I just bought Crusader No Remorse _no_remorse and wanted to play that with the MagicDos Box on my android phone. I downloaded the game and installed the standalone version (Without gog) and then I copied all of my files to my phone.
Overall, No Remorse provides exactly what the title implies: addictive hours of fun without remorse. My only gripe is that the controls take some getting used to, with different keystrokes for walking, running, rolling, crouching, shooting, etc. The combination of mouse and keypad seems to work best, but this requires considerable practice. But no matter-- practice you will, and as soon as you get used to the controls, you'll find yourself hooked in the Silencer's world for hours on end. Two thumbs up, way up!
A simple mistake, one that anyone could make, and isn't that true of all of them? Divorce, episodes of lousy parenting, dumbhead investments, negligence behind the wheel -- it's all too human, and you have to learn how to admit failure and walk away from it and not torment yourself. Sometimes the remorse is worse than the offense.
May 21 (Reuters) - Sharks flanker Jean Deysel has been suspended for three weeks after being sent off for stamping on the head of Canterbury Crusaders loose forward Jordan Taufua in a Super Rugby clash last week. Deysel will miss all rugby until June 7, Super Rugby's governing body SANZAR said in a statement. The 29-year-old was sent off in the 16th minute of the match in Christchurch following intervention from the television official after the incident had been missed by referee Rohan Hoffman. "Stamping is a serious offence," the judicial officer said. "It is an offence that cannot be tolerated in the game because not only is it totally against the spirit of the game, but it carries an inherent potential danger of serious injury to players, especially when contact is made in the head/face area." The offence could have earned Deysel a five-week ban but an apology by the flanker after the game, the nature of Taufua's injury, Deysel's genuine remorse and his good disciplinary record were accepted as mitigation. The Sharks, who beat the Crusaders despite Deysel's dismissal and remain top of the Super Rugby standings, face the Auckland Blues at North Harbour Stadium on Friday before returning to South Africa to face the Stormers on June 1. Super Rugby will then take a three-week break for the international window. (Reporting by Greg Stutchbury; Editing by Nick Mulvenney)
Appropriate Adult, Neil McKay's drama about Fred West, did this week what I thought it had failed to do last, which was to more closely question how Janet Leach became so bedevilled by the man she was representing. It was a far messier episode than last week's, full of uncomfortable ambiguities of tone and unresolved feelings, but the performances were up to it. As Fred, Dominic West pulled you in with what looked like sincere remorse and then shockingly revealed another flash of calculation. And Emily Watson disintegrated in an entirely believable way, suddenly realising how compromised she'd become. It was, I'm sure, a decent instinct that led the makers of the drama to conclude with images of the Wests' known victims. But it was a mistaken one. These women hadn't asked to be part of this story in the first place, and it felt wrong that they had no choice about their enlistment here.