Ethereal87

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
 

Our little one (18 months) started swim lessons about a month ago, so we're learning all about swim diapers and trying to avoid an accident until we get to the pool. We've changed in the locker rooms and got in the habit of just putting the swim diaper on in the trunk upon arrival. With a wiggly kid, that's just a pain but we dealt with it.

Last week, my wife was in the water and I stayed in the chairs where I overheard two of the other moms talking and one had an awesome suggestion we hadn't thought of. Put on the swim diaper at home, then put a regular diaper on over the swim diaper and take off the regular diaper upon arrival. Keeps everything contained, makes changing a lot easier, and we're in the pool a lot faster.

Curious to see what the community has and see if we can get some knowledge sharing in! What else have you got?

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

I mean, the charitable read is the CEO of the company reassuring the entire company that they'll be OK. That's his entire job. Yes, it's a pretty crappy thing to say but we all weren't the intended audience. He's there to rally the troops and keep morale up.

That said, fuck u/spez and I'm way happier over here than there.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago (2 children)

/r/Games basically said they wouldn't close up because it's Summer games news week so why hurt the people coming to the subreddit? But also some kind of "we stand with the blackouts so we'll make some very light changes in protest".

I've generally liked and preferred Games to other choices on Reddit, but it showed they just didn't care. Went ahead and unsubscribed because of that weak response.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Daily Dadish (iOS linked) has been a cute daily platforming challenge. Outside of super tricky levels, I can usually get the "best" time to collect the star in 10m or so, and the controls are pretty solid for being a touchscreen.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

I know! I tried re-playing it on my Steam Deck recently and I just struggled to make the controls feel good, but I have debated re-installing it on my PC and diving back into it!

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

I tried to use Reddit over old.reddit and I was OK with it for a while, but I gave up when topics with barely any engagement would show up at the "top" in my feed and I would get suggestions from other subreddits that I wasn't a part of.

I can adapt to a UI given time and I did like some aspects of their new layout. I'm not on board with desperately trying to fill my feed with "something new" every time I visit the site though because sometimes I want to follow up on a topic from earlier. It just kept burying things and I switched back to old.reddit after maybe six months of trying the new one.

For the sake of the app developers, I hope Reddit reverses course, sets a more reasonable cost, or the devs find ways to hook into something like Lemmy so they can keep doing what they do best. That said, I'm happy to have found a much better community in the whole process :)

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

Alright, not much to go off of but I'll try based on my playtimes and exclude some very popular games.

  • Cook Serve Delicious (1, 2, or 3, my wife and I have probably 400h between the two of us). A fast moving cooking game that tests your dexterity. If you want to understand the flow of the game, I personally recommend trying CSD1 on an iPad if at all possible since the touch controls help you understand the flow of the game, then once you know the flow, you add in a keyboard or controller in CSD2 or 3. 3 is my personal favorite.

  • Cassette Beasts (51h). Pokemon always has a special place in my heart and I've bounced off other games that try to emulate it. Cassette Beasts hooked me with their creature designs and awesome soundtrack.

  • Zero Sievert (33h, Early Access). I haven't messed around with the big name extraction shooters like Tarkov or Hunt, but the appeal of a single player third person top down extraction shooter with a pretty cool style surprised me at how much I enjoyed it. The only reason I put it down was to save up for whenever it eventually releases.

  • Heat Signature (31h). Very run based, but the whole idea is you have to infiltrate ships all over the galaxy and accomplish your assigned objective on that ship. Maybe you need to hijack it, maybe you need to capture/kill someone, there's a lot of options. The fun really came with weird scenarios where you'd have to find unusual answers like breaking a window to launch yourself into space with your target and get scooped up by your ship, or hack the turrets and lure the enemies into a kill box.

  • Griftlands (18h). Card game similar to Slay The Spire where you build up your deck and get progressively more powerful against more dangerous enemies. The part I thought was cool is you can try to negotiate with your enemies just as easily as fighting them. Negotiation has it's own separate deck you can boost up over time.

  • Everhood (12h). A weird exploration and rhythm game with some good humor injected. I can't even really tell you what exactly happened since it's been a minute since I played it, but all I know is it got really philosophical and after it ended, I felt almost hollowed out at how beautiful/profound it was.

  • Antichamber (11h). A portal-like game that plays with spatial puzzles and navigating an ever shifting labrynth.

I could list out a ton more, I love these smaller and weirder types of games, but hopefully something sounds good!