aimeeandbeatles
watermelon
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2007
- Messages
- 20,112
I woke up this morning to find out my cat was sick all over the floor. At least I didn't step in it?
If the backpack doesn't have a metal frame it would probably go inside one of the big washers laundromats have for things like blankets.
Yeah do something with that backpack, either clean it (get long gloves!) or replace it. The allergy can get seriously worse with further contact. I had an outdoorsy professor who developed an allergy and when were launching balloons into the stratosphere and fishing them out of the woods when they landed he had to hang back. He had been exposed a few times and was to the point where he would have to go to the emergency room to avoid death (literally). He loved being in the woods but couldn't risk an accidental exposure - it kind of ruined his outdoorsy lifestyle. So please be extra careful.
I have heard that this years strain is another that is hitting young adults, so even more reason to get the shot this year.With a lot of strains of flu, it's the very young and elderly who are most at risk, as well as people with compromised systems (ie. people with asthma or COPD). The Spanish flu attacked young adults
Wow. Just wow.
I have just read probably the most ridiculous thing about video games I've read in a long time.
Chill.
Life gets a lot easier when you accept that most people's opinions are unimportant.
What 10 nutballs, who are randomly distributed over the planet, who have no power or importance whatsoever, what they think, that is totally unimportant.
And next time don't read it, makes life also easier.
Wow. Just wow.
I have just read probably the most ridiculous thing about video games I've read in a long time. I'm seeing a bunch of posts on social media calling the game Cuphead both racist and ablelist. Here is the ridiculous reasoning for each one:
Racist: Apparently Cuphead is a racist game because it's animation style is similar to that of cartoons from the 1930s and since those cartoons were racist, that makes Cuphead racist too.
Ableist: Because Cuphead is a challenging game. Seriously. That is the only reason being given for how this game is ableist.
Then people whined about how sexist Metal gear was with Quiet, Even though you had male butts and male nudity right there in your face, along with some hyper realistic violence. It became a massive scandal. Have journalist not been expose to the oversexualisation of women in video games ? so dumb
Do you also complain when real women share images of themselves in underwear on social media?Where were the male butts in the game? I've admittedly barely played any of it, but the only male butt I remember seeing was that hospital patient in the beginning with the gown that didn't close all the way, and that didn't really seem all that sexualized to me, more like "Yep, here's a butt"
With Quiet, she dresses in a ridiculous outfit that nobody would ever actually wear for any reason that only serves to highlight certain parts of her and has a really flimsy justification for why she dresses like that. Oversexualiztion is really the only reason for her outfit, and it's perfectly reasonable to complain about that.
Can you link the article that claims that Cuphead - the game itself - is ableist? I've read a few that argue that the "If it's too hard for you, get better, noob!"-attitude is ableist, but the game itself?Ableist: Because Cuphead is a challenging game. Seriously. That is the only reason being given for how this game is ableist.
Hahaha I once bought my friend a confederate flag as a joke and man was my suggestions queue messed up for a while.You browse a few books on Jewish history, and Amazon assumes that you want to become either a convert or an anti-Semite. I'd have hoped that there was some space between the two.
It's also not just some random unimportant opinion. If such opinions were prominent enough for me to see them, then the developers of Cuphead may have seen it as well.
Cuphead - at its best best, educates the player on how to overcome each obstacle. Every boss fight has an ideal strategy discovered through trial and error. To avoid stress, it’s helpful to think of failure as a greater tool than any weapon. When a Medusa-like boss froze me in midair, I eventually found the spot to hide from her icy stare. After a ghastly horseman uppercutted me into oblivion, I knew to keep an eye on the bottom of the screen so I could spot him preparing a strike. With each round against a boss, I found myself progressing further, not because I was becoming some prodigious video game guru, but because I merely spotted and memorized each stone on the walkway to victory.
All of this is possible because of one crucial component: consistency.
Finding the parry-able objects can become a game of recon, sending Cuphead into a fight not to win, but to spot the path to victory for a rematch. Tucked into the game are three mausoleum stages in which Cuphead can only extinguish ghosts with parries, sending the little goober bouncing across the screen, bopping one ghost after the other. It’s a lovely palate-cleanser, and I hope to see more of these missions in future expansions.
The game isn’t designed for true gamersto race through with nothing but raw skill and unearned confidence. If anything, the boss fights punish pride, filling stages with minions, projectiles and traps.
Is ableist a reference to not being disabled?Wow. Just wow.
I have just read probably the most ridiculous thing about video games I've read in a long time. I'm seeing a bunch of posts on social media calling the game Cuphead both racist and ablelist. Here is the ridiculous reasoning for each one:
Racist: Apparently Cuphead is a racist game because it's animation style is similar to that of cartoons from the 1930s and since those cartoons were racist, that makes Cuphead racist too.
Ableist: Because Cuphead is a challenging game. Seriously. That is the only reason being given for how this game is ableist.
This just reminds me of old school Nintendo games. With the exception of a few games, there was little or no progress saving, and even the games that did allow you to save progress made you do it at very specific locations or through an impossibly long savecode that you would always screw up writing it down...I remember kids who would literally pause the game and turn the TV off (a hangin' offense in my household) and just hope their parents didn't see the console was left on to avoid losing their progress.Those arguments are most certainly visible for them, as even their own steam forums had some large threads about difficulty being a barrier to entry. The reaction there was of course that people were told to git gud, and that the difficulty is one of the positive sides of the game. Interesting enough, Polygon out of all places describes how the game actually allows you to "git gud" by paying attention, not by doing acrobatics with your fingers, in their review of he game:
Overall, the game has a 89% metascore, and most reviews point into the same direction as that polygon review, say that the difficulty of the game is hard, but fair. So I really don't think it's worth stressing over the few articles written by people who cannot live with the fact that a game forces them to actually practice a bit. Even if the devs see them, then they MUST also see the many articles that tell them that they're doing things right. It would be very strange for them to change course because of those few articles that are critical of them.
Is ableist a reference to not being disabled?
I usually dismiss people who really fly the anti-ableist flag, though, since it's often based upon the idea that being disabled doesn't mean you're disabled which is a theory I'm fundamentally opposed to.
If "ableism" would be used properly [in case that's possible], then it would mean that whatever action is taken would be taken with some sort of malicious intent