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BioShock Infinite Complete Edition Confirmed for Xbox 360, PS3, PC

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http://tinyurl.com/ovvqvcv

http://www.gamespot.com/articles/bioshock-infinite-complete-edition-confirmed-for-x/1100-6422481/?utm_source=gamefaqs&utm_medium=partner&utm_content=news_module&utm_campaign=hub_forum  (if you don't want the tinyurl)

 

 

[uPDATE] Following the publication of this story, 2K confirmed that BioShock Infinite Complete Edition is coming to consoles and PC later this year.

"We can confirm that the BioShock Infinite Complete Edition is coming to Xbox 360, PS3, and PC later this year, and we will be sharing more information about it very soon," 2K said.

The original story is below.

2K Games will release a special BioShock Infinite Complete Edition this November for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 that includes all of the game's previously released DLC for $40. That's according to GameStop and Amazon product pages, which list the unannounced bundle for a release across both platforms on November 4.

 

The BioShock Infinite Complete Edition will reportedly include the main game, as well as the Clash in the Clouds and two-part Burial at Sea expansion packs. You'll also receive extra weapons in the form of Comstock's China Broom shotgun and Comstock's Bird's Eye sniper rifle, among other pieces of digital content.

2K Games has not officially announced the BioShock Infinite Complete Edition, so you should take this news with a grain of salt for now. We have reached out to 2K Games for comment about the rumored bundle, and we'll update this post with anything we hear back.

 

Much surprise to anyone? Though it's somewhat interesting it ain't going to the 8th gen systems.  Got it free with my GPU . . . .

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Awesome.

 

I would so get this in a heartbeat if I wasn't afraid that my PS3 couldn't play it just like it can't play the Bioshock 2 I have right now. 

 

Glad it's for PC too, probably pick it up for that once I upgrade to something worth putting in my sig.

Bert & Ernie before squirting spermie. 

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Why?

1. Bank: money

2. Benjamins: a one-hundred-dollar bill (in reference to the portrait of Benjamin Franklin that distinguishes it)

3. Big ones: multiples of one thousand dollars

4. Bills: multiples of one hundred dollars

5. Bones: dollars (origin unknown)

6. Bread: money in general (on the analogy of it being a staple of life)

7. Bucks: dollars (perhaps from a reference to buckskins, or deerskins, which were once used as currency)

8. Cabbage: paper money (from its color)

9. Cheddar (or chedda): money (origin unknown, but perhaps from the concept of cheese distributed by the government to welfare recipients)

10. Clams: dollars (perhaps from the onetime use of seashells as currency)

11. Coin: money, either paper or coinage

12-13. Cs (or C-notes): multiples of one hundred dollars (from the Roman symbol for “one hundred”)

14. Dead presidents: paper money (from the portraits of various former US presidents that usually distinguish bills of various denominations)

15. Dime: ten dollars (by multiplication of the value of the ten-cent coin)

16. Dough: money in general (akin to the usage of bread)

17-18. Doubles (or dubs): twenty-dollar bills

19. Ducats: money (from the Italian coin)

20. Fins: five-dollar bills (perhaps from the shared initial sound with fives)

21. Five-spots: five-dollar bills

22. Fivers: five-dollar bills

23. Folding stuff: paper money

24. Greenbacks: paper money (from the color of the ink)

25. Gs: thousand-dollar bills (an abbreviation for grand)

26. Grand: one thousand dollars (as in “three grand” for “three thousand dollars”)

27. Large: thousand-dollar bills

28. Lettuce: paper money (from its color)

29. Long green: paper money (from its shape and color)

30. Loot: money (originally denoted goods obtained illicitly or as the spoils of war)

31. Lucre: money or profit (from the biblical expression “filthy lucre,” meaning “ill-gained money”)

32. Moola (or moolah): money (origin unknown)

33. Nickel: five dollars (by multiplication of the value of the five-cent coin)

34. Ones: dollars (also, fives for “five-dollar bills,” tens for “ten-dollar bills,” and so on)

35. Quarter: twenty-five dollars (by multiplication of the value of the twenty-five-cent coin)

36. Sawbucks: ten-dollar bills (from the resemblance of X, the Roman symbol for ten, to a sawbuck, or sawhorse)

37. Scratch: money (perhaps from the idea that one has to struggle as if scratching the ground to obtain it)

38. Shekels: dollars (from the biblical currency)

39. Simoleons: dollars (perhaps from a combination of simon, slang for the British sixpence and later the American dollar, and napoleon, a form of French currency)

40. Singles: one-dollar bills

41. Skrilla: money (origin unknown)

42. Smackers: dollars (origin unknown)

43. Spondulix: money (either from spondylus, a Greek word for a shell once used as currency, or from the prefix spondylo-, which means “spine” or “vertebra”; these have a common etymology)

44. Stacks: multiples of a thousand dollars

45. Tenners: ten-dollar bills

46. Ten-spots: ten-dollar bills

47. Two bits: twenty-five cents (a reference to pieces of eight, divisible sections of a Mexican real, or dollar)

48. Wad: a bundle of paper money

49. Wampum: money (from the Native American term wampumpeag, referring to native currency)

50. Yards: one hundred dollars

 

This is why.

.

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Should of elaborated  a tad.

 

Meant why would anyone buy this...

I assumed you meant why this would be made.

.

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