Gay bars near blizzcon

Admittedly, London and Oedipus find themselves placed into inherently different situations. One awed a crowd with his intelligence, the other diddled his mother. Incest may be morally wrong, but even nerds get desperate. Some nights I slept bar hours, others I slept as little as three.

Even though cashing grandma's pension for a cross-country flight to BlizzCon will score London a sweet load of frequent flier miles, society isn't going to deem him as a person who's going places. I understand he thinks World of Warcraft is sauce. I really do. But if his voice is any indicator, he's a few weeks away from becoming an opening act at Chuck E.

It's not often I near compelled to talk to other people, but for the Double-Decker I made an exception. Wanting to know more about his relationship with gaming, I tracked him down and got answers the way blizzcon self-respecting interviewer would: I threaten to Han Solo him in Carbonite.

London Double-Decker: I started back in the days of bit. I didn't discover the game until early college. All my friends played WoW. I resisted playing for a year or so, because I saw what it did to them. Unless you've played or known someone who has, it's hard to explain how controlling the game becomes.

It's a lot like a succubus. LDD: Boredom. I had a dishwashing job at the local hospital and I was on the Dean's List, but still I had a lot of spare time. I'd suggest "Dean's List. TBR: But employers aren't. You tout something like "dishwashing extraordinaire" and gay got yourself a job.

It just exudes "cheap labor. LDD: Laughs Maybe. But yeah, my roommate at the time was a serious WoW player. He always tried to get me to play. TBR: You mentioned the game takes control over its players.

The Tragic Tale of Red Shirt Guy

How'd it change you? LDD: Most noticeably, my sleeping schedule. The more I got into the game, the later I stayed up.