spunkycomics

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[–] spunkycomics 5 points 5 months ago

Great grandad was buried barefoot

[–] spunkycomics 2 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

A problem with The Witness is that the game’s single biggest excitement comes from a twist that revealing completely spoils

spoilerThe environment puzzles

So it’s stuck in the position of letting 80% of its player base walk right past the best part, or preserving the moment of discovery.

I’m personally grateful it has the integrity to let me find it on my own, but it’s also a bummer since at least two of my friends beat it without ever realizing

[–] spunkycomics 19 points 8 months ago (4 children)

The Witness has a lot of generative puzzles that I guess technically are replayable, but you can’t go back to before the moments of joy of discovery and that’s the core of what made that game incredible to me

[–] spunkycomics 4 points 9 months ago

Thanks for writing all this up! I have a friend group of mixed attention spans and this will be invaluable for next time. Asymmetric instruction is always such an uphill battle

[–] spunkycomics 4 points 10 months ago

Neon White isn’t necessarily low-poly, but it has a dreamcast early-2000’s vibe to the levels

[–] spunkycomics 2 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I’m taking it on two fronts (though admittedly reading right past “inkflowers” and “metal pans”) 1- the literal planet and moon, with the moon eventually drifting out of orbit, overcome by the gravity of some other body 2- a more metaphorical relationship of a girl and her brother. I’m reading it as a family member with special needs or just in need of a caretaker. She uses him to hide in some sense, using the need to caretake as shelter from other things in life. But eventually that brother is gone for some reason or another, and she’s left adapting to the new exposure

Metal pans may be hospital trays/bedpans?

[–] spunkycomics 5 points 1 year ago

It does, but when I click away that pop up at 10am mid-work, I almost always forget to plug it in at 5 later in the day.
I need something present but not intrusive so I don’t just x it out. I always see the pulsing LED on my Logitech mouse, so it’s hard to forget about it entirely

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

Largely agreed, although I specifically just now opened up Lemmy on my phone because my mouse died and I’m having to top it off to make it to my next work meeting. So it’s definitely not not a hassle sometimes.
I love the mouse, but even a tiny red LED visible on the top to remind me of low battery at the end of the day would be great if they’re intent on keeping the bottom port

[–] spunkycomics 3 points 1 year ago

If for any reason you wanted to stick with PHP, Symfony + Doctrine has been a delight to work with. For JS projects I pretty much always go Node for easy startup, but the frontend changes based on project needs and my whims.

[–] spunkycomics 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Happy birthday! I hope the big screen experience was an excellent time

48
Oldboy (2003) Rerelease (self.moviesandtv)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by spunkycomics to c/[email protected]
 

Just watched Oldboy for the first time as part of the 20th anniversary remaster. What a wild ride; so much goofier and fun than I expected.

Several years ago I bounced off The Matrix pretty hard (due largely to “Seinfeld is Unfunny” syndrome) so I was worried this had enough cultural footprint to go the same way since I had seen the octopus and hallway fight scenes before; but by no means was that the case.

Somehow I’ve managed all these years to have nothing about the rest of the plot spoiled and that gut punch hit just as hard as I expect it did in 2003.

The brief interview with Park Chan-wook after the credits was nice too.
Definitely worth going for both existing fans and anyone like me who hasn’t seen it

[–] spunkycomics 16 points 1 year ago (4 children)

The new Futurama season dropped an Apple Maps punchline in the last episode that felt painfully out of date even for our timeline.

I thought the writing had been decent up to that point, which made me realize how bad public perception still must be (on a product that works great now, imo)

[–] spunkycomics 1 points 1 year ago

Just went down a rabbit hole of his other Dire Straits covers; incredibly fun!

 

Anyone have a favorite holiday highpointing memory or recommendation of when to go?

I climbed Mt. Elbert (CO) on July 4, 2016. The crowd at the top was way more prepped for the celebration than we were- and something about that specific Colorado view really made the day connect with me.

 

Knocked out my 30th highpoint one week before turning 30! A beautiful - if hot - day for it. The state line running down the center of the observation tower was a fun quirk. Easy to find survey marker.

I loved the surrounding terrain. The hills seemed so much narrower and rounded than the Appalachian views I’m used to in TN and NC

 

Just an FYI for anyone putting together a tiki event on a budget: solid-color inflatable balls from Dollar Tree work great as ad hoc glass floats for a party.

We had some LED puck lights from a past event that were simple to hide in the top rope (with a layer of electrical tape to block any other light leakage). They illuminate through the ball for fantastic ambience.

You can follow Batjakknots to weave the rope, or just improvise with cuts of cheap netting/simple knots like I did, it all ends up capturing the effect pretty well for ~$3 per light

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