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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/)J
Posts
1
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2921
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • Yeah I think I filtered out like anime or hentai or something years ago, so I don't see that kind of game anymore.

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    I dunno

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  • You're not listening to me and I don't think you're worth listening to. Go away. Goodbye.

  • In my imagination, some sort of referral/voucher system might work. A invites B, B invites C. C turns out to suck. Ban C, discredit B heavily and discredit A lightly. Enough discredit and you get banned or can't invite more people.

  • A well written review will detail why they thought it was good, so the reader can think about if those reasons would make it enjoyable for them.

    Unfortunately, most people are semi literate and writing at that level is a challenge

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  • I like and respect teachers, but I'm a software developer and I'm telling you that adding extra parenthesis often adds clarity and makes the whole process smoother. You exist in a whole other context that has norms and assumptions that do not apply to what I'm talking about.

    You being technically correct is irrelevant.

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  • Adults who have forgotten the rules who I work with and read/write code where it's important. In the real world.

    This is like some pure maths vs real life engineering cliché.

    You're either being deliberately obtuse or you're painfully naive.

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  • Scheduling, mostly. The classic big bad of DND.

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    I dunno

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  • That’s because it’s already clear as is, as per the rules of Maths.

    More people evaluate 2+3x4 incorrectly than 2+(3x4). So, no, your answer does not hold up to my observed reality. You can throw as many "well technically" and "well actually" as you want, but that's not going to fix the bug or make a pr.

  • Used hinge. It's the least bad, as of this year anyway.

    Most people who use dating apps are, frankly, bad at it. People send garbage messages with garbage profiles. People half-ass it and expect the other folks to carry the whole thing. I feel like I could write a short book on how to do it better.

    Condensed into like three bullet points it's

    • Ask questions. Do not dead-end the conversation and expect them to do all the work
    • actually ask them out. Like, in the first conversation after you clear any must-have deal breakers (eg: if you have a kid)
    • put stuff you want to talk about in your profile. Don't be "clever" and respond to "what are you looking for?" with "my keys". This is where you give the other person topics to talk about. (Also if you are tired of people asking about the stuff you put in your profile, change it you doofus.)

    Being "an introvert" doesn't excuse you from being present and engaged. The other person isn't going to be that interested in someone who responds every couple hours with "lol". If you can't muster up the energy to have a real conversation, you aren't ready to date.

  • Ok so you're probably correct but I also like seeing the opposite of the usual "omg socialism everyone in NYC is already dead!!!"

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  • Part of that falls under the "don't show up when invited" umbrella, but mostly that sucks. I'm sorry you feel like your efforts and friendship efforts weren't appreciated.

    I've definitely had a couple friends ("friends") that were lopsided. I remember posting about one way back in the 2000s on some web forum, and a guy with a otter(?) avatar told me "This guy, that flakes on your plans and only shows up when it works for him? He doesn't respect you. Don't put up with that". Good advice from a small furry animal, I think.

    Some people just aren't worth it. Maybe they were in the past. Maybe they will be again. But I find it's important to have boundaries for oneself. It can be hard to balance.

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  • I always wanted to get one of my lawyer friends to play a devil in a DND game I ran. Just have him write the worst contracts for the players that are more air tight than I can come up with.

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  • A lot of our behaviors and coping mechanisms come from our parents. So if they’re lonely and have no friends, you should examine why that is, and try to change it in yourself.

    One of my friends realized after therapy they had a lot of behaviors from their dad. Stuff they hated when their dad did (lashing out when uncomfortable, mostly). Once they saw it, they were able to work on it. Before that, it had been a real source of friction with friendships.

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  • Hah, a different ex that I'm still friends with responded with "you rank us??"

    No, there's not a full ranking. I'm still good friends with 2, there's a lot of ones I have no hard feelings about, and then there's this one stinker.

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  • "go home and look at Instagram" is largely a stand-in for "I'm tired and can't muster the energy to do anything that feels more effortful".

    In my limited experience, the trick to getting out of the hole is doing the hard thing anyway. That and professional advice and medication as appropriate. You can't to my knowledge willpower your way out of clinical depression. But ultimately if you want out of the hole, you have to climb out, regardless if that means therapy, medication, or being mildly uncomfortable. It's not going to fix itself.

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  • I usually recommend Meetup or similar. There's a bunch that are just get togethers for board games or whatnot.

    But you have to keep going. I think people expect to like go once and make a new best friend and partner. You usually need a lot of interactions to level up from "stranger" to "person I see sometimes" to friend.

    I also ran a small meetup for a while before the pandemic. Made a few friends that way, but it's a lot of thankless work.

  • Additionally they have to have time to play it.

    And money to buy it! Wages are down. I was unemployed for a while so I just didn't buy any games (or much else)

  • I leave reviews when the game does something exceptional (good or bad). Or sometimes when steam nags me to leave a review.

    It's funny: if you leave a negative review and keep playing it asks you if you want to change your review.

  • Been living without a car for (oh no I'm old) almost two decades. It's pretty great. NYC is a rare city in the US with good public transit.

    I wouldn't willingly move somewhere that needed a car for day to day. I don't care if it's a little cheaper or there's "more space". I like density and walking places.