Iirc, we even have evidence of wars fought between the inhabitants of the different hills of rome, implying that it is such a good place for a settlement that multiple groups settled there before growing too large to be supported by the resources available on their hill alone.
CatoPosting
You're welcome for that knowledge of your limitations comrade :D
That's cool as hell
I can visualize just fine, but literally cannot imagine smells. It makes adding full sensory fluff to tabletop games frustrating, and makes me get confused when authors do it to any great extent.
some people can actually hallucinate at will
Wait, what? I finished a BS in psychology and they never taught me THAT?! Please, give me readings to devour on this subject.
I want to vacation inside your head, please and thank you
I once played a Tabletop RPG where one of the NPCs was an annoying, opinionated AI who refused to do work beyond what he calculated his level of keep was, but who would freely criticize the plans and opinions of anyone he found it amusing to in a gratingly sarcastic way.
Eventually, I stated having thoughts in his voice commenting on my actions unbidden. It was rather surreal. Truly though, I'm a bit sad it ceased some months after the game ended.
I think that's Fable 3, 2 just either killed your wife and dog or all the townspeople.
Beyond that, true, though I liked that you could easily get there by being a king that guitar hero'd around the kingdom to buy all the houses and lower their rents while raising the rents on businesses.
Out of sheer bullheadedness I've gotten the very good ending in a save where I immediately lowered all working class rents to the minimum, lowered poor shops and middle class homes somewhat, and raised the riches rents as high as possible.
I have real soft spots for the Ghost from Star Wars Rebels and the Normandy from Mass Effect.
For the Ghost though, I really love its strange shape, the WW2 bomber tail gun, and the attached shuttle. It's both so typically Star Wars and yet still new.
As an American, I can tell you most Americans need a decades worth of lectures on our own history because we are thoroughly propagandized to believe anything but.