fisfulofdice
FistfulOfDice
fisfulofdice

It’s amazing to think how much of and influence Sir Terry’s works have had on me since I lucked into a copy of Light Fantastic after reading a review of it in an old issue of Dragon Magazine.

There’s just something special about a guy who complained about and criticized the president for eight years getting the job and being honestly confused that people are complaining about and criticizing him.

I said it before the Kinjapocalypse, time to start saying it again: as soon as the idea that every potential disagreement point was “debatable”, regardless of morality or reflective of the real world it is, we were fucked.

The people who aren’t worried about an apocalypse are the ones who think they’re going to be Immortan Joe.

Marvel’s been doing a retrospective on their website, but yeah it’s not the same.

Well, yeah, if you want to look at the actual numbers...

Every time something like this happens, regardless of who did it, I like to imagine there’s a “Things The Youths Of Today Are Into” wheel with all these pop culture things written on it that some 70-year-old guy spins to see what they’re going to try and use to appeal to the current generation. 

They’re totally “with it”.

I feel it’s more like someone took a library, threw out the card catalog, and then just laid all the books and magazines in a long row in the order they were added instead of grouped by any sort of category.

Yeah, nothing about this is an improvement so far.

You can make a burner account and insult him; I’m guessing that’s the new downvote.

It also doesn’t look like you can browse by content series (World of Flops, Top Ten, History of Violence) or just go through a TV series’ reviews anymore.

Christ I can’t even see if my comments are loading. What the fuck?

Wow, I hate this already.

Gentlemen, it's been an honor.

WAIT! I can explain.

oops

Have to admit, I got a good chuckle out of having to look up the name of Matt Frewer's character on Wikipedia.

If you stop paying attention to the sun, it'll just go away.

To paraphrase Sir Terry Pratchett, who was so often right about these kinds of things: you have to keep people with those kinds of minds occupied, otherwise they could get up to anything.