I remember a game I played ~9 years ago where you could send ships to explore the world and when they got back you had the option to reject their findings. If you never rejected anything, the world would be exactly like Earth, but everytime you rejected it would randomize the section that had been explored and over time it would start generating a whole new world.
And you could even make the planet flat by rejecting the discovery of it being round.
I haven't stayed in that many hotels so I'm not sure what to pick as worst. It's either the one that was very stingy with the breakfast and I had to order everything individually and request 3 doses of milk for my coffee, or the hotel where right in front of the entrance I got robbed at gunpoint and punched for being too slow to hand over the money.
The second one I was 20 and trying to get the cheapest option I could find. The first one I was 36 and paying premium for comfort.
It's not that it undeletes them, but that it keeps some of your comments unreachable. Every few months it re-indexes stuff and then with everything that was reachable before being deleted, it shows a different set of comments.
You can see more comments if you access the list with different params. For example, after deleting all your comments sorted by top score, you can access them sorted by controversial and you'll see a whole other list of comments still there.
I've seen a few bands, but only tagging along with friends, never seen anyone I actually like. Tbh I'm not a big fan of live music anyway. There's something about it not being 100% the same as I'm used to that just makes me not like it as much.
I got the game from some magazine, in a time I didn't have many choices for games. I didn't speak much English yet at the time so I had trouble getting past some stuff and didn't get very far. I even named my first dog after the robot dog in the game.
I picked it up on steam a few years ago and tried it again. I think I got much farther than I had back in the day, but still didn't finish it. I think I might try it again on deck now.
Sir, there's something wrong here. I spent 20 years believing I was the only person who ever played Septerra Core, and it's too long to change my mind now.
Autistic people will often do the right thing simply because they were taught it is what they are supposed to do - with no consideration of how they'll feel about it.
And ADHD people don't get to feel good about anything they do.
Combine the two and you get the ultimate altruists!
Found it in my history, it's Neo Atlas 1469.