ANNOUNCING - Synapse Chronicles
Play as ELARA and come face to face against a vast cosmic conspiracy. Psychic powers, open levels, VISCERAL combat, ADVANCED Physics, stencil shadows, tense ACTION around every corner!
Oppose the DEATH OF FREEWILL
WATCH the trailer...
WISHLISHT on the new STEAM page below!
from a kind of Hallmark syndrome that dilutes the strength and reach of the Gospel and its wisdom. There's a sort of divorce from reality in the storytelling that turns it into meme grist.
God's kingdom will advance without being present on television, but we owe Him better art.
I would say this is one reason I like that "The Chosen" exists. There's humanity and gravity present in the part of the show that I saw, even if there were things I would have liked done different.
Adult Christian programming suffers-
Apropos of nothing, I think part of what may drag Christianity down is a kind of "kiddifying" the stories.
I'm not saying "modern audience"-ify any of it, just more that how the narrative is told ought to have opportunities for a greater level of gravitas and connection to-
@AdamBryceThomas Glad to see things are working out okay right now, busy as you are.
It's always good to see real passion for the craft manifesting in great work.
Hoping you find what you're looking for in terms of that return on investment.
"So you're the cleaner? I'm sorry, it's been a long day. We had a little incident in the office, but my contacts took care of it. They just left a bit of a mess."
A long overdue Callie Briggs revised for the Wheel of Fire setting. In this case, I decided that the mayor of Rockhide could use her assistance in dealing with a rather chaotic industrial city.
Just as I promised, I have a 3D live later coming up later this year! But I really wanna dedicate more time to learning how to sing once my military service ends. It's something I enjoy a lot, so I think it'd be nice to improve quickly and show off to you fellas. 💪
the human experience at large.
The versions of the stories we tell children are good and decent tools, but there needs to be graduated presentations of the history beyond that, else some of those narratives remain trapped in the "kids's story" state someone is first exposed to.
Apropos of nothing, I think part of what may drag Christianity down is a kind of "kiddifying" the stories.
I'm not saying "modern audience"-ify any of it, just more that how the narrative is told ought to have opportunities for a greater level of gravitas and connection to-