Came here to post this, but I guarantee you they don’t get an affiliate purchase percentage from BB.
Came here to post this, but I guarantee you they don’t get an affiliate purchase percentage from BB.
Came here to post this, but I guarantee you they don’t get an affiliate purchase percentage from BB.
Came here to post this, but I guarantee you they don’t get an affiliate purchase percentage from BB.
That was literally the first thing I thought of. Today I just randomly noticed that I have 220 hours in Witcher 3 for a single playthrough with all expansions. I’m not even at 100% and that would be $275. For that price, anyone considering it might as well just start saving up to build a new PC. I’m pretty sure that,…
I totally get where you’re coming from; like I said, this is all from the perspective of my own way of enjoying games and is more based around cheating myself out of an experience than ‘cheating’ in a more abstract sense.
For the Souls games, I don’t really care about missing cool areas/items/armor because if I do find…
walkthroughs feel like cheating, but I have come to peace with it because companies purposely put obscure items and items ruled by low drop rates and abnormal gameplay to gate interesting content. Dark souls helped me come to peace with this because there is bugger all ways to figure out how they did some npc…
I’ve never transitioned. Likely never will. So no, I don’t understand. I just know the people I know who have gone through it, and how different all of their experiences are.
Just like any large internet community, the majority of people on Reddit are actually decent people. It’s just that the minority of trolls and garbage subreddits make for better clickbait so they usually get the majority of media attention.
This is an extremely flawed infographic for several reasons:
Moreover, you should ALWAYS be suspicious when the phrase "more than" or "times" is used in statistics.
As far as I can tell from the reference list at the bottom of the graphic, all the "studies" are at best correlational and at worst are cherry-picked statistics from various websites. A quick google scholar search does reveal some published academic articles on the subject. Honestly, I could come back with as many…
I'd really like to see what the numerical increase is in risk instead of "fluff" quantification such as "40% increase" and "3 times as likely".
I'm sure sitting all the time isn't good for us, but all this romanticization of how much healthier life was when people worked on their feet all day is heinous. I'm the first desk worker in my family, so I've been around people all my life who have the standing jobs. My mom worked all day in a textile mill and a job…