Comment105

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 46 minutes ago

Yeah, they banned touching other cars. Double disqualification.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 hours ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (1 children)

I agree, that looks like a fascist to me. And they're on Midwest social, that's all you need to know. Ban. Defederate.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago)

Too fucked up and funny for contemporary audiences.

You can have a commune of wiccans represented respectfully in the game, with a soup making minigame, a small patch for planting and harvesting vegetables you can use, and a short quest chain featuring a little "theatre" performance event near the end, where you get to play the role of one of the fae. You even get a "play dead" button. The commune will feature interesting and iconic characters with appropriate jokes.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 hours ago

It's just how some lumpy butts fold. Badly.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 11 hours ago

Impressive and commendable, but irrelevant.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 11 hours ago

It would be called "OurSpace", but really it would be "The Party's Space"

[–] [email protected] 4 points 11 hours ago

Idk about all the rest of it, but you might be able to learn to watch your tone. You know, modulate your voice better. Figure out what sounds aggressive and how to catch it, maybe apologize for it if appropriate, then consciously avoid it for a bit.

I think I've had a couple friends like you, and while there were a few things to tolerate with them (as I'm sure there were with me as well), the weirdly/slightly aggressive tone they had a bit too often made hanging out with them a little bit worse than it could've been.

Still happy to have spent the time I did with them. I'm still hanging out with one of them and he's still aggressively into some games, TFT now, but he's chilled out a bit it seems or I just notice it less. It comes back when he gets competitive or drunk.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 12 hours ago

Nothing unhealthy about that. Video games, crying and arson are the holy trinity of our generation. It's just contemporary culture.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago)

NFS Heat felt good. Just a good game.

Everything between Heat and the first Most Wanted (I think?) was trash, I looked at reviews and played demos and saw nothing but garbage and usually a frontend for a microtransaction model.

I'm one of those who didn't buy Unbound because the theme ended up being a bit of a gimmick, they didn't lean into it enough to make it cool, they held back and delivered something unexciting.

 

It is at 361,826 out of 1,000,000 signatures with the remaining trickle after the initial spike nowhere near the pace needed to hit the mark before the 31st of July 2025.

(https://www.reddit.com/r/StopKillingGames/comments/1flaevi/let_me_put_the_current_campaign_progress_into_a/)

I interpret the state of Ross Scott's SKG campaign like this:
It's pretty clear that democratically speaking, we do not object to companies arbitrarily removing access to purchased video games. Only a minority objects to it.

While it will stay up and get more signatures, there will ultimately be no follow-through to this campaign. The reality is that it's not politically sound, it's not built on a foundation of a real public desire for change. In other words, voters don't want it. You might, but most of your family and friends don't want it.

 

Because the shops don't fucking sell them, and that makes me sad for some reason.

They're just on like Temu and shit like that, usually with weirdly small black panels.

 

Too many users here prefer smaller communities and have openly stated they aren't interested in making accommodations to pursue growth to a truly large platform, even if it could be.

Lemmy is the sort of site that will linger in the background and quietly die out, it'll occassionally be mentioned in the same sorts of conversation that bring up old alternatives like voat, rare conversations with few readers.

I had some optimism at the growth spurt, but seeing what the opinions of users here were, that hope turned into cynicism. As I forgot about Lemmy, it's irrelevance was reinforced. It would be best, I think, if this foundation could replace its competitors. But I don't think it's going to happen.

I don't think you want common idiots to like the site.

 

I posted a comment with a link to an article on CNN and several links to architecture and construction websites. It seems like reddit doesn't like comments with untrusted links? Are they being subtly hidden from the thread?

If this is being done at any scale at all I wonder if it's a significant cause of the feeling that the internet has shrunk into a few main sites, linking to a recognizable relatively small selection of news and media sources.

 

Is it just random letters arrived to by keyboard mashing like a lot of federated websites seem, or is there any thought behind it?

 

It's always particularly nice and soft the first time you put it on, but the one I got most recently is so bad it leaves a thin but thorough coat of black fur on my arms when I take it off. What's the production methods used when making sweaters like this?

 

Isn't that supposed to only happen on Posts>All>New? Shouldn't Active/Hot posts require some existing engagement before appearing?

Does lemm.ee sometimes sync with federated instances, which is when new content floods en masse?

This is one of the experiences I've had that makes Lemmy feel far more janky than reddit.com/r/all

 

"help" just means "a conversation"

and that really doesn't make a difference

worse, it's like you're saying "If you have cancer, treatment is available." but what you're actually offering is a daily bowl of fairly healthy soup. you're running exaggerated, optimistic advertising.

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