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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • My writing resolution was to simply put less pressure on myself to write “a thing” and to spend more time just writing. So far it is going well. Whether I want to write something that is only 3 paragraphs or 30 pages, I’m giving myself that freedom.

    I wrote a cyber-punk short that ended up only being a few pages with a time-skip in the middle because I couldn’t figure out how write the middle part. Then I decided “it’s cyber-punk, everyone knows how the middle goes” and wrote the last bits instead. Not something that would be published but always trying to write something that would be publish-able is what stopped me from writing in the first place.



  • I understand the purpose of the article and it is important to be critical of whatever party is in power because they certainly aren’t going to do the right thing for the sake of doing the right thing. I’m not a supporter of the Liberal party but this article doesn’t really point out the issue. The issue is the misplacement of blame.

    The article talks about how the Federal Liberals aren’t doing anything about housing and consumer affordability but those are provincial issues. Yukon, Newfoundland, and British Columbia are the only provinces currently not run by conservatives. The most effective communications the Federal Liberals could do would be to educate the populace on what is within their power to change and what is a provincial responsibility. It likely won’t matter much because a large number of voters aren’t interested in educating themselves on politics. But the majority don’t understand Federal vs Provincial vs Municipal jurisdiction.

    Ultimately, I think the only thing the Federal Liberals can do is focus on the messaging. They are achieving important things but they can’t change the things that are impacting the average Canadian on a day-to-day basis. Minimum wage is a provincial issue. Rent and housing is a provincial issue. Health care is a provincial issue. Heck, even the climate change stuff the Provincial Conservatives fought tooth-and-nail on and lost but continue to refuse to address it themselves. I’m not sure what the writer of the article is expecting the Federal government to do other than trying to inform the populace of what they can control and where they need the provinces to do their part to solve these crises.



  • While what you say is absolutely correct, keep in mind that the profits a game makes go to the company. The workers are already paid. If a game doesn’t make money it would likely mean those people at the bottom would lose their jobs but the people at the top will absolutely get their share. But stealing a game like this doesn’t mean people aren’t getting paid. If Bethesda feels like the game doesn’t need all of the staff it took to make it, they’ll still get rid of them, regardless of how popular the game may be doing at any given time.

    Indie game studios stand a better chance at doing right by their employees but a capitalist society means the profits go to the top and the losses go to the bottom and rarely are indie studios exempt from this rule of economics.

    This person is being punished because they found a weakness in Bethesda’s setup and exploited it. It MIGHT be that if they had gone to Bethesda and let them know of this vulnerability rather than trying to sell what they had found that they would be been rewarded. But, more often than not, the companies who are shown a vulnerability still seek to punish those who point it out to them.



  • Love seeing PE and LoD on here, both incredible games. I would also love to see Xenogears get a remaster that actually fleshes out a lot of the stuff left on the cutting room floor. I know we got Xenosaga - another one that would be great to have on modern hardware - and Xenoblade Chronicles but I truly miss that PS1 era of RPGs sticking with the turn-based model while trying to find ways to be unique.