I take a week or so off to recover from surgury and miss burger discussion week? Aw, man.
The hot dogs are another story. They're pretty good. That Chicago dog someone was alluding to earlier is loaded with crap that I don't eat...
The unfortunate reality is video game sales have sucked for years now. Were there any really good deals during Steam's Autumn sale? Does anyone expect any really good deals for the Holiday sale? Valve was aggressive in cornering the market but now that they have all we get are bland sales without any kind of promotional hook at tepid mid-week/weekend deal prices.
Even hardware-wise Black Friday was pretty mediocre.
Black Friday was fine on other stuff. I went out and bought 1000 LED Christmas lights. Great price. Which means I got every deal I was looking for.
As for game sales, I grabbed some FX3 tables, some HITMAN DLC, and some American Truck Tycoon DLC. Any guesses as to what I'd been playing leading up to the sale? In the Christmas sale I might grab the Last Jedi FX3 pack, even if it doesn't hit 50% off and I'm also hoping for some bundle deals on Pixel Puzzle Ultimate DLC. Exciting, right?
Pubs also realized they didnt need the insane drops to earn more money. If you go back through steamspy's annual write-ups of sales data, starting in ~2015 the average % discount starting dropping off a lot, but also at that time the pubs were raking in more money than before. So they realized they didnt need the steep discount %s they had been using in the past and that trend has continued. They had historical data of their own at that point to start realizing they made even more money with less discounts
Haven't we always heard that Valve has an economist on staff and he's available to advise publishers with games on Steam?
I'm surprised no one here has brought up the Bethesda Canvas Bag-gate. That shit is hilarious.
It's part of a $200 collector's edition. We are on a sight for Cheapasses. Who the

around here buys a $200 collector's edition? We'll start caring when it's 90% off on clearance at Gamestop.
If you want to get all botanical about it, pretty much all of the peppers people eat around here are chili peppers, but this begs the rather obvious question of why you would call something a "sport" pepper in the context of a restaurant instead of the familiar name "chili." Weird nomenclature irks me.
Forget it, Warreni. It's Chicago.
No, seriously, it's just one of those regional things. You can also find sport peppers elsewhere in the midwest. I seem to recall that Steak n Shake has a bottle on every table. They're really tough to find elsewhere, though. They're about the hardest part of trying to do homemade Chicago dogs in Oklahoma. (Well, that and not being able to get Vienna Beef dogs, but there are acceptable substitutes.)