Holy shit, I laughed audibly at a meme!
Holy shit, I laughed audibly at a meme!
I’ve spent a lot of time in RPGs, and the last time I RPed in a G was around the time George Bush’s dad was president.
You see, it’s true: Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!
My experience in going from C to C++ was different: if you’re not converting everything from mallocs with custom addressing systems to the collections framework, you’re not living.
They named the bill wrong - it should be Kids’ Act for Online Safety- KAOS.
As opposed to foreign autocrats like Putin buying votes, which is perfectly fine… Perfectly fine.
Herzlichen glückwunsch zum geweedschlagenstag!
My last game was exhausting. Years of cryptic lore, mediocre tie-in properties we pretended were good, pvp you could opt out of midstream by switching off your router, a sandbox that one player characterized as “as wide as the universe and one inch deep.”
So, I thought I’d try something completely different, and that different thing, god help me, is Evony.
Yes, and bring back Chase… Masterson?
What’s the underwater game that came out a few years ago? Your spaceship crashes in the ocean of a cold planet, and you explore and make bases, and solve a mystery… SubZero or something?
Try to train a human comedian to make jokes without ever allowing him to hear another comedian’s jokes, never watching a movie, never reading a book or magazine, never watching a TV show. I expect the jokes would be pretty weak.
I wonder if Lorraine is an actual author or someone OP is mad at.
I was trying to think of one. Lech Walesa came to mind, but it’s doubtful. There was a Romanian president maybe 20 years ago that was a merchant ship officer, who often get f/l qualified (I did), but iirc, he flamed out.
In (d/dx)f(x), d/dx is a symbol that means the derivative of f with respect to x. It’s not a division of two variables. But, the reason the symbol is useful is that you sort of can multiply the dx in some situations.
When I want to see a broken mod, I just surf over to Reddit.
It’s like when customers at West Marine dress up in outfits and call each other ‘Captain.’
ESR: “Every good work of software starts by scratching a developer’s personal itch.”