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Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: May 31st, 2020

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  • My workplace preinstalls Ubuntu, personally I’m using openSUSE. I don’t even think that Ubuntu is particularly bad, I’m mainly frustrated with it, because it’s just slightly worse than openSUSE (and other distros) in pretty much every way.
    It’s less stable, less up-to-date, less resilient to breakages. And it’s got more quirky behaviour and more things that are broken out-of-the-box. And it doesn’t even have a unique selling point. It’s just extremely mid, and bad at it.




  • They’re not really for me, as I find it difficult to relax while playing them, but I’m glad they exist.

    Gaming had a real identity crisis around the 2000s, when every other game was a brown military shooter.
    Now we’ve got cute games and cozy games and artsy games, and I feel like that opens up the genre to more people and enriches the whole medium.

    Cozy games are more difficult to make, though, because the gameplay is not anymore just “point cursor at screen and click in the right moment”. So, yeah, you will get some worse example, especially as the genre is still figuring itself out.



  • I think, it works kind of well in games where you’re able to enslave/recruit the random encouters (Pokémon, Shin Megami Tensei and such), as it’s then a surprise what you’ll find, somewhat like a slot machine.
    But the way the more recent entries work in these series, that you find out what creatures roam the world by exploring, that kind of works, too.

    More generally, I don’t particularly like the problem that random encounters solve. Which is that you’ve got sections of gameplay where nothing happens, so you throw enemy encounters into there. That also goes for non-random encounters.

    RPGs do this and I used to enjoy RPGs as a form of escapism. But now that I’m doing more stuff in real-life, I want it condensed down in roguelike form, or I’ll just play other genres…




  • It talks about the experience black people with autism have. In particular, it talks about someone with a hyperfixation on deejaying and how the video author relates to those experiences. The video author has a hyperfixation on writing.

    Two notable points that stuck with me:

    • Black autists may not get diagnosed, because they’re less likely to visit psychologists for depression and such. As apparently the family of his put it: Mental health issues are for white people.
    • Autistic behavior quirks themselves got interpreted as white people behavior.