Misfit-Meower@lemmy.world to RetroGaming@lemmy.worldEnglish · edit-23 days agoDoes Bomberman have a lore?lemmy.worldimagemessage-square29fedilinkarrow-up188arrow-down11file-text
arrow-up187arrow-down1imageDoes Bomberman have a lore?lemmy.worldMisfit-Meower@lemmy.world to RetroGaming@lemmy.worldEnglish · edit-23 days agomessage-square29fedilinkfile-text
(Title corrected by a user) I mean, Mappy has a “lore”. Dig Dug has a “lore”. But I can’t seem to find Bomberman lore.
minus-squareotp@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·2 days agoIf it’s a statement, definitely. “Bomberman has lore?” is generally not the standard formation of a yes/no question. They’re usually formed for with the verb “do”. If one wants to know if Amazon sells books and wants a yes/no answer, one would generally ask “Does Amazon sell books?” If someone is browsing Amazon and finds books unexpectedly, they would be more likely to say “Amazon sells books?” However, in some dialects of English, the two might be interchangeable. I think it might be the case for Indian English, to give an example.
If it’s a statement, definitely.
“Bomberman has lore?” is generally not the standard formation of a yes/no question. They’re usually formed for with the verb “do”.
If one wants to know if Amazon sells books and wants a yes/no answer, one would generally ask “Does Amazon sell books?”
If someone is browsing Amazon and finds books unexpectedly, they would be more likely to say “Amazon sells books?”
However, in some dialects of English, the two might be interchangeable. I think it might be the case for Indian English, to give an example.