DanCopeland
DanCopeland
DanCopeland

*pushes glasses up nose* ACTUALLY, Akira was the source of the previous singularity, Shakira is dressed as Kaneda. /nerdpedantry

It's not either-or. Plate armor uses layers of padding beneath the plates, strategic removal or reshaping is all that would be needed for women with smaller breasts, and may not even be necessary; something akin to a sports bra would certainly "squish" them out of the way. For women with larger breasts, one would

Not necessarily. Plate armor would slow an arrow significantly but not necessarily prevent penetration, depending on the arrow's velocity. Primary advantage of plate mail versus arrows is that it and the padding beneath would absorb enough of the impact to lessen penetration into the torso, as well as possibly

Arrows wouldn't really be redirected in that manner. A straight-on shot would likely penetrate where it hit, deflection in any direction would most likely prevent penetration into the armor. The big worry would be bladed weapons being redirected towards center of mass, or crushing weapons driving the center into or

Kill yourself, spammer.

Slotoise

Batman isn't the only wealthy industrialist, not even the only one in Gotham. And most of the people who encounter him don't see all the gadgets. You're assuming all the clues are there because you're examining the situation from the outside, you can see all the clues that you think everyone in the actual stories

I meant more in a general sense, since while the response here has been sympathetic it'd be easier to rally a lot of the general public against policies like this by pointing out the danger to them than it would be to make it about her.

Not sure how much sympathy most people might have for her, despite that she clearly deserves sympathy, but maybe it needs to be shouted far and wide that Subway's policy is apparently to put all of their customers at risk of serious illness just to keep their employees slaving away.

Evil, meet sword! Sword, meet EVIL!

I'm not sure to what extent they're related, if they're along the same spectrum or affecting completely different parts of the brain, it may be that they're functionally related. What I've found says that there's a lot of variety in how it manifests, some people just have slight trouble reading numbers, others have

Just got finished playing through this, and thought it was...good. Not amazing, but enjoyable. The combat could have been tighter, and I wasn't a fan of the switch to vertical instead of gridded challenges, but the story was much more coherent than City while still keeping a more open feel to where you could explore.

Does it matter?

Today is just not my day for recognizing tongue—in-cheek humor. Sorry for that.

Link him to some of the sites that discuss it, if you haven't already. Easier when you have documentation.

It's a meme...

My family turns to me for all sorts of trivia, political discourse, philosophizing, etc.

My spatial is pretty good, but I have to use other things/people to track time and days.

I don't know if a particular test would pick it up, what I've been able to find says that there's a variety of symptoms that may be signs of it. I actually hadn't even realized until doing a bit more research that my difficulties with processing what people are saying to me were related to it, I've just always had to

Dyscalculia is a thing that exists, though I'm unsure exactly how it relates to dyslexia. Very intelligent people can have endless trouble with numbers because the brain refuses to read them properly. So someone like yourself can be perfectly bright and still have trouble counting back change. Personally, I can't read