Top 1200 Commonwealth Games Quotes & Sayings - Page 5

Explore popular Commonwealth Games quotes.
Last updated on December 19, 2024.
I think computing power is ready to do 3D justice. It was great for shooters and racing games in the past, but I didn't think it was right for strategy games.
In politics, they play games. In Hollywood, they play games. I think that, overall, everybody is trying to do whatever it takes to get ahead.
So the nature required to make a really noble Guardian of our commonwealth will be swift and strong, spirited, and philosophic. — © Plato
So the nature required to make a really noble Guardian of our commonwealth will be swift and strong, spirited, and philosophic.
You have to be able to get enough points from your away games or it puts difficulty on your home games.
I'm not super social, don't really go to parties, or basketball games, or football games very often, the big social occasions.
The Ancient Games are relatively obscure to most Olympians, but to understand just what the Games are about, it is really necessary to investigate the roots and the meaning that has transformed culture and society for so many years.
I've played more park games than NBA games, and I had a 10-year NBA career.
As governor, I'll focus every day on delivering for working Kentuckians like teachers and first responders all across the commonwealth.
I loved the DOS games, Super Nintendo. And I have a very addictive personality, so I recognize now that I just can't engage in that kind of stuff because I'll never stop. So I no longer play any games.
It was always one of my favorite things, the action figures, the video games, when I was with WWE, even though I'm not a gamer. I would literally go out and buy the games just so I could play myself.
And from that nineteen sixty four, this was my goal to go to Olympic Games. And I realized what does it mean, Olympic Games, like big celebration.
The cornerstone of what makes our commonwealth a wonderful place to live is all that we share in common, not the things that set us apart.
There's a DVD called 'The Secret.' It's like visualization and meditation, certain methods I use before games, visualizing the games before they happen. — © Trey Burke
There's a DVD called 'The Secret.' It's like visualization and meditation, certain methods I use before games, visualizing the games before they happen.
I'm a Windows guy. I have been for many, many years. I play games, and it's where games run, baby.
My favorite memory from school was going to football games with my friends. We always had so much spirit and dressed up to go to the games, even though our team was pretty bad.
I think video games are going to completely take over storytelling in our society. Video games are not a fad.
I was so competitive, I wanted to win games but... I lost 13 games in my first three years in college. I lost 13 games in my first month in the league and it felt like nobody cared. So, eventually halfway through the season, I'm like 'well, why the hell do I care?' If they don't care, why do I care.
I have liked games for a very long time but when I saw 'Gradius' at the arcade as a junior high student, I became certain that in the future all forms of entertainment will be taken over by video games.
In football winning games is all that matters, but a team like West Ham and every team apart from Man City are going to lose games.
I think it would be impossible to make a movie about video games if there wasn't some violence that we know from video games.
Video games offer violent messages, and even the sports video games include taunting and teasing.
It's always tough when you beat your expectation and you win 48, 49 games and you expect the next year to win 50, 55 games.
Everywhere do I percieve a certain conspiracy of rich men seeking their own advantage underthat name and pretext of commonwealth.
Sure, I like to win when I play basketball or board games or video games, but my day isn't ruined if I lose. I'm always up for a rematch. In all seriousness, that's something that's nice about maturing.
Education has to be welcomed as a Spiritual Practice for the establishment of Peace in the individual heart as well as in society including the human commonwealth.
When I'm on planes, I'd talk to people and I'd tell them I compete in the X Games. Some would know what it was, but maybe half didn't. But everyone knows about the Olympics. They're really like the X Games for the world!
You can lose games, but when you look back on the games you lose, you must be, 'Okay, we lost, but we did everything to win it.'
To the best of my knowledge, a lot of people who play video games also play tabletop games and vice versa.
When I was younger I used to get really nervous before games, so much so, you are almost throwing up before games.
We’ve been in all the big games, we’ve been in small games, and we’ve treated them all the same and I think that mentality is what’s helped us get to the point where we are now.
We certainly haven't used that as a motivation, ... The games themselves and the time that they've put in in preparation for these games is motivation enough. I don't think that has anything to do with it at all.
Fortunately, I got to play some India 'A' games, and some games where the pressure was a little less, so that I can focus on my skill and my technique.
In the case of games, we have a belief that that could end up being the largest category in entertainment over a long period of time. Just look at what's happening in games and how social they've become.
I am a Yankees fan. I should say - have been to more Yankees games than Mets games.
I like all sorts of games that make you think. Chess is one of the games I play a lot, read a lot of books.
When we started Blizzard, we just wanted to make great games. What we realized is that the games we create are really just a framework for communities and human interaction.
I think the reason that I like so many different games is because I like the way my brain works when I'm playing games. It's more fun.
For Premier League games, you get people coming from all over, paying big money to get into the games as part of a weekend away. — © Bruce Grobbelaar
For Premier League games, you get people coming from all over, paying big money to get into the games as part of a weekend away.
I love video games. When I was growing up, video games were very important to me.
I'm a huge 'Call of Duty' fan, 'Minecraft' and all those kinds of video games. I'm constantly playing video games every day.
The Democrats are standing on one side, and the Republicans are playing games on the other. Both sides are playing games.
That's the key to win a lot of games: you have to pull the wagon together, and everybody has to give 100 per cent, and that's how you're going to win games.
The games you lose are the games you can remember.
My main point in this regard was to compete for my country and my people and to receive the support of the entire Cuban society, to carry my flag in whatever competition I was in, the Olympic Games, Pan-American Games.
The big stadiums, sold-out crowds and games with massive things riding on them; as players these are games you want to be playing in. It's a chance to write your name in the history books.
People said that video games were bad because they made you numb to death, made you register entrails splattering across a screen as a sign of success. In that moment, Val thought that the real problem with games was that the player was suppossed to try everything. If there was a cave, you went in it. If there was a mysterious stranger, you talked to him. If there was a map, you followed it. But in games, you had a hundred million billion lives and Val only had this one.
I've played a lot of games, and automatically, if I play a lot of games, I feel fitter, much stronger, and good.
Football, for me, is the most ever-changing sport in the world, because you can go seven games in a row, scoring in all of them; then, you don't score for two games, and already you're doing badly. You're in crisis.
I don't really want to make casual games or games with no sort of story backbone or character backbone. — © Cory Barlog
I don't really want to make casual games or games with no sort of story backbone or character backbone.
I'm not getting caught in a club at 2 o'clock in the morning. I'm going to basketball games and hockey games and going to events and dinners.
I'm afraid that sometimes you'll play lonely games too. Games you can't win 'cause you'll play against you.
You can even express movies and poetry using video games. For those reasons, I've decided to create stories through video games.
I don't want to play police games. When you start playing police games, I take myself out of the equation.
That's all I want to do - win games. Stats will come. That's the player I am. But I would rather win games.
Everybody is playing games. There are games now for pretty much every age, every demographic.
When I was five years old I would see Champions League games and I asked God to let me have a part in these games and to show my quality to the world and to be famous for football and to try my best.
In a divine commonwealth holiness must have the principal honor and encouragement, and a great difference be made between the precious and the vile.
I can't play video games because I have that addictive personality. If I started playing video games I wouldn't stop.
I'm not a competitive player at all, but I don't want competitive games to go away, because for some people that's why they play games, to compete.
It may have once been true that computer games encouraged us to interact more with machines than with each other. But if you still think of gamers as loners, then you’re not playing games.
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