“There Will Be Blood” (8-Bit Video Game Version)
Check out this in-game footage from the SNES release of Academy-Award winning classic There Will Be Blood, created by Tomfoolery Pictures. Brilliant and hilarious! I hope this is real.
Check out this in-game footage from the SNES release of Academy-Award winning classic There Will Be Blood, created by Tomfoolery Pictures. Brilliant and hilarious! I hope this is real.
Fartsquare from Fartsquare on Vimeo.
Now this looks way more fun to us.
“Because we all over share! Keep your friends and followers constantly updated by sharing that you farted, how smelly/loud/wet it was and where it was. Check the map to see where your friends passed through and passed gas, sharing it all is the next frontier in social networking.
In a world, endulged in network culture, the modern narcist is able to share each and every step he takes, literally.
The ‘social network’ Foursquare enables its users to check in to places they visit, registering them as a guest there until they check in at a different venue. By checking in, users receive points, and thus become players in the city wide location based social game, competing with one another over who receives ‘Mayorship’ of venues.”
Will you join him on this 8-bit “Hispanic Adventure”?
Features:
-Classic Home Run competition game play
-Hundreds of ballsy insults straight from by Eastbound and Down’s Danny McBride
-Retro 8-bit color graphics
-Exclusive Eastbound and Down: Season Dos content
-Five levels of balls-out insanity
-The chance to square off against one of the greatest pitchers of all time. Period.
You can download the app here.
(via TWBE)
And the world’s pizza restaurants cheer in unison.
Funny and sad.
(via LOLFeed)
Feel like Facebook is compromising your privacy? Is Twitter making you feel dumb? Why not check out Gink? It’s the most unique, most secure and most complicated social network yet!
Starts With Typewriters tweeted this bit of comic genius today in response to the recent iPhone 4G leak. In case you don’t know what a Kin is — and you most likely don’t — you can officially not care after visiting the product site.


