This "whatever they want to attack" has been very clearly one item: misogyny, and if you took the time to read these "attacks," you'd pretty quickly learn that they're based on something that just happened. In fact, if you look at OP's comment history, you'll find a ton of removed comments with very negative votes, and looking a bit deeper than that, you'll find even more misogynistic posts that are still up.
You're trolling, right? You've gotta be. I'm having a hard time figuring out how you could ever have come into this thread, read multiple different comments calling OP out for recent misogyny, and think this reply held any value.
Are there even any good launchers for Android TV? Last time I looked, everything I found was either abandoned so long ago that they don't work on modern devices or had such a scuffed UI that they were damn near unusable.
I can't seem to find the source of it anymore, either. I think it's a bit hard to look up without exact names because it's actually a few different events that make up one story.
Basically, as I remember, Volition's parent company sold Volition to that shitty company known for buying companies with falling sales and dissolving them, and the rights to Saints Row went with them, but the parent company kept rights to Red Faction, making it impossible for Ultor to really be included in SR after 3. IIRC, Red Faction ended up being owned by the shitty company later on, but at that point it didn't really matter anymore. I can't actually remember if GooH included any actual mentions of Ultor with the reintroduction of Vogel.
It's been a few years, I could have gotten details wrong.
I always felt 4 was just too cartoony to last. I enjoyed the super powers, but it did way too much damage to the series' world (literally and figuratively) and left very little room to realistically expand. I get that they lost what they were planning with the whole Ultor thing when the rights split happens, but the path they took feels, and I didn't intend the pun when I first wrote this, pretty scorched earth.
It's surprising it worked. It's a really well-known tactic, owed to being on every cop show ever. Pretty sure it's totally above-board, though. Anything you leave behind (trash, crumbs, maybe a bit of saliva) is fair game. Unfortunate.
Yes, but asking them to read a large, technical manual that's gonna put them several hours and multiple pages in for a single concept is.