@shaztrot going with this as it was first preference (although i do love the idea of the wooloo one as well!)

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@shaztrot
@shaztrot going with this as it was first preference (although i do love the idea of the wooloo one as well!)

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hey @ Dwarf Fortress players, are there any major differences between Classic and the paid Steam release that i should consider as a first-time player? obviously theres a tileset in the Steam release where Classic is only ASCII, but idk anything deeper about the game and im not sure if its such a difference as a first-timer that i should opt for the full game ahaha
Aside from the tileset, the premium version has an actual mouse-based UI. You can click things to interact with them or hover over them to observe them. This, I think, is the Steam release's biggest feature, bigger than the graphics. The free version is 100% keyboard driven through menus, and that includes, like, selecting things to look at them.
Also, the official tileset has a leg up over free ones you could download simply because it has layers. You can see what is above or beneath an object on a tile with your actual eyeballs rather than inspecting the tile to see what else is on there besides the one thing it decided to show. You could very well not notice if that tile with a dwarf on it also has a barrel of cloth goods, a silver crown, a boulder of limestone, a dozen raw emeralds, a dead unicorn, and an engraving on a platinum floor tile.
Classic DF is still the same whole game, to be clear, but most people will have a lot less fun in trying to get started interpreting the space, and it just simply isn't as information-dense in the contexts where it most counts.
我在靈界上受夾板氣,天真靈魂從四面八方面臨“spiritual buttmogging”的妖氛攻擊
ok my little VN piggy. you're doing great. after you're done with this route, you'll have to finish the other two. and remember, you won't cum until you show me the 100% CGS complete award, okay?
goddess this game is ass
you want mommy to kill herself
I remember the ai saber sandwich post, so you didn't just imagine it, but I could not help you find it
It was found! But nowhere near as technical as I had remembered it. Still interesting, though!

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Fixed my name chat...
It's now Maddie :3 (not legally... yet)
An old school hobbying question: did everyone always base their miniatures "like that" in the 80s and 90s, at least for warhammer and adjacent properties? Whenever I see old photos of minis or see someone painting minis to early Warhammer specifications, they always follow a very narrow design sensibility for basing: covered in either sand or flock, painted to resemble a field of grass, optionally given tufts of model grass to represent taller foliage, model standing straight-on. Occasionally it's dry or yellowed, but pretty much always to that formula. No shade whatsoever there - a lot of these pieces are beautiful and it's a system that works in the absence of a global fantasy miniatures market - but I know that a lot of these hobbyists and professionals were skilled and creative enough to do whatever they want. Did nearly all minis look like they were standing on the grassy knoll that killed JFK or am I just not looking hard enough?
I never used the bright green sand method. I always compared it to standing on a perfectly manicured putting green. It just didn't look like a battlefield to me. In the 90s I used a mix of natural sand and gravel with sparse additions of mixed green and brown flocking, with a medium green or tan rim, to look like rougher ground that might have been trampled by troops. To this day I still prefer a relatively low profile to the texture material, and I won't perch a model for gaming on a tall plinth of rubble like you see in painting contests.
I went down the rabbit hole (here, here, and here) to find the specific origin of the Goblin Green bases drybrushed Sunburst Yellow that every YouTuber insists was the oldhammer method, but it really wasn't a universal thing through the eras of Rogue Trader and Warhammer Fantasy 3e. The earliest I can find it explicitly spelled out is the 16-page 1989 White Dwarf Presents: Citadel Miniatures Painting Guide:
Here Woodland Green is the main color and Goblin Green is one of two shading options, and the rim has been left black.
Plain green bases match plain green felt tablecloths better, especially when photographing for publication That's probably why GW gradually started showing more examples of similar simple green bases through the late 80s and early 90s. Even then the instructions weren't always consistent. As late as the 1993 Warhammer Fantasy 4th ed rulebook Mike McVey says to use sand this way but to paint and drybrush simply "green."
(Update: Found the even simpler 'Goblin Green drybrushed Sunburst Yellow' method in Mike McVey's 1992 update to this painting guide. John Blanche introduced the 1989 version above.)
Umineko is Japanese for "Catfish"
and sea lion is english for lionfish
chicken jokey
something that gets lost in translation when imageboard screencaps are reposted on tumblr is that when the op responds to a reply with something like "yeah? I'm gay, so what" that is absolutely fucking not op saying that
As someone who doesn't use 4chan and the like, I'm confused by what exactly this means? Any chance you're willing to explain?
Barring certain exceptions, posts are anonymous at the user-end. On many boards, you have no particular reason to believe that anybody in particular isn't either talking to themselves or isn't actually a dozen separate people doing a bit.

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Imagine that a century or two from now, the eastern half of the United States is conquered by the Canadian Empire, its intelligentsia deported, its land colonized by Canadian immigrants, and its remaining people mostly gradually absorbed into a Neo-Canadian identity. The West reorganizes, developing a new political and cultural center, and comes to regard itself as the "true" United States, with the remnant culture of the East (by now much changed by Canadian rule) as representing an unchanged tradition stretching back to the time of George Washington. The holdout western half is subsequently conquered by the Reformed Mexican Empire, and while most of the population remains in situ, its elite is taken to Mexico City. There, for three or four generations, they do their best to maintain their distinct American identity, focusing on the American "civil religion," the distinctive political ideals and cultural features that mark them out as Americans, and come up with a new way of interpreting their history that allows America to be a perennial idea, something not directly physically tied to the territory of the United States, which no longer exists. They compose a body of historical works based on Washington Irving's rather fabulistic approach to early American history, the half-remembered popular versions of the stories of Columbus and the Pilgrims, the First Thanksgiving, even the Revolutionary War. They don't have access to the original texts anymore--let's say this is all taking place in a post-Collapse North America where long-range travel and communication is difficult and a lot of history has been lost--but they do their best. They append to these books, or include in their text, of history a copy of the Constitution, big chunks of the United States Code, and Robert's Rules of Order.
Subsequently, the Empire of Gran Columbia invades, conquers southern and central Mexico, and its Emperor lets the captive Americans go home. They return north, mostly to California, find that the version of American history and civics that is remembered there isn't the same as the version they have (not that the Californian one is correct--the Mexican Empire has suppressed English-language education and high culture in its Aztlani provinces), and set about reforming and reorganizing the Western States (as they're now called) to be more in line with the forms they brought back from the exile. In the meantime, other bits of important literature start being kept in libraries next to copies of the received histories: some bits of early American literature, like Hawthorne, the Song of Hiawatha, some highly abridged Herman Melville, Thomas Paine--heck, even some John Locke, and quotes or fragments from Shakespeare. Some traditionalists now argue the capital of the United States has always been located in San Francisco, and that Washington, D.C. only because the capital later, under the influence of Eastern heretics.
In the following centuries, the Western States retain their independence for a time, but eventually become a secondary battleground for a lot of other empires--the Mexicans, the Canadians, the Pan-Pacific Federation, and so forth. American culture remains distinctive, insulted in part by its unique traditions, though now everybody speaks Future Spanish, and only learns English to read the old texts. In this period additional material, including later compositions, continues to accrete, forming a distinct body of sacred American scripture, although it does not exist in a single canonical form. Attempts to reconcile distinct sources, like more literal and historically-grounded accounts versus the simplified narratives of figures like Irving, produce hybrid texts that sometimes are full of internal conflicts.
Oh, and through all this, some institutions of American government like the Supreme Court still function, although their rulings only apply to Americans, and there isn't much in the way of a federal bureaucracy.
Finally the Great and Sublime Brazilian Potentate conquers most of the Americas, sets up an American client state that roughly coincides with the heartland of the old Western States (California, Oregon, most of Washington and Nevada), and allows the Americans to elect their own President (subject, of course, to Brazilian approval). During this period, an apocalyptic street preacher from Los Angeles claims to have inherited the authority and power of George Washington, and is executed by the Brazilians; his later followers point to the prophecies of Emperor Norton, and out-of-context bits of a Quebecois translation of Moby-Dick and some Mark Twain stories to say no, really, he was George Washington. Inexplicably, a version of this religion becomes the dominant faith of the Brazilian Empire before it collapses. But long before then the American state in California fails, crushed when it tries to revolt against Brazilian rule; the remnant Easterners likewise dwindle down to only a few hundred souls living in a village in Alexandria, Virginia. Centuries from now, as the descendants of the descendants of the Brazilians colonize Mars, they will point to the sacred Americanist scriptures, the Neo-Americanist narratives of their prophet's life, and the letters written by the early leaders of Neo-Americanism, and say, "all of this was written by the spirit of George Washington, and is free from contradictions." Meanwhile the remnant Americanists, who have been writing about Americanism and how it applies to their everyday lives in the centuries since, and whose commentary has formed around the copies of the last editions of the U.S. Supreme Court Reporter (SCOTUS managed to outlast the final American state by a hundred years or so) plus the thoughts of the remaining Americanist community in Mexico, continue to regard their traditions as the unbroken and unaltered practice of American culture, politics, and ideals as they existed since the Revolutionary War.
This is, as far as I can tell, approximately how the Bible was composed.
Hey, check out this fuckin' sick-ass weird bird I found
🐧
what is that freak i love it
there's a gossamer thread connecting "i can haz cheeseburger" to "lets X with mama" as they float through the cosmos
Let's inherit the unending chain of history from mama
This must feel SO good if you're a railroad track
Post This Rin

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Polyamorous prison guard constructing a sort of cuck panopticon.
ohh girl you are a today Becuase a you are am October
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Woman