That's great and all but how about a remastered Virtual Springfield?
TheMauveAvenger
Most estimates are around 30% for people who use ad blockers. I would guess half or more of those are probably people who had someone else install the ad blocker for them (I personally do it for any family who has me help with their computer) and don't even care about blocking ads. Half of the remaining half would gladly turn off the blocker to keep getting their YouTube fix. So we're left with a tiny percentage of users who would actually be upset about this.
Something tells me they'll be fine and they know more than the tiny population of lemmy, a niche community of people notorious for using free software, pirating paid software, and avoiding corporate media.
For someone who doesn't care and has no viable responses to the questions here, you sure do have a lot to say.
Chopped onions and cilantro qualifies as foodporn these days?
Puerto Rico about to find out what a zone 14 is.
Not cheating anything, just asking questions to define the parameters of the power.
It matters what part of the body the measurement is tied to for start and finish. If it has to be the same point on the body then it's a problem, but if the anchor point can change then there are greater possibilities.
I can put my hand on the door and extend my foot backwards. If my hand is the anchor point to start and my foot is the anchor point to end, then certain parts of my body have teleported more than 7", but in the aggregate at least one part of my whole body is always within a 7" distance from anchor to anchor. That would mean I could teleport my whole body through any solid item that is less than 7" thick.
I think you meant to say Tomira. Thiccest herbalist on the continent.
That really only could be considered even remotely plausible if everyone played online, but most people quickly discovered it was a trash money grab. Otherwise it's no better value than any other story driven single player game.
For real. This building would have most certainly languished for years and then been torn down to be replaced by a cookie cutter development. Instead it has been repurposed in a unique way (by the city, not Amazon) so that it can continue to be used (by many companies, not just Amazon).
It's fun to laugh at the irony, but overall this is a good thing.
Watch the video/gif in the article. It moves in a wave-like pattern in real time so the screenshot doesn't capture what it really looks like.