Soooo....clutz, basically.
- FFVII (and VIII)
- Homeworld
- Shadowrun (Sega Genesis version)
- Parasite Eve
- Wing Commander Series
- Colony Wars: Vengeance
- Gran Turismo 2
- Freespace (can't believe I forgot about that one)
...I'm in my late forties, so pre-2000 was my peak gaming time. As a result the list could go on and on and on....
Because as long as they have us convinced that's it's "left vs right" than we won't be unified enough to fight the real war, which is "Corporations vs the rest of us".
Piggy Does Pittsburgh
Once Kdenlive got its stability issues sorted out, I was shockingly impressed with just how good it's gotten. I still wouldn't put it against DaVinci Resolve or Premiere Pro or anything, but it sits along with Inkscape and Blender as a great example of what Open Source is capable of in a professional setting.
Imperfections are what make things unique and beautiful. Be they people or manufactured items. The fact that each of those jugs is slightly different than the others (not only in size) is something that we've lost in our homogenised, mass produced world and it makes me sad.
Has anyone told him that you first have to have a big dick before you start trying to swing it around?
I'm the guy who is consistently picking up old games that he's always wanted when they go on a steam sale years later for single digits. So I'm constantly three or four (or more years) behind. And I don't really mind because I'm always a single player who doesn't enjoy any form of online multiplayer.
So do I care that I only last month picked up EU4 and a bunch of DLC for cheap, not one bit. Same for Civ 6.
I'll happily chug away at my old games that no one cares about anymore.
A terrible way to die. My grandpa saw a lot of kerning in 'nam. Was never the same after.
Are the vertical lines angled? Or is that just an optical illusion?
It's crazy to me that they've set up a system that essentially requires recidivism in order to keep meat coming through the doors to function, and yet somehow think that that's normal.
2021 GMC Canyon.
I never wanted a truck, but with home ownership and Saskatchewan winters I learned early enough that they do come in handy for renovations and such. Also, the older I get, the less I want to groan getting into and out of a vehicle, so the higher the ride, the better for my back.
But I still didn't want to go full truck (half-tonne). So I compromised and got a quarter-tonne. Useful enough for day to day stuff, but with a V6 engine isn't really any worse on fuel than your average SUV.