This guy has never spoken to a gym rat or eboy LMAO. Lots of straight men love masculinity, love maintaining and enhancing their bodies, love their "corporeal existence" as he puts it.
I assume Junji Ito changed it a bit but you can read the original (translated) short story by Edogawa Ranpo here: https://pseudopod.org/2021/08/21/pseudopod-771-the-human-chair/
To answer my own question, I haven't played all the games yet, and I'm biased towards parser games, but I loved To Sea In A Sieve and I think it's a contender for winner. Quirky writing (which seems to be a popular trait among past winners), strong setting, and challenging puzzles. Only possible downside is that the puzzles might be a little too challenging? 🤔
I accidentally lost my progress in Assembly and haven't gotten up to replaying, but what I saw was super promising too.
For me a big thing is that because Lemmy is so small, it's not diverse. It's mostly liberal-to-leftist nerds from America and Western Europe. I roll my eyes and scroll past whenever there's a post about any Asian country because you know it's just gonna be a bunch of foreigners (whose exposure to the country is limited to news headlines) pretending they know anything. And unlike Reddit there are seldom any locals available to set people straight.
Python. It's the only one I know :(
I've been trying to learn C# too but object-oriented programming just slides right off my smooth brain lol.
You can just type "icon pack" into the play store search and install whichever you like. Most of them cost money though.
I did a bit of looking, it's from coffeetears on Newgrounds/Twitter. You can see part of their watermark near the leg.
Unironically even if you can't/don't want to actually socialise yet, just being outside and around other people is better than nothing. It lets you feel like a real person, like you're part of the world.
Energy in gen Z context means vibe.