We are. But thank you for the concern.
qyron
European guy, weird by default.
You dislike what I say, great. Makes the world a more interesting of a place. But try to disagree with me beyond a downvote. Argue your point. Let’s see if we can reach a consensus between our positions.
- 46 Posts
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qyronto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•People that lived above a bar, how many floors up before you couldn't hear it through the floor?10·1 day agoBars, clubs and other night time entertainment venues need to be highly sound proofed where I live. Even if the venue is built on a somewhat isolated area, it’s still required for the building to be insulated to some degree.
I had a restaurant that had a longer hours permit next to my house and because they didn’t had stronger insulation, they couldn’t exceed a certain decibel level after 22h00.
And even then, every so often, a patrol car would swing by to check if everything was calm, to keep the more rowdy patrons level headed.
Are we speaking of government or established nation with defined borders in the original post?
As I understand it, it is refering to nation, not government.
My country is 900 years old and my people has inhabited these lands before the romans ever dreamed of set foot here.
That is plain ignorance.
My keyboard doesn’t have that many symbols.
I concede.
Eventually, we’ll run out of these and enter proper discourse, with full sentences and long words.
I had the intuition these would be for medication.
But that raises another question: are these labels only manufactured by one entity?
What type of products would be getting these?
qyronto iiiiiiitttttttttttt@programming.dev•"Why should I reboot? Turning off the monitor does the same job."38·3 days agoCtrl+Q
I’ve memorized this shortcut after three uses.
It’s beyond my understanding why people keep 10, 20, 30, 40 tabs open. Bookmark if it has useful informatio/content that may merit a revisit or a more in depth reading or viewing. Take notes if there is only a small useful snippet you find useful. And throw the rest away.
Why?! It only equates to lazyness in my mind. Close your browser properly.
qyronto Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•In 2016, over 300 wild reindeer were killed by a single lightning strike on the Hardangervidda plateau in Norway21·3 days agoCernunnos descent failed.
Congratulations. Having high level characters and well rounded players does make everything smoother. If you’ve had those, I envy you. But not much.
I’ve managed a couple of games but I always made my plots to willfully accomodate chaos. I like to reward stupidity and recklessness. After a couple of disastrous events, the table tends to settle down and the mood tends to loosen up.
I’m fairly comfortable saying we have different approaches to playing and play directing. Which is good.
That is scripting.
Are we playing a campaign or renacting the Lord of the Rings?
Live for the chaos and mayhem. Expect it. Thrive from it. And tell the players that if their precious avatar dies, it’s on them, exclusively.
A campaign should be built around goals, capable of being moved around, delayed or put ahead of schedule as needed.
The players are walking in the campaign blind. It’s not their concern if a random action - that may be completely in line with their character - ampers, deviates or collapses the entire campaign.
Set wide goals, expect mayhem, have fun. Anything more than this is wishful thinking.
DnD is no more just dungeons and dragons. The moment it becomes an open world, the players roam around and do mischief.
If you want to play out your dream campaingn, write a book. It will never play as you expect or want. Unless you have the play fully scripted, with fixed roles and outcomes, it will derail.
You’re welcome to down vote to your content.
qyronto Technology@lemmy.zip•Perplexity CEO says its browser will track everything users do online to sell 'hyper personalized' adsEnglish21·4 days agoAnd give him free atention? Nah.
qyronto Dogs@lemmy.world•I woke up today deeply missing my dog Newbie, so I figured I'd shareEnglish8·4 days agoThe first dog I took under my responsibility (I won’t say he was mine; I don’t own dogs, I care for them) came to me at 12 weeks. He was the sole survivor of his litter, as his mother was too old.
We spent the next twelve years together. A cancer took his health and at nearly twelve years old I had to ask help for him to go peacefully and painlessly. He took his last breath in my harms.
I miss that dog every single day.
You did your best. If you miss that pup, that much, you did your best. Remember the good times you had and be happy. They don’t like to see us down.
Extreme weather phenomenon. Something about a wave reveberation.