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soloner
I’ve actually begun boycotting Nintendo around a year ago because I got so sick of them not putting games on sales.
There are only a few games I’m missing, but I was able to play the new Metroid on an Emulator. Tears of the kingdom and Pikmin 4 I am not sure if I will bother emulating or not l, but I definitely am interested in Pikmin 4. Just wish Nintendo could be like valve and others and price games reasonably
I’m glad you brought this up. So my brother tried this and had limited success with it, which made me dismiss the thiught. I love the idea but I’m worried because I like board games but I’m not a “nerd” with them. Do you think I would fit in if I was more of a casual board gamer?
Confirmed there are 16 cans of beans. I counted each one
I’m so rich I don’t cook just doordash and eating out
To add another angle not mentioned: Something I’m not sure of but interested in finding out is if multiple communities allow for better curation than one single large one.
For example, imagine a huge sub like /r/pics. When browsing “new” on that sub, the content goes away and is refreshed with even newer content in practically the blink of an eye. Because sooo many people are posting all at once.
As a result, a lot of good content gets missed in the flood of everything, and you have to rely on time of day and luck to get your post recognized.
OTOH with duplicate communities, the content gets divided and conquered a little bit better. One userbase can browse new on one community, while another userbase can browse and curate content on a similar one. In the end, both communities content don’t get drowned out by the massive volume.
Once a multireddit like feature comes out, users like you and me can identify and group these duplicate communities and be none the wiser browsing all of them at once.
I don’t use the random generated passwords cuz they’re hard to read. And some dumb forms disable copy/paste stuff.
I get all my passwords from usapassphrase.net, and then usually capitalize the words, separated by periods, with 69 appended to the end.
It’s easy to remember or type, and it also typically works for password rules around casing, numbers, and special character inclusion. Plus 4 word passphrases tend to be a lot of characters, providing a nice long password which is good for security.