I'm sure there are also edge cases where you'd prefer to avoid a deck shuffle so it's cool that it's optional. Maybe you've scryed something spicy on top deck.
InquisitiveApathy
The commenter is being a jerk, but you're misinterpreting the point they're trying to make. Twitch has a had a lot of issues with rules enforcement since the introduction of the 'Just Chatting' section when it comes to sexual content. What's considered acceptable has only ever been nebulously defined in the TOS really.
Because of this a lot of disproportionate bans have happened on women simply for existing, largely affecting smaller streamers because large ones generally just get a slap on the wrist. On the other side of the spectrum the rules have also allowed for a lot of loopholes being taken advantage of, like for example the hottub craze. The other commenter is not exaggerating when they are saying that people stream themselves pole dancing and doing strip teases.
Whether you agree or disagree on the level of sexualization that should be allowed on the platform, what's considered acceptable use definitely needs to be more rigidly defined for the benefit of everyone.
Look a little closer at the map.
I'm pretty sure you'll be able to do it. I have faith.
This is essentially how I see it also.
The changes over the years allowing non-gaming content have allowed some really cool stuff to be showcased, but it also opened the floodgates for a lot of low effort softcore camgirls. I'm cool with sex workers making a living, but it would be nice to filter them out. Twitch has done a lot of work on discovery over the past year or two that's been positive at least even if the site is awful when not logged in.
I think the impact of these changes will really depend on the how Twitch chooses to allow monetization. Given the changes to aggressive ad-focused monetization recently I think that will be the big decider for what this means.
I always hate any viral math post for the simple reason that it gives me PTSD flashbacks to my Real Analysis classes.
The blog post is fine, but could definitely be condensed quite a bit across the board and still effectively make the same points would be my only critique.
At it core Mathematics is the language and practices used in order to communicate numbers to one another and it's always nice to have someone reasonably argue that any ambiguity of communication means that you're not communicating effectively.
It's popularity was slowly waning and companies have been slowly pulling back on the marketing at the expo for almost a decade. Over the pandemic period the largest gaming names (Nintendo, Sony, etc) pulled out entirely and created their own marketing events of a similar style that were cheaper and easier to maintain while still accomplishing the same thing. E3 was left as a bunch of disjointed marketing events held around the same time. Geoff Kneighlys events ended up filling in the void it left over this period and E3 just never recovered.
I'm in an extremely similar relationship to OP it sounds like. Any time I've tried to play a VN style game hasn't been very successful. They always end up bored unless it's crazy engaging. 'What Remains of Edith Finch' comes to mind as one of the successful narrative focused games I found though.
The number of players that determine if it's "massive" will be subjective, but there's more to the definition than just that. A CoD game isn't an MMO just because it has a 16vs16 lobby for example. Gameplay design is still always going to be a big factor into the genre definitions.
!patientgamers@sh.itjust.works is the largest community that I'm aware of
Time is a resource that once spent can't be gotten back. I agree that time spent inefficiently is another huge factor, but I don't think that's going to be seen as a strong argument in this community so I intentionally omitted it.
I would be careful about making generalizations linking mental illness and public transport. I know you're commenting based on your own experiences(which are valid), but it's not going to be the case everywhere and will vary depending on the city support systems, which to your credit you did touch on. Any sufficiently large gathering place, regardless of purpose, is going to have its fair share of weirdos in the end.
Again, I feel like a lot of people over simplify and just go, "My gas is X, the train ticket is Y. X
I don't think it is an oversimplification honestly. It might work out as a favorable arrangement if we're only talking about only moving around within a larger city with robust infrastructure, but the scenario of the post with a 4 hour drive speaks to the fact that this isn't the case.
For driving a fair distance your expenses will be gas, tolls, and parking generally. A long-range train ticket will likely cost more than all those combined and then on top of that you'll still likely have to pay for extended parking and/or other transportation on one side of the trip if you don't have someone you can rely on.
I don't by any means live in the middle of nowhere and the nearest train station to me is still over a two and a half hour drive. I don't enjoy it, but the infrastructure just isn't there to make this a feasible option for many people.
I know you clarified that they can just be to translucent, but it's hilarious to me that the first step to a lazy meal is to spend 45 minutes caramelizing onions.