It sounds like a show made by committee. I imagine the executives came up with a premise by researching what has been successful on the internet and then hired a bunch of people from those things to cobble it all together.
I couldn’t beat the Megaman solo fight as well. I went overboard on farming the robot masters wyrmprints. I ended up making 4 max unbound copies of each of them.
There are all sorts of weapons and gear to collect. It’s enough to make a guy who swore he’d never play Dragalia Lost again poke his head back in, dammit.
GrubHub is doing this to somehow make money. We don’t actually know the precise mechanism but the lack of transparency with the involved restaurants implies that something shady, if not outright illegal, is going on.
I’ll admit the changes sound nice but I don’t know if I can trust myself to play again without feeling obligated to play instead of playing for fun.
Don’t tempt me with that crossover event. I played Dragalia Lost almost every day shortly after it launched. At a casual player, I made decent progress through all of the events despite never spending any of my wyrmite stockpile.
It’s strange that they didn’t incorporate standard things from other MMOs like having players start in different locations in the world. It helps to diffuse the player base and makes the experience less linear.
Dole has a modified version you can make at home.
Tamarind is used in the sauce for traditional Pad Thai.
They are also impractical. As literal walls, they obstruct the views of guests on the other side and prevent conversation.
I am too lazy to make mushroom powder myself and use mushroom seasoning. It is salty so you have to be careful about how much you use.
In Mexico, some recipes that use piloncillo (cones of unrefined cane sugar) are written to match the common sizes/weights sold in stores. Instead of grating or chopping the cones, they are just melted and mixed with the other ingredients.
People seem to forget that a lot of dishes were originally just a way to use leftovers. Fried rice is a classic example.
It could be more than just greed. If the game was making so much money, Activision wouldn’t have let Bungie buy the rights back. I suspect that Bungie is at a loss on how to monetize the game and has resorted to following industry trends.
It’s technically fine if you spend enough time to reheat it sufficiently. You are essentially killing off any pathogens if it boils for 10 minutes. The major downside is that any buildup of those dead pathogens makes the flavor get worse over time.
[as an aside, I imagine molding clay and or simple mud into shapes, letting them dry, and using them to hold water/whatever for ONE meal was fairly common. Making long-lasting pottery would have come much later but single use pottery would not have taken the equivalent of a rocket scientist to come up with]
What a nostalgia trip! I haven’t thought about My Side of the Mountain since reading it in school.
Many tribes in California cooked acorn mush with hot rocks in baskets.
But in reality, she writes, those jobs actually paid very little and pitted Black franchise owners against members of their own communities.