I always assumed it was shorthand for an html close tag like , so I'm going with "/s".
Until markdown gets a sarcasm thing at least.
I always assumed it was shorthand for an html close tag like , so I'm going with "/s".
Until markdown gets a sarcasm thing at least.
I would say "cursive is how adults write, you'll need to know it", but that wasn't true then either.
Duckduckgo has an email redirect thing where you can make temporary addresses that forward to your normal one.
Its basically a perfect game. It never feels dated and has one of the most horribly catchy songs ever created by man. Its weird that it's so fun, its like as simple as you can really boil down a game, its literally just arranging blocks into lines. But it just clicks with the human brain on some deep level.
Joplin for notes, and Rclone drastically improves any cloud services.
I've been saying this forever too! Boomers were the ones complaining about thier kids playing them back in the day because of the violence and demonic imagery.
In the 90s people called them "Doom-like"s. I usually just say "90s FPS games". Which I guess could be confusing and make people think I'm talking about framerate, but eh.
Its tricky, because how much do I really know about people's views who I've never met? Especially more famous people who might just be crafting a public image. They might be hiding aspects of thier views that are bad publicity, or just being controversial to drum up attention.
Morrowind and Oblivion both have a massive fan following but I think always get unfairly overlooked for Skyrim.
I don't know if this helps, but if you use DuckDuckGo as a default search engine in your browser, its easy to look things up on Wiktionary using !wt. And yeah, Wiktionary is awesome and very underappreciated.
Synfig might be what you're looking for.
That was my only issue with the otherwise excellent Shovel Knight! It had very long levels and only saved once you beat them.
I still love all of the 90s FPS games like Doom and Quake.