It is time
>>96500986Any filename joke that starts with the word "typical", "average" or the likes is not a good joke. You are just posting a funny gif.
>>96501286I know this is triggering but I don't know how beyond kobold bulge
>>96501542Heheh i remember
>>96501034
>>96501480Are they wrong?Also had to recreate this .gif...
>>96501514>Fortune>"WE WERE ACTUALLY GASLIGHTING YOU THE WHOLE TIME WEHEHEHE YOU CAN'T MOVE MISSILES IT WAS ALL MAKE BELIEVE">she actually just moves missiles with the power of make-believe>dies without any further explanationListen man, this Campaign runs on Vibes. This is a Vibe-based exp system. We don't roll dice anymore, we only Vibe. That's how Tabletop Stealth Action would feel.
>>96502344The closest game I've found to a Metal Gear system is FIST.
>>96502353seems like it hooks more into >>96501480 than the first Strand-type tabletop game.Martin Mystery was better
>>96502663
>>96499701?
>>96502694
>>96503256you can just unscrew it to open the lock, 0 skill involved
>>96501471It's implying all weapons should deal equal damage sinply because they kill things equally. It's a butthurt spear troon masking their asspain towards Greatsword chads.
>>96499581FASA Shadowrun really was best Shadowrun
>>96501480
>>96501471lets count the ways>it's wrong about every statement>it's clearly drawn by a gay furfag>look at those tiny feet lmao
>>96501471Because a lot of medieval realism and pseudo-realism fanatics can't grasp the idea of the weapons being situational and the fantastical nature of the setting creating a niche for fantastical weapons and armour.
>>96499581
>>96501629What the fuck is this?
>>96504848Lovecraft Country, a HBO show from a while back.There is an episode where a character gets lost in time and space, and one bit has them in some weird hypertech future.
>>96504006My grandpa was born in 1925. He grew up in New England on a farm with no electricity. I remember we were at a family gathering for the Super Bowl (a bunch of cheer-leaders in skimpy outfits were dancing on the TV in our air-conditioned living room) in 2018. I asked my grandpa, "Hey, grandpa. What's it been like going from a New England farm with no electricity, to... this?"All he said was, "Boy... it has been exciting."
>>96505387I think about this occasionally in regards to the internet and our high connectivity society. In the late 80s and early 90s, I left home to go to the nearby town to have fun without any sort of way to contact my parents short of a payphone; I had no real safety net beyond the kindness of strangers giving me a hand if my car had trouble or anything else. If I wanted to know about something esoteric, I physically visited a library and looked up a book that held information on that topic. I had zero idea what other countries were like in a day to day sense except for the ones I personally traveled to, no way to just talk with random people from anywhere in the world to get an idea what was going on.Perhaps I'm playing it up too much or maybe we just don't realize how much our lives changed when things like the internet and smartphones came into proliferation, but I'd say it's almost as big of change as the introduction of the automobile or electricity.
>>96505581No, its major. Even as someone BORN in the 80s/90s, the difference is huge. I remember floppy disks and dialup internet, computers that work on MSDOS and being told to never give out your real name to anyone online.Now everyone else lives their lives with all of their personal data handed out at the door with no hesitation, and it horrifies me. They don't feel like they are giving up any privacy, because they never were taught to expect it in the first place.
>>96505581>but I'd say it's almost as big of change as the introduction of the automobile or electricity.I think it is quite a bit bigger since while those make the world a smaller to travel, the internet made it fit on your desk or in the palm of your hand.
>>96505605Yeah, it's uttterly bizarre how one website's policies irreparably damaged internet etiquette. Pre Facebook, you generally didn't want to use Identifying info online and the people who did so, and posted their entire life online, were weirdos. Then at some point it flipped and now you're a weirdo if you DON'T do that shit.And yet, even though everyone's life is online, people have gotten worse at understanding "Holy shit different countries/cities/whatever are different"
>>96505605>>96506070It is so bizarre going from growing up with "never give out any personal information" hammered into basic netiquette to "here is my face, my address, my apartment number, my job, etc. wooooo" that is today. It triggers so much "this is incredibly stupid and dangerous why are you doing this" feelings from me.
>>96506107I mean, there is a certain retarded logic in it. If one person goes into a cage with a hungry tiger. They're going to get eaten.If a hundred go in, each has a 1% chance to get eaten.If a million people go into a cage with a hundred hungry tigers... well nearly all of them will be fine. So what's the problem?Of course you could just, you know, not go into the cage, but apparently you're some kinda sketchy weirdo if you do that.
>>96506136And it is getting harder to avoid a change being made around you with cookie tracking and shadow profiles being made either by facebook or ad companies.
>>96502694i remember having a version of this in 2012 that had each frame last 2 seconds... they don't make em like they used to
>>96505387That's a pretty lame story. I thought your gramps would say something funny.
>>96501286Lesbian top, bi top, gay bottom, respectively.
>>96503792
>>96506428>they don't make em like they used toI mean, there's that one toxic holocaust yuri gif that's like 10 minutes long... equal parts impressive and abominable.
>>96505387man, imagine that. he saw some of the greatest achievements of the nation and some of the greatest failures as well. he saw it all in his lifetime. and unlike the stereotype, he was enjoying the ride.See, this is why I don't see Immortality as a curse at all because when you achieve immortality (in a game or a fictional narrative), you have the privilege to understand that life is a spectator sport to you now.Honestly, If i were to make an immortal character for a setting, he'd be the kind of character that's been alive for so long he's not interested in interacting with the mundane, but he understand that he has to keep in touch with that part of life. he'd be a chronicler for a nation, a bureaucrat who's duty is to write records of everything that happens so future generations can come to him and he can give them books on events that happened in such and such year. like an immortal record keeper.
>>96506136Tiger gets to eat one person at a time, big corpo can mass-process data at millions of entires a second. Snake oil salesman could address crowd of few hundreds, targeted ads and engineered product reviews have no such limitation.That said, internet and AI are not the enemy, they are just tools, tool used to great effect by people who would tell fortunes and peddle saint's relics made of chicken bone if they were born few centuries earlier.
>>96507105>and unlike the stereotype, he was enjoying the ride.I'd like to believe most people enjoy the ride. It's just that those who like to complain happen to be the most vocal...
>>96507078
>>96507118In fact some might have enjoyed the ride tad too much...