Yeah, that really brings me back. I had like 4 tokens on Steam to give the game away when they were trying to get more people to play. There was some other hero shooter MOBA a little after that too, by Epic or something. Didn't last very long and wasn't all that great, but I still played the shit out of the falcon character that could "fly". Man, I need to jump into another one of these games.
flamingarms
Oh shit, I hadn't heard of that. I'll definitely check it out; thanks for the recommendation.
It was a hero shooter MOBA but with some verticality, so that's about as far as the Overwatch comparison goes. I had a great time with it. I like traditional MOBAs but don't have the skill/patience/time for them, so hero shooter MOBAs are the perfect way for me to be able to play them more casually. In my opinion, of the few I've tried, Paragon was the best implementation of a hero shooter MOBA; the core gameplay just felt really tight to me.
Or Paragon even. That game was so fun back in the day before it got killed. If anyone can make something that fun again, it's probably Valve.
Can't answer as to why you would buy it again, but for me, I thought about replaying Braid recently only to discover that it was a pretty blurry mess. This looks a lot nicer, and commentary on video game design and development can be really interesting to me, especially since a lot of that is kept behind closed doors still.
Yeah, had to look up the bill, like with so many of these kinds of articles: https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/7888
Since these articles never seem to include the bill, this appears to be it: https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/7888
Love that full flavor profile chart they do too; very cool.
It's dope seeing photos of the farms for some of the single origins. Does it bother anyone else though when roasters don't put information on the farms and farmers on their packaging? I'm glad we've got so much information on the websites; it just seems that it'd be respectful and helpful to have the info on the packages too, like wines do.
To spare others the same googling: 175f = 79.4c, 180f = 82.2c.
What you're doing is called cupping! I've seen it used mostly to set up tastings of multiple different coffees at once. Generally it's recommended to stir the crust at some point so that the grounds fall to the bottom of the cup. Also, you're brewing at a pretty low temp though. Even for dark roasts, I would consider brewing a touch hotter and see what you think.
1zpresso released the J-ultra a few months ago, which is just a J-max with slightly smaller adjustments and something like a 1/6th lighter. It's highly regarded for espresso and does a great job for filter coffee. But it definitely creates more fines than a grinder specifically for filter coffee, so heads up there.
"...because you don't understand sourdough"
Made me spit up my coffee.