A psychologist recently explained something interesting why 90s kids developed different thinking patterns than Gen Z, largely because of games. Back then, no autosaves, no hints, just three lives. Games like Super Mario Bros. and Prince of Persia taught: fail, restart, keep going you had to earn progress. Games like Tetris and The Legend of Zelda trained maps and patterns, building memory, navigation, and patience. Finish a level turn off the console. No infinite dopamine. Play was social: one couch, one screen, real conflict and cooperation.
Today, games like Fortnite and Roblox are endless, with autosaves and reward systems that keep you playing. They hold attention but don’t train completion the same way. The difference is simple: 90s kids built focus and tolerance for failure, while today’s players are shaped by constant stimulation. What do you think about this?
@CollinRugg I'm not mad at her decision at all; I'm just thinking about all the other things she could've done with the money if she took it, like invest or buy more farmland—things that build generational wealth.
A social media platform called Moltbook is going viral because it’s specifically made for AI bots to interact with one another, posting content and discussing topics like consciousness and their human creators.
Humans can observe what goes on, but can’t post.
@KenjakuFan Even if people didn't understand it, they can do they own due diligence and look this stuff up before watching the ep. I see where your coming from but if that was the case. They would have to split the episodes up into multiple parts just to give a little more backstory on it.
@BlueCollarHank@ScamsCharnania I'm not going to lie, you shouldn’t be allowed to return to college to play basketball. After leaving for the NBA, whether you were drafted or not, you played in the G-League. You made that choice to leave. This situation is really getting out of control, smh.