Nothing too dramatic, but I'm glad to see it getting some more attention. It's a delightful game, but once you get to the end game there's very little to keep you engaged despite the game clearly encouraging you to stay and keep playing.
Dawncaster on mobile. An expansion comes out tomorrow and it's the first mobile dlc I'm legitimately excited to throw money at. Excellent developers with an excellent game. Think Slay the Spire, but designed for mobile.
Caves of Qud on Steam Deck. It's been a few years since I last played and it's very different from what I remember. Combo that with using a controller for the first time and it's been an enjoyable but challenging experience.
Hell Let Loose on PC. This may be my favorite multiplayer shooter of all time. I was a competitive counterstrike player back in 1.6 (Cal-M), so unseating those memories is an incredible achievement. It's just so good.
The learning curve is steep and there's plenty of room for frustration, but once you're over that hump it's legitimately a terrific experience.
There's a lot of stupid people in these interviews:
“I can’t vote for Trump. He’s a crook. He’s too corrupt,” said Scott Simeone, 64, an independent voter from Amherst, who backed Trump in 2016 and 2020. “I voted for him, and I didn’t realize he’s as corrupt as he is.”
You voted for him in 2016 I might grant ignorance then, but in 2020?
Then there's democrats on the other side turning up their noses at the idea of voting for Biden as the lesser of two evils. This is an existential fight for democracy and people are getting persnickety with fascism at the gates?
I had to watch the video. It's both better and worse than the text makes it seem. It's definitely more word salad than usual. What's fascinating is his audience likely assumes they're the ones who don't understand, given how little of reality they understand already.
If you think about it, even a stopped clock will be right twice a day, a defective clock, however, can go months or even years without being right once!
Famously, Mother Jones didn't believe in women's suffrage. She believed it was a distraction from class warfare.
I tend to align more with Simone de Beauvoir who saw women as a disadvantaged class as well. I think it's a helpful lens for how we consider gender dynamics and patriarchal structures.
I thought you were going to be uncon-sole-able.