youhadjustonejob
youhadonejob
youhadjustonejob

I’ve been wondering for a while now how Discord even makes money. I assume selling data, but I can’t imagine it’s enough. There’s no ads, you can buy Nitro or whatever but of the ~100 people I see/interact with, only a couple have it. Their store pretty much crashed and burned I think.

I haven’t played it yet, but in a lot of the videos I’ve seen, the names and basic appearance of cards are used pretty frequently, if not all the time. The header image has a Sporecap Spider in it, which is definitely a Magic card. Screenshots of the deck building interface for spells/abilities looks to have a lot, if

It was an adaptation (if that’s what you want to call it) of an early 2000's YouTube video called We Like the Moon.  One of the first attempts I can remember of a weird internet thing crossing over into the mainstream.

It’s amusing to me how mad people get because Steam won’t put every single sleazy sex game on their platform.

This is where we’re at now.

I’m not the most adamant viewer of the fighting game scene, but pretty much every time I have watched it, they are using Playstations.  I got into watching Injustice 2 and MK11 for a while, and would sometimes check out other games and it’s always Playstation.

Yep. It’s no longer unrealistic when people in horror movies make the obvious bad choice. If anything, movies have been giving us the benefit of the doubt for it only being a small handful of people.

Yeah. I’m in the market for a 3070 and a PS5.

I like the idea of wings more than I like actually eating them.  Even though I like the flavor, I can never kick the notion that I’m eating trash chicken at a premium price, so it always colors my outlook on it.

This isn’t a D&D style game. It’s a hack and slash looter game based in a D&D setting with D&D characters.

It bothers me that people seem to be incapable of recognizing differences within games. There’s people in these comments, ostensibly having read the article, thinking they are getting some kind of D&D style RPG from this game.

Yeah... I started growing a beard a couple years ago after being clean shaven my entire life.  I go through phases - last year when I ended up finally trimming it, I trimmed off about 3" and it was still pretty long.  Earlier this year I trimmed it down to “normal” beard length, and now it’s getting long again.

It guessed me 6 years older than I am, but I also didn’t pick that many things from either list - just more on the second list.

Yeah, we talk about it around the office sometimes. I think even if the technology is closer, we’re still a ways away from autonomous semis. I can see it being used in situations where a truck picks up a load at one terminal and then delivers it to another, but the reality of driving a semi in urban areas is a bit

Right?

THAT’S WHAT!

I only rode the bus for one year, in 8th grade. I was new to the school, but 8th grade was also the oldest grade (no high school kids) so I just kept to myself and everybody else did too. I went to a different high school than the one I was supposed to go to, so my freshman and half of my sophomore years, I just got

Probably more Valheim. My friends and I killed the second boss last weekend, so now we’re working towards the third. I’m also messing around in a solo world, which has been fun. Left to my own devices I apparently build needlessly complex and large structures, so it’s taking me a very long time to reach parity with

That still exists, actually. Most trucking companies will pay for your CDL if you agree to drive for them for some period of time. There’s been a driver shortage for years, and it’s getting worse... companies are doing everything they can to get and keep drivers. Last I heard, a lot of companies were running at

There was a certain amount of romanticism around truckers then - kind of like that the open road, driving around the country made truckers this “everyman” hero, like cowboys who traded in horses and cattle drives for big rigs. They embodied the idea of freedom and working for yourself. The idea of “doing your part”