Finally! I've been designing this game for almost three years! #SuperMash is a video game that makes video games! Out on Nintendo Switch May 2020, out the Epic Store RIGHT NOW. https://t.co/6ZqH8cNKOO so proud of everyone who worked on it, this team is the best. @digitalcontinue
Have you ever wanted to play a Platformer with Stealth elements or a Shoot ‘Em Up with JRPG battles?
Well you can in #SuperMash from @digitalcontinue, a game where you mash together genres to create unique gaming experiences! Coming to #NintendoSwitch May 2020. #IndieWorld
@PostDisclosure Yeah hell’s hard to believe in. I think there does have to be some final judgement though, some kind of final justice. There are people who have done horrible things, and a god of complete mercy, without any type of final righting of wrongs would also be evil.
@PostDisclosure @LoseTheAnger It also occurs to me that a lower intelligence being might just have limitations in understanding most expressions of intelligence from a much higher intelligence being / species / alien civ, like a dog watching a debate on tv. So what seems like obfuscation is us hitting limits.
@PostDisclosure@luckywilson “Secret”? “Mysterious”? Arcane”? Enigmatic? How to describe the answer to a riddle or a buried treasure?
When Jesus intentionally obfuscates, it seems to me the intent was world-correcting, to give the most important secrets to the poor,disenfranchised and uneducated.
@BSquidding@PostDisclosure If it doesn’t have an obvious, functional effect on your life, I think open-mindedness and openness is probably a better default position, ie one can believe uap represent non-human intelligence without it having a negative effect on your life.
@leslanphere This seems like an eisegesis of the Chosen. The creators obviously have a deep respect for the Bible and Jesus. How does this guy feel about Aslan? Is cs Lewis making a mockery of scripture by turning Jesus into a lion? Is this dude going after veggie tales with a pitchfork?
@tanyaxshort In addition to being familiar systemically, combat is also familiar narratively. Combat’s a super easy way to introduce conflict to a story, and we’re kind of handcuffed to conflict as far as what humans usually like about stories, for better or worse (probably worse)