so what’s the plunger/French press?
You already know who i am.
so what’s the plunger/French press?
and the open source, free tools for creating such games are getting better almost by the day.
I read this on the toilet and was nearly overcome with a powerful urge to shatter my skull against the handbasin.
ngl but there’s something about this that really gets me going.
yodel if
yourself?
I can only assume that’s what I meant to type, so I’ve corrected it. thank you 😆
I’m no fan of hamas, but what Israel is doing is just insane.
not everyone in fucking gaza is a fucking terrorist.
I think a better phrasing I for this question might be, how easily can i put myself in a (fictional) character’s shoes?
using examples from the adjacent reply, it’s obvious Frodo is intending to destroy the ring, is questing to that end. but can you imagine yourself being him, imagine how he feels at a specific moment in the story, discern his deeper, non-explixit motivations, his thoughts or fears?
a marginally more imminent death.
exactly like a battery.
also, thinking skills decline with age for the same reason that batteries lose maximum capacity over time.
inherently meaningless. intended only to deceive.
are we counting an infinite number of zeroes after the decimal point, as having infinite digits? because if you specifically exclude while numbers, your output would not be truly random, though it would be essentially impossible to distinguish it from true randomness.
I think most species probably align themselves to either the galactic plane or prominent orbital plane of the local star system.
the “up” & “down” directions would be completely arbitrary, though. there’s no reason to think everone would decide on a standard for those.
and species without that certain sense of appropriateness, or an overt dedication to logic, would likely not bother with a standard orientation. and especially when in orbit over a planet, I think everyone would orient their “down” towards the surface.
having a rank named for you is literally more recognition than Harry actually got.
star wars isn’t a utopian society, though. lukes family can’t afford or won’t spend the money on a droid that could do all the work for them. or the might be supply issues on tatooine - they buy c3po and r2 off jawas, after all.
doesn’t tatooine have two suns? solar radiation wrecks skin.
if you enjoyed diablo 2,grim dawn feels like a spiritual successor to that game specifically, whereas d3 didn’t really.
you know what? just to prove you wrong, I’m not going to argue about it.
I used to hate early access - why should we pay to test an unfinished game, when that’s an actual job that people get paid to do?
but I’ve come to recognise that it’s am important avenue for funding for many developers, and tbh, I don’t think any of the early access games I’ve played have felt “incomplete” - perhaps lacking polish, perhaps in need of more content, but that’s true of many full releases, and early access not only gets you these games at a reduced price, it effectively guarantees a large amount of free DLC as the game gets made more complete.
my only real complaint now is sometimes I like early access features which end up getting cut from the finished game.
Tuvix was an atrocity and extinguishing it would have been morally correct even if it had not resulted in numerically more living beings.
tabaxi: pupils dilate