Texas is full of liberals. They congregate in the triangle, though, so it’s easy to get confused about Texans.
Texas is full of liberals. They congregate in the triangle, though, so it’s easy to get confused about Texans.
Progressive Texans are better at talking about progressive issues than anyone else I know, I honestly think it’s because they have so much practice!
There are quite a few of us and always have been (John Henry Faulk, Molly Ivins, Bill Moyers). Being in this right-wing lunatic asylum masquerading as a state tends to make left-of-center types a feistier bunch.
For all the talk of the younger generation being a bunch of “Snow Flakes” we’re really just a bunch of people raised to see the value in EVERYONE. Ya know? Probably the first generation raised on “inclusion of all” being a strong principal of our education.
It’s likely not coincidental. Once one person in a group or organization speaks up, especially if they are of high status, others get the courage to do so too. It’s sort of a reverse bystander effect. If everyone ignores something, most people will also ignore it, but if one person calls attention to a problem )of any…
If you live here and pay attention, Dallas provides plenty of opportunities to get “woke” up.
THERE ARE DOZENS OF US!
Not a video game but you might enjoy Descent: Journeys Into Darkness. It’s a board game and its pretty sweet.
I’m not sure how good the app is, but I’m sure it’ll be fine for learning and such. With one person playing as the Overlord, it becomes a more interactive game. One thing to keep in mind is that I hear the Descent can possibly become rather one-sided, so just like D&D it is imperative for the DM/GM/Overlord to…
And I think each quest can take between 45 minutes and 2 hours, depending on how you play.
The base game comes with 20 quests, and that’s before you look into user-generated quests. You might even try your hand in creating your own (and then you’ll be just a hop, skip, and jump away from full-fledged D&D). There’s also this: https://www.fantasyflightgames.com/en/news/2013/1/11/announcing-the-descent-quest-va…
Yeah, you’re basically describing Divinity.
As others are saying, Baldur’s Gate would be a decent starting point, but as an avid D&D player and game master, I haven’t gotten into it or enjoyed my time trying to go back to play it.
D&D in video game form is significantly different from the tabletop experience. That said, if you wanted to “try out” D&D as a video game I’d suggest Baldur’s Gate. Or actually any fantasy RPG since, well, video games came to be because they all took their cues from D&D.
Divinity is the closest. butt he thing that any video game would have a hard time replicating is the interaction between multiple people. In combat it’s replicated well, but outside of combat you can’t yet get the experience of playing off of another person’s character.
We hold athletes to a higher standard as examples to kids than the President of our country.
The joke runs a little deeper, because the Hanshin Tigers have a similarly tortured history as the Jets. So you could say also, who in their right mind would root for the Hanshin Tigers? (my Father is an Osaka native and a Hanshin Tigers fan).
Not sure why I didn’t expect a lot of the kotaku fan base to be ultra annoying about this throwaway joke, shame on me I guess.
Because Japanese is a rather profanity-light language (there are, however, tons of ways to be disrespectful and insulting) and more literal translations tend to come across as awkwardly mild.