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Most Popular Video Games Of 2008 - Top Rated Combats ... For Wii Fanatics If you are into Wii, then you want to keep a look out for the newest and best 3D versions of battles and adventure. In spot number one for Wii is Super Smash Brothers Brawl, the best of Mario Brothers...

The Best Online Games Console, Ever! ... Lets first begin in the 80's where the games console boom began, a fairly new Japanese company had released a games console to the nation called Famicom... Moving on to another relatively small company in the name of Sega, who created a new games console called Master System, which was supposedly meant to eliminate the NES, but it never really obtained any kind of significant market share...

How Does The New Playstation 3 Compare? ... The original Playstation system was introduced in the United States in 1995 and Playstation 2 followed in 2000. In early 2006, Sony announced the end of production for Playstation 2 as it began working toward the much ballyhooed introduction of the high-tech and next-generation Playstation 3...

Video Games Can Be Educational For Children ... You may often hear your child say they do not like to read, but if you will take the time to watch them play particular video games and tell them you can not see the writing that well, then hopefully they will read it to you and you will become fairly surprised... Each video game that your child plays must be viewed as having a positive side instead of listening to all the hubba of others, because video games can teach your child different skills....

Video Games Are Not Bad For Children ... However, many activities have both positive and negative contributing factors, and video games are no exception to the rule...

The rules of drinking games are taken more serious than the rules of war.
—Chinese proverb.

For a mother the project of raising a boy is the most fulfilling project she can hope for. She can watch him, as a child, play the games she was not allowed to play; she can invest in him her ideas, aspirations, ambitions, and values—or whatever she has left of them; she can watch her son, who came from her flesh and whose life was sustained by her work and devotion, embody her in the world. So while the project of raising a boy is fraught with ambivalence and leads inevitably to bitterness, it is the only project that allows a woman to be—to be through her son, to live through her son.
—Andrea Dworkin (b. 1946)

Will TV kill the theater? If the programs I have seen, save for “Kukla, Fran and Ollie,” the ball games and the fights, are any criterion, the theater need not wake up in a cold sweat.
—Tallulah Bankhead (1903–1968)