jamescobalt
jamescobalt
jamescobalt

There are already mods for the second and third and a console command to fix the first.

There are mods for that too. If something feels like it’s breaking your immersion, there’s most certainly a mod for it, immortal children included.

There are multiple mods allowing you to adopt extra children. It’s Skyrim! If something feels artificially limited, you can bet there’s a mod to correct for it.

Yes but you have to kill them first. :-/

I am. And I played through that game largely in stealth mode; no interest in killing anyone if I can avoid it... even though they are just rudimentary simulations.

Weird. Usually my seasonal allergies leave me in bed for a couple weeks but this year has been a breeze so far. Maybe that will change in a week or two? ...we’re a couple hundred miles north of NYC.

I was uncomfortable with some of the glorification of violence... Holy cow how was this not rated R? Because they didn’t drop F bombs or show titties??? My god, America get your priorities straight! Also took minor issue with the physics-defying invincibility of the characters as it removed a lot of tension from the

Favorite grilled cheese fillings? I like tomato, onion, and either pesto or a sauce like Mac Sauce, Thousand Island, or greek yoghurt with Sriracha mixed in. 

I switched to Home Chef after trying Blue Apron, Plated, and others for a few months each. Home Chef’s recipes were on average easier and the portions were more realistic for a meal. Blue Apron and Plated left us hungry.

Class always tells.

This is what I do. I get nearly the same performance at 4K with antialiasing turned off (where it isn’t necessary) as I do at 2560x1440 with antialiasing enabled (where it is). Yet of course everything looks better at 4K, so it only makes sense.

The closest study I’m aware of on this found most people tend to predict their futures will go better than they actually do. The success of a project. Our health. Earnings. The vast majority of people are wrong about how good those things will be.

It’s a good point. That was kind of where I was going - but I don’t think the two sides are equal, objectively. For every great meal you enjoyed for half an hour, there was a lifetime of suffering for another animal. For every product created and transported, the environment was polluted. For every great book printed,

Let’s leave that to someone with the appropriate credentials. I’d hope they’d touch on the idea that being happier by caring less is not necessarily the ethical path to go down, but we’re talking about self preservation here. The ethical path would probably mean dedicating your life to reducing as much suffering as

Compassion is generally intertwined with empathy - how do you see them separated? To me, empathy is the catalyst and compassion is the reaction. Regardless, “compassion fatigue” is a common psychological condition for those intimately aware-of and exposed-to the suffering of others. A Tibetan monk is deeply aware of

Reality is objectively terrible and probably all for nothing. But the reality for realists may be reality isn’t worth caring about much - at least a lot of the negative stuff since it’s out of our control. We are surrounded by suffering every second of the day; more than any one could feel empathy for without dying

The self checkouts at some stores including the one I go to are designed so you can bag your groceries while someone else starts scanning theirs. These ones have little dividers you can swing out to separate the groceries. But these might be bigger than the ones you have; they’re maybe 2/3rds the size of a regular

For what it’s worth, these are almost entirely plastic, so paying extra for the “stainless steel” version is meaningless outside of color matching your other bathroom accessories.

For what it’s worth, these are almost entirely plastic, so paying extra for the “stainless steel” version is

Most of ya’ll are underestimating the cleaning power of soapy water rinsing down your legs and then drying them with a clean towel, while simultaneously overestimating the cleaning power of soap.