Society: There are two boxes, “man” and “woman”. Which box do you belong in?
Me: I fit in neither box. I am non-binary
Society: Recalibrating
Society: There are three boxes, “man” and “woman” and “nonbinary”. Which box do you belong in?
Me: /o\
There is also a secret fourth option: not using agents at all. If you do this, you can explain all the code that you wrote, because you actually wrote it. Saves a lot of time!
It kind of feels like the choices right now are:
1) Provide minimal constraints to the agent. It makes slop.
2) Provide many constraints to the agent, but the more you constrain it the worse it performs in other aspects. It makes slop.
3) Use it like a glorified text editor.
Everyone in the comments and quotes saying to fry in beef tallow instead of what will really make a difference which is to blanch fry, freeze then double fry until crispy. “Never frozen” is something you want for beef for your burgers but for fries freezing is crucial for texture
my favorite picture of all time is from last christmas: my brother's demon cat, caught mid-jump, fiending for the costco ham while my aunt desperately tries to protect her cheese board. we had to take shifts to guard the ham
@dungeonminister A lot of systems talk a good game about creating a fun experience at the table, but don’t have these little rituals to help players step back *away* from the table … which can lead to awkwardness and discomfort when the game ends.
@dungeonminister More tabletop systems should have end-of-session XP - not for gameplay purposes, but for debriefing purposes! It’s SO helpful for getting my players out of their characters’ heads and back into their own.