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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)MO
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2 yr. ago

  • I paused a lot on quests like these.

    If you don't have the tech skills, you don't know what the right way to fix the guy who thinks he's someone else. Who knows what happens if you choose wrong. What do you do with the guy who stole that eye implant?

    Also... Minor spoilers: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BuWPaWluAUQ

  • To my knowledge, hobbit holes have none of those amenities. You can make one of these in a city or suburb if you can get the permit, it'll just be a strange looking house. That's not how I interpreted the post.

  • Cyberpunk, and specifically the Phantom Liberty DLC.

    I know 2077 has a bad rep for its terrible release, but the game excels in storytelling and mocap above all else. The DLC is accessible at the end of the prologue and requires that you make several hard choices which have a major impact on the dlc's conclusion.

    The DLC is also chok full of side quests and contracts that don't affect the overall story but can affect your relationship with various factions, and that are affected by other choices made outside the DLC. The quests also feature various difficult choices. Do you kill the guy you were hired to kill, or do you give them a second chance so they can get treated for the cyberpsychosis that made them lash out in the first place?

    I can't recommend this game enough, honestly.

    Edit: If you want more details, or have questions, just ask. I don't want to spoil too much.

  • I empathize with the feeling of living a simpler, happier life, but living like a hobbit would suck for a lot of us.

    Indoor plumbing, sewage, electricity and internet, are all way more important to the kind of people who are on this site than they might expect. In addition to that, if you've never lived in the countryside, rural living and basic peasant subsistence farming is fucking awful. You are constantly working maintenance and rebuilding damaged property. You're always dirty, smelly, and tired.

  • My mom refuses to watch anything remotely 'scary' so she hadn't seen Lord of the Rings. I managed to trick her into watching the first movie by watching a vlog of some people visiting the hobbit holes in New Zealand.

    She loved it. She didn't like the orcs and the balrog, and the fighting, but she loved the story, all the beautiful nature, the lighthearted nature of the hobbits, all that good beautiful stuff. We saw each of the three movies on a different day and she was the one who asked to see each of the sequels. It was nice to share one of my favorite things with her.

    My favorite new movie I saw this year was Dune. It was the first movie I've seen in a long while that made me go "Was that it? Where's the rest of it? That can't be all there is. I want more!" needless to say I'll be seeing the sequel in the cinema. I loved the books and I loved the movie too.

  • It is nobody's profession to solve problems on social media. In fact, few problems can be solved on social media. Additionally, few professionals are interested in solving problems for free, and in the comments of some random thread on obscure social media. I don't know what you thought lemmy was but it is effectively reddit for people who don't want to support reddit.

  • I remember playing with a wire controlled car when I was about 3. It was a battery powered f1 style red car and it had yellow bumper wheels on the corners to allow it to not get stuck when it hit a wall. It had a 'remote' that was connected to the car by a short cable. It had 2 buttons, one to go forwards and one to go backwards. It could go straight backwards but it would go in a circle forwards. It had been a gift from my aunt and uncle and my father stepped on it to break it because it bothered him.

    Second memory, I'm walking into the yard on a summer evening. I open the gate, look up, and then towards the entrance door. The fence is green but the paint is chipping because it crumbles under my fingers. The sky is all sunset colors; blue, purple, orange, and the sun is blocked by the great big apricot tree between the house and the garage.

  • For some reason I can't see your comment in the thread. Maybe I can reply here.

    The walk out into Liurnia from Godrick's castle and the elevator down into Nokstella are such beautiful moments, perfectly done, without even a cutscene. The closest I've seen in another game is seeing Touissant for the first time in Witcher 3. It's a land of fairytales.