I honestly love doing Game Dev stuff, and I'm so ecstatic that my first game is slowly shaping up! If anyone wants to check it out and keep tabs on the progress, check out my ItchIO!
https://t.co/UH3PSSzIRG
(The name is pending)
@Pirat_Nation Unpopular opinion here, 90% of that EULA is perfectly fine and people are too uneducated in how they work and what their typical language is.
@OWAnonymous_ I've been mostly playing Lifeweaver because he's a great counter to a lot of character and he's a ton of fun. I feel like I'm the only friggin Lifeweaver to ever be aware enough to properly use his grab though 😫
@durpeefangrl I think people are just MUCH closer to room temp IQs than we expected. This might have been one of the most obvious things and it baffles me that anyone couldn't figure it out within their first match.
@DayumDahlia I can honestly say in the 6 years I have been using the scarlet, I don't think I've had more than 2 times when I had to reseat the USB. They're fine for the cheap price
@effxzzzyy Quickshare works just fine and my Pixel is getting compatibility to share with iPhones so not really a big deal. Plus no one is sharing files often enough on either platform for it to be a selling point imo
@AmicusAemilius I find it hard in general if you use a C-clamp hold, but weight helps alot. I've also played around with torquing my c clamp more and loading my core/lead foot alot more
One night I asked my mom how she knew my dad was “the one.” She didn’t say butterflies. She didn’t say grand gestures.
She said, “There was a year I wasn’t okay.”
She told me after I was born, she felt overwhelmed all the time. She stopped talking as much. Stopped laughing as loudly. She said she felt guilty for not being her usual self.
And my dad didn’t demand the “old her” back.
He just started doing small things.
He would wake up earlier to pack her lunch.
He’d fold the laundry without announcing it.
He’d sit beside her on the couch and just hold her hand without asking a single question.
She said one night she finally cried and told him she felt like she was failing at everything.
He didn’t interrupt.
Didn’t give a motivational speech.
Didn’t say “but you have so much to be grateful for.”
He just listened.
And the next week?
He didn’t treat her like she was fragile.
Didn’t bring it up during arguments.
Didn’t use it as proof that she was “too emotional.”
He loved her the same. Calm. Steady. Normal.
My mom looked at me and said,
“That’s when I knew. Love isn’t the loud days. It’s who stays gentle on the quiet ones.”
And suddenly their 20+ years together made sense.
Real love doesn’t panic when you’re not at your best.
It adjusts.
It waits.
It stays.