HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

spywaregorilla

no profile record

comments

spywaregorilla
·2 anni fa·discuss
Those poor fools and their 11 digit lifetime revenue figures
spywaregorilla
·2 anni fa·discuss
I really feel like epic games should be paying games to let people use their consistent character across games. It doesn't need to be significant. Just the metahuman mesh.
spywaregorilla
·3 anni fa·discuss
probability of hitting the moon with a random velocity in space is comfortably roundable to 0% provided you randomize decently far awaay
spywaregorilla
·3 anni fa·discuss
hypothetically, even if this is how it worked, that would still be fine, because literally any direction other than the one directly targeting the earth is going to be a non issue. the probability of randomly nudging and hitting anything of consequence is basically zero.
spywaregorilla
·3 anni fa·discuss
Seems dubious. Got a model to look up?
spywaregorilla
·3 anni fa·discuss
I feel like people get hung up on silly things. What does "enable all features" mean? Does it mean using the smart tv features? I feel like that's pretty reasonable.

I say as someone who just bought a sony tv, declined all features, and just use an hdmi input from an actual computer. Very pleasant experience. Can't say I've ever seen a TV that doesn't actually allow you to do this.
spywaregorilla
·4 anni fa·discuss
I believe unreal engine is doing the same thing for their next major release to support large open worlds
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
Hades is a good game. You might enjoy it more than witcher 3. But it's multiple orders of magnitude smaller no matter how you cut it. If you want to build enormous games, you tend to need enormous effort.
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
I'll try one last time before giving up :)

OPEC doesn't feel like the right analogy. OPEC is a foreign state. Arrakis seems to be, like all planets, owned by the galactic empire. It is by several orders of magnitude the most important planet. A better analogy would be if, say, Hawaii, contained the bulk of the world's energy resources. It is strange to me that the galactic empire doesn't rule this planet directly with extreme security measures. Why isn't the empire immediately taking charge directly when there's any sign of conflict on the most important place in the empire?
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
I should probably just stop here and not expect to grok the geopolitics of this universe over a conversation like this but...

* Why is there so much conflict if there's an empire?

* Why doesn't one faction simply control the planet?

* These are just regular nukes right? Like on the scale of the atomic weapons we have now? I guess on the scale of intergalactic conflict those don't sound very important to me? Very different from the scale of a nuke on an OPEC state city.
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
I would comment as follows.

Iron Man - sort novel for setting marvel tone but mostly banal action movie

Iron Man 2 - banal action movie

Thor - banal action movie

Captain America: The First Avenger - particularly banal action movie

Marvel's The Avengers - banal action movie

Iron Man 3 - banal action movie, sort of interesting to see protagonist suffering PTSD anxiety from being a superhero

Thor: The Dark World - banal action movie

Captain America: The Winter Soldier - first interesting take. Patriotism is not the same as government obedience. Real fight choreography approaching a soft john wick.

Guardians of the Galaxy - Early rock and roll aesthetic pretty interesting

Avengers: Age of Ultron - banal action movie, perhaps mcu lowpoint

Ant-Man - superhero heist movie, literally deconstructs larger than life superhero tropes. I think thumbs up

Captain America: Civil War - by this point doing the mcu's own thing, which is novel, but probably not interesting outside

Doctor Strange - banal action movie

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 - aesthetic still feels mostly fresh.

Spider-Man: Homecoming - super down to earth high school drama, frustrated working class villains suffering the fallout of superheroes, seems interesting to me

Thor: Ragnarok - great film, very genre savvy. Rare achievement to make godly strength brutes feel really engaging to watch. Taika Waititi is a genius.

Black Panther - pretty good. interesting aesthetic. directly addressing racial tensions.

Avengers: Infinity War & Endgame - Mostly fan service and not too surprising but honestly still novel.

Ant-Man and the Wasp - Ehhh I really don't remember

Captain Marvel - Beginning had some great hard sci fi imo. Thought the ending message of newly apotheosizied female not needing to prove herself to her evil male mentor was a solid take, whereas a classic "mano a mano" kind of showdown would be so typical of the genre

Spider-Man: Far From Home - Villain emphasizing themes of the power of deceptive media? heck yeah.

Wandavision - Really bizarre and interesting start. Unfortunately non-self-aware conclusion

Falcon and Winter Soldier - Active discussions of race and the problematic nature of superheroes being supremacists? Very good.

Loki - kind of a super cliche topic (time cops) that is also somehow really rare? eh.

honorable mentions for Logan and Deadpool for being just great; and the Amazing Spiderman for its excellent aesthetics despite terrible writing.
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
I'm not an expert on the world of dune or anything, but I guess I would have assumed that nukes on a relatively barren sand planet would be pretty ok.
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
I don't buy that this is an actual trend. If anything I think we're seeing more original plots than we used to. Even marvel plots are a hell of a lot more interesting than their equivalents in the 00s, 90s, and 80s. A lot of content is starting to get smarter, and more genre savvy, and indie content is thriving more than ever before.
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
Why don't they just use the shields as nuclear weapons then?
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
Are you making a joke about "Aliens" or is this an honest question
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
> DNA is extremely flexible, there's no macroscopic form or shape it can't take, as various insects camouflaging themselves as sticks and leaves and what not shows.

That feels like a really bold claim given the evidence.
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
Given how rare humanoid shape is on Earth, it doesn't seem especially sure that humanoids will be dominant among even intelligent life.
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
I have a friend who did that. It's pretty irritating trying to remember his unique constraints on communication that I need to know in order to reach him.

Some people conflate authenticity for interactions with others who are willing to go way out of their way to spend time with you.
spywaregorilla
·5 anni fa·discuss
I was a lifeguard and I never felt very confident in it tbh. But I do win this "game" every time. So... idk, what that says.