You can use quotation marks to filter only results that have a certain word or phrase in it, rather than related content.
You can use quotation marks to filter only results that have a certain word or phrase in it, rather than related content.
Right. Christianity and Islam say we’re all equal…
Unless of course, you’re lgbtq, or a woman, or an atheist, or a member of another religion, or anyone they don’t like really.
But other than that we’re all equal.
I don’t get milk and cereal. Both milk and cereal taste better before they’re mixed, together they just taste like wet paper.
@DocSophie This reminds me of Spacer’s choice slogan from Outer Worlds.
“It’s not the best choice, it’s Spacer’s choice McDonalds”
Agreed. I love small communities, but i love small communities about topics i actuallly care about. And so far the only magazines i’ve found on Kbin/Lemmy that have any activity in them are about super generic stuff.
I don’t want r/movies, r/anime or r/games, i want r/moviesfromthatoneobscuredirectorilike, r/thatonenicheanimenobodyelsewatches and r/thatoldassgameonlymeand10otherpeopleplay
They do and i am, lots of games have this problem, which doesn’t make it less of a problem.
Though my point was mainly that the fact that “nothing actually happens if you wait” isn’t the issue, but rather the fact that it doesn’t make sense for your character not to always priorize the main quest.
I haven’t played fo4 because they neutered the dialogue, but in 3 there are similar stakes with you trying to find your father, and although that game isn’t perfect about this either, there are times where the lead gets colder, and others where it’s hotter, this counts as a shift of tension like i mentioned.
Whether there’s a mechanical clock or not is irrelevant, this is about roleplaying and immersion. The player should be able to play in a way that makes sense in-world without being punished for it.
A good open world game should have lower tension moments sprinkled along the main story so it gives the player time to chill and explore the world.
Your argument was that Christianity and Islam preach that we’re all equal. I am saying that is not true (Or actually, that it preaches that while simultaneously preaching the opposite). It simply lacks one layer of inequality.