So, how has everyone's week been?
Been kind of quiet around lately, but it seems like most everyone is some kind of exhausted.
"some kind of exhausted" about sums it up I think.
In part because of the student with me (and my reluctance to be "that kind of person" around someone else, particularly around someone whom I am supposed to be setting an example for), I've mostly managed to avoid reddit-hopping this week, so I feel a bit better thuswise. I've been forcing myself not to turtle up lately and actually reach out to the groups I'm in, at least. Also been reading up on reproductive synchrony.
Very nice! I've never played Celeste, but I watched a couple of runs of it before. I'm not a speedrunner myself of any variety, but I do respect the skill. I tend to prefer casual playthroughs to speedruns in general, and I particularly avoid tool-assisted speedruns, but again, the skill is something I find impressive.
My favorite thing to do with games, is to play through casually, but with a critical eye towards theming, design, et cetera, but I have noticed of myself that I prefer playing a variety of different games rather than perfecting any single one, but I enjoy speedruns so much that I decided to try my hand at them here and there. Celeste happens to be an easy one to pick up and easily see your progress, unlike older games which I might choose instead (e.g. Donkey Kong Country) due to being part of my childhood and knowing better, since I worry that it would warp my perception of them.
But thank you for the compliment.
On that note, I started my Halloween piece for around here, but I lost steam on it almost immediately. If I can't find motivation to continue and finish it soon, I may need to wuss out and just write another poem for it this year. We'll see what happens. I have half a month yet. The sad thing is, back in the old days, it NEVER took me that long to write a story, unless it was a collab and getting passed back and forth. I like my job in the sense that I can afford to eat and live in my own house, but man, do I miss the days before my full-time job when I could knock out a story I was happy with in two days.
Amen. Oftentimes I think I complain unnecessarily about my job, but calculating it out, I have just about as much "free time" (not including sleep) as I do time involved with work (including commute), so it's no **** wonder I don't have any energy to do what I would love to do. I just don't want a full-time job, but I've never known anything that wasn't more than full-time.
I've been keeping up my Fallen London roleplay, which is steadily heading into monst- em, scandalous eldritch dalliances
Prurient material aside, it has been attracting most of my creative energies lately.
As far as RP goes, I'm currently in a Star Wars themed D&D game that has been pretty fun. I play a plucky little Bothan spy working for the Empire, not because I want to, but because of a string of unfortunate circumstances. He's a gambler, but, as you can no doubt glean, not the luckiest...
Man, I'm jealous. I'm too stretched thin to act as a DM (besides my common complaint about not having time) and the one game I had been in got put on such a long pause because of the faeces-filled hand the DM got dealt that it's fallen through. Instead, I've been writing for myself in part to guide my world-building, which of course led to a major detour when I had to stop everything to figure if a woolen sweater and thigh-highs would be too outside the realm of "Roman fantasy" and what kind of materials were in use in the past.
Side-note 1: despite what I was raised to believe, wool can be almost as fine as silk, and is harvested from many different animals besides sheep, like llamas and rabbits.
Side-note 2: socks have been in use for a few thousand years, and possibly were much longer in the past (more like stockings). Relatedly, pants in general seem to have been invented for colder-weather climes, as many ancient peoples wore things like togas, dresses, and wraps.
@LUna-
Now I don't feel so bad for never beating Link's Awakening as a kid. I remember starting over at one point and ending up on a very different route through the game, with no idea how to get into what I originally thought was the "first" dungeon.
I've never speedrun, but I've played through Celeste. Except for that last postgame world.
I got the impression that, like most Zelda games, LA is linear and you can't enter dungeons out-of-order, but I guess I could be wrong. One thing that's been on my mind the last few days since I beat it, though, is how my opinion of Pokémon might be different if I hadn't had guides for the 2nd and 3rd generations (don't ask me how tf I figured out the first gen), because those games can be similarly obtuse. Like "level up your Eevee past lv.30 while within so many tiles of this random ice rock to get it to evolve". Some evolution mechanics seem more crazy than early Zelda because the game's mechanics do not
allow for you to "rub x on y".
I played through a large percentage of Celeste my first time through, getting all the berries and hidden rooms I could find, and I unlocked the
first post-game area, but there's a
second post-game area that requires you to find everything which I haven't unlocked yet. I've seen it speedran and it looks insane.