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Topics - Sandtrap

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151
The Flood / "No Homo"
« on: March 31, 2015, 07:53:17 AM »
God said as he put a man's g spot up his ass.

152
The Flood / I'd like to know what the fuck "21 stone" is.
« on: March 31, 2015, 07:31:01 AM »


Does 21 stone equal to 1 boulder?

153
The Flood / The Clench is Real
« on: March 31, 2015, 07:27:02 AM »
YouTube


Close call.

154
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Majestic.

155
The Flood / Joseph Frank Keaton: The Father of Stunts
« on: March 31, 2015, 06:44:13 AM »
Vaudeville actor and comedian that took to silent movies. He did something special in the days before stuntmen and CGI.

Single takes and superb timing.

Spoiler
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Keep in mind that the dude did all this stuff without the usage of practical or special effects. One take only. No safety nets. Because if he did two takes he might not have made it.


156
Serious / A hypothetical question in regards to money/currency
« on: March 31, 2015, 05:05:35 AM »
Now. Let's sit down here, and imagine a really, really big damn hypothetical here. Let's just say, that for whatever reason, money just suddenly dissappeared. Every single piece of currency, the dollar, the pound, you name it. It's all suddenly gone as if it never existed and there is no way to produce it.

My question here is, in the abscence of currency, let's say you introduced a new system into play. This is a system where, if you play a part in it, aka you work a job to some degree, you don't get access to money, but intstead you get access to what you could buy with money.

Basically, you work and play your part, you get access to everything that's offered. You go up to the store, show you credentials, walk in, and take what you want.

Now!

Would it not be logical to assume, at this point, that because technically, crime and theft rate would plummet because why steal something when you yourself could get it from simply working? Would a country's population of people, with a rising unemployment rate not change if all they had to do was just simply work, for a bare minimum of time?




157
The Flood / Discuss Social Gathering bullshit ITT
« on: March 29, 2015, 01:19:05 PM »
Oh joy. I got invited out to dinner. The invitation extends to me and my mother. So here's the deal. If I piss off and don't show up like a supportive gentlemen, I'd look quite bad. But I don't entertain the fucking idea of sitting there for an hour, eating food and not talking cause I've nothing to say. Or actually, stifling what I could talk about since I'd lose the hosts faster than a teacher trying to explain complex math to a kindergartener.

And I really, really fucking don't like the idea of putting on a fake smile and doing the small talk routine.

So discuss your all time favorite social event/dealing with people or shit you don't feel like kind of moment while I go and do something with my sorry bones and fix my garage door.

158
Gaming / I really hope bloodborne gets a PC port
« on: March 26, 2015, 12:23:57 PM »
YouTube


Because holy fuck that boss music. I've kept myself spoiler free here but jesus fuck the music alone makes me want the damn game so bad.

This should have been dark souls II dammit.

159
The Flood / Somebody poisoned my cat
« on: March 24, 2015, 11:01:22 AM »
Excessively lethargic. Uncoordinated. Drinking water non stop. Slow, and not chatty like she normally is. Not eating food and just drinking water.

Fucks sakes.

There's some fucker around town that does that shit. It's happened a few years back. Bits of fucking meat doused in anti-freeze.

Great fucking morning. How about yours.

160
Spoiler

Read your kids some fucking bedtime stories.

161
The Flood / Mods be like
« on: March 23, 2015, 02:32:32 PM »

162


His name is Quilly Willy.

163
The Flood / I summon all the BritBongers of this domain
« on: March 22, 2015, 10:52:39 AM »
To tell you all a little story.

About two/three years ago, a little town called Bjorkdale won a contest or competition of sorts. So Bjorkdale's little school, of oh, say 50 something kids, went to our capital city, Regina, and presented themselves to The Queen in person while she was visiting here for some apparent reason.

Your bonger faces when backwater flatlanders got closer to touching crocodile handbag than you ever will.

164
The Flood / Right, so you guys like autism right?
« on: March 21, 2015, 11:39:11 PM »
YouTube


This should cover it. Cheers.

165
The Flood / Why do we have 87 guests.
« on: March 21, 2015, 11:18:02 PM »
Why.

You green coloured default mother fuckers were the bane of matchmaking in Halo 3.

166
The Flood / TRW your buddy goes down
« on: March 21, 2015, 11:05:20 PM »
Spoiler





167
The Flood / Petition for Cheat to give us Daedra font as an option
« on: March 20, 2015, 06:37:05 PM »



168
The Flood / What the fuck are they putting in my town's water
« on: March 20, 2015, 05:30:59 PM »
Like fucking seriously. An old neighbor of mine, living not far out on a farm from town comes in today. He's a big guy. Older 40's-50's. Strong like an ox. Comes in with a bandage on his neck. I thought it was a fucking work injury.

Got the news. It's fucking melanoma.

What in the serious fuck is up with this god damn town. Why the fuck are cancer rates so god damn high up here?

I can think of roughly 5 or 6 younger people who've had it. I can count myself among the number. I can count some older people among the number. Cerebral palsy is high up here. Degenerative diseases and other stuff. A lot of altzheimers, down syndrome, bi-polar disorders.

Fuck me this place is harsh.

Personal question. How many people do you know around you that have, or have had a cancerous disease?

169
The Flood / Here, have some in progress writing for a story of mine
« on: March 20, 2015, 11:40:05 AM »
Because today, I've nothing better to do and why the fuck not. You folks like a bit of magic and undead? Cheers. I've separated gaps in time into spoilers.

Spoiler
To the inheritor of my duty, my work, and my life. This letter is addressed to you, whoever you may be. I have my assurances that I know who you are, but one can never be so sure after all. I, Cromwell Hume, now impart upon you the deed and title of “Gravekeeper.” You, who so reads this letter, are now part of a writ, a pact, and should always swear faithfully to your duty.

   As a gravekeeper, you now find yourself as the owner and caretaker of Coldshore Cemetery. Your job as a keeper is simple. Maintain the Cemetery. Keep its graves undisturbed and free of intruders. And, most importantly, when the dead rise, put them to rest.

   Be aware, that the dead are not to be treated and shuffled back into their rest like instruments or simple blunt objects. Sometimes, the soul forgets that it is dead, and returns to what it finds comfort in. The dead you deal with, are people.

   Some of them, like all people, will have different ways of responding to you. Some will not heed reason, will not listen, because they are mad. They’ve no sense left in them and so all that remains is violence. Put these souls to rest with a strong arm and a sharp blade.

   Some will be curious, returning to the world they’ve been away from for so long. Bribe them. Give them trinkets, offerings, and they will happily return to their graves to tinker, and then rest.

   Some will feel the surge of life in their old bones, and seek to flee. To run and escape. Coldshore is surrounded by wards, and so they never will. Chase them down and play their games with them. Eventually, they will tire, and return to rest.

   And, of all who are the most troublesome, are those souls who are lonely. Why they are lonely, it never has been known. Do not strike them with a blade. Do not bribe them with trinkets. Do not play games with them. Your job, as a keeper of the dead, is compassion and understanding.

Listen to these souls. Give them comfort, if you can, for they are lost and have no one to light the way for them. Grab a lantern, and walk with them, all the way to their home. And then put them to rest.

And finally, be aware of the strongest. Souls who do not need to return to their body. Souls that force our world to bend for them, if only slightly. These souls are the most detached. They will wander the grounds, or the river. They will scream a wail that curls your blood. They will yell in a rage that rattles your very bones.

And they will kill you if they lay sight of you. They act as beacons for others, and seek to draw other souls to them, so that they may sustain their temporary life. Your best and most final option for dealing with these souls is to avoid them, and cut them off from their food source.

Put the dead to rest that are drawn to them like moths to a flame. And you shall put out the wail and fire of the Banshee as well.

I, Cromwell Hume, wish you the best of luck. The life of a Gravekeeper is that of being alone. But if you are succeeding me, then it shalln’t worry the likes of you no doubt, for a Gravekeeper is the mirror image of death in life. You shy away from others and likely led a shallow, tiring life before this job seemed like anything a sane man would do. Something to make you tired of the world.

But take heart. The dead who walk Coldshore can have more life in them than you’d ever expect. There are days when they renew your faith in the people you’ve abandoned. In the world you hide from.

Treat the dead with respect, and be kind to them.

And they will take care of you more than you can ever expect.

Best of luck, yours in confidence, Cromwell Hume, now, ex-Gravekeeper.

Spoiler
Rain pattered down on the roof of the coach as he folded up the letter, slipping it back into its envelope safely where it belonged. The coach bounced and rocked along the old path in the mud as he sat in the dim confines, alone. Coldshore Cemetery. Farther inland from Coldshore Harbour. The cemetery was ancient. A part of old history, having endured for centuries untold. Perhaps, even thousands.

It resided in the cold, damp fog of the murky forests that filled the coastline here up north, and since man was always so ornery about rituals in death, Coldshore Cemetery only grew wider over the centuries. Graves built upon graves, crypts, sprawling outwards ever more. Surprisingly, the cemetery was still manageable for one man alone.

Although, keeping graves wasn’t exactly a hard pressed job. But Coldshore was unique. The undead were not uncommon across the world. From the scourge of those who fed on the blood of others in the shadows, vampires. To the beings that dwelled farther down south on the opposite coast of the continent in a place called The Shroud. The undead, the undying, were everywhere.

Scattered across the world in all of their numerous forms like mankind itself, like the ancient, enduring remnants of magic, and all the forms it could take, alongside creatures of wonder, the undead were a part of life. But what made Coldshore Cemetery so profound, was the sheer number. It was as if the cemetery were a well of sorts.

A collection, an indent on the land that drew souls to it. Why, he could think of no other place across all the world where the souls of the deceased walked so freely and appeared in such number. Which was why the long, and storied history of gravekeepers who had called this place home had a reputation. For they were more than just merely gravekeepers.

And now, he was stepping in to fill the role. Stepping in to fill the shoes of the man who wrote this letter for his successor. Under the dim light in the coach he listened to the patter of rainfall on the roof and looked outside beyond the windows to dark and fog. The letter, written by Cromwell. The man knew what it was to be a keeper of the dead.

Musing on the path that led him here, the long, winding road, tiring to him. A world he wanted to vanish from, and disappear from. The coach came to a sudden stop, lurching him back to things. No matter. He was here now. Slipping on his hat and a thicker coat, he opened the coach door to the black of night, lit only by the light of the lamps on the outside of the coach, and now, the light of an old building, not far away.

Before him stood the gates of Coldshore Cemetery in the night, given some shape in the darkness and rain by light that shined through the windows of an old building behind them, ancient cobble and a simple, hayed roof. The sound of heavy iron was heard as a figure pushed through the blustering rain towards the coach in darkness.

He could barely see the man as he strode towards him, and was barely even given a greeting as the man spoke up in the rain.

“Right, you’re the replacement then?”

“That I am.”

“Right, I’ll not spend another night here! I’m just a courier for this place. I’ll take your shopping lists and bring you what you need. Get your bags ready. This place is all yours now!”

In a hurried manner the man went round to the back of the coach as the driver steadied the horse up front. The driver spoke now.

“This place. Spooks horses. Best if we all moved this along.”

In silence the three men hauled trunks of luggage out to the only source of light in the rain and dark, promptly dropping them off at the steps of the old home at the gates. Through the light of the windows he could make out the man a little better but never got a chance to say anything, as the last of his trunks were dropped off and in hurried silence, the man quickly went out beyond the gates to the coach.

The driver, a man more courteous, stayed behind, if only for a moment, tipping his hat in the rain.

“I wish you luck sir. This job is not one so easily shouldered.”

The driver held his hand out, and he took it, shaking it firmly.

“Did you know the old keeper here before me? Cromwell?”

Under the darkness of his hat the driver nodded.

“Only vaguely, sir. I am but a ferryman. But I hear the fellow who watched over this place was the one who found him.”

“What happened?”

The coach driver chuckled.

“What else? He died.”

With one last tip of his hat in the blustering rain, the coach driver turned, walking back out to the dark beyond the house, closing the iron gates behind him. That was it then. He was the Gravekeeper now. The sound of leather straps and a horse making to move far away from here was heard alongside the creaking of the old coach. He looked out from the dim light that shined through the old windows of the house to the darkness beyond.

There was nothing. Only wind and rain in the night. Well. That settled it then. He stood on the stone step to the house, feeling the patter of cold rainwater on his hat. May as well bring his luggage inside for the night. He’d sort things out in the morning.

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Grey skies dawned under a dim light in the morning, as the rain continued, albeit slower than the night. The small cottage of sorts, he quickly discovered, was very well built despite its appearance outside in the night. It was warm. Welcoming. And not a spot of cold water to be found here. A simple space really, a bed, a desk, and all around him, books. Stacks of paper.

With only a little room left behind for his own things, he found spots to nestle his trunks into and use them as chests of sorts. He mused on the cramped space, all the books here, and wondered why they were left behind. And on closer inspection, he soon understood. The books, and stacks of paper were records.

Some were records of the dead brought here. And others, were records and documents of the instructional kind. Upon skimming through pages and pages, he’d found them all signed by Cromwell. It made sense, perhaps. One needed time to occupy themselves out here. And so Cromwell had prepared things for others. And, as if on cue, like it were planned, he opened up the drawer on the desk by the window, to find another envelope. Signed to, “The New Owner.”

He looked outside the old window to dull grey beyond outside. Gravestones, hills of them as far as he could see. Crypts. And the borderline remains of the forest that surrounded this place, standing tall in the form of very ancient trees among the graves. Thick iron bars taller than the house he was in surrounded the perimeter of the cemetery, held together by immense stone pillars and cobble walls, vanishing from his view behind the hills.

He could wait a while. There was no real rush involved with the dead after all.


170
The Flood / TFW you fuck up colour files
« on: March 18, 2015, 12:20:18 PM »

171
The Flood / Evolve in A nutshell
« on: March 18, 2015, 11:35:09 AM »
Spoiler

You folks remember Evolve right? Let's take bets on how long it'll take a certain source filmmaker community to get a hold of the wraith's model.

172
The Flood / Do you think actors can watch their movies?
« on: March 18, 2015, 11:05:15 AM »
Just a question. I mean, usually, a creator of something can enjoy their content. But, because they're the ones who made it, they have a different perspective of things.

For example. Where somebody could sit down and watch a movie, enjoy it for what it is as a well executed type of enjoyment, an actor will sit down, and watch the movie with the knowledge of every scene they worked on. And not only that, but they'll have to watch themselves too.

You think any, if at all, watch their own movies?

Do you think Leonardo Dicaprio watches his performances and constantly talks to himself, telling himself that it was oscar worthy?

173
Serious / ITER: Star in a bottle nuclear reactor
« on: March 16, 2015, 11:19:09 AM »
Anybody hear about these new developments? The article itself is old but ITER showed up in the news today apparently. Did some digging on what exactly it was.

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Years from now—maybe in a decade, maybe sooner—if all goes according to plan, the most complex machine ever built will be switched on in an Alpine forest in the South of France. The machine, called the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, or ITER, will stand a hundred feet tall, and it will weigh twenty-three thousand tons—more than twice the weight of the Eiffel Tower. At its core, densely packed high-precision equipment will encase a cavernous vacuum chamber, in which a super-hot cloud of heavy hydrogen will rotate faster than the speed of sound, twisting like a strand of DNA as it circulates. The cloud will be scorched by electric current (a surge so forceful that it will make lightning seem like a tiny arc of static electricity), and bombarded by concentrated waves of radiation. Beams of uncharged particles—the energy in them so great it could vaporize a car in seconds—will pour into the chamber, adding tremendous heat. In this way, the circulating hydrogen will become ionized, and achieve temperatures exceeding two hundred million degrees Celsius—more than ten times as hot as the sun at its blazing core.

No natural phenomenon on Earth will be hotter. Like the sun, the cloud will go nuclear. The zooming hydrogen atoms, in a state of extreme kinetic excitement, will slam into one another, fusing to form a new element—helium—and with each atomic coupling explosive energy will be released: intense heat, gamma rays, X rays, a torrential flux of fast-moving neutrons propelled in every direction. There isn’t a physical substance that could contain such a thing. Metals, plastics, ceramics, concrete, even pure diamond—all would be obliterated on contact, and so the machine will hold the superheated cloud in a “magnetic bottle,” using the largest system of superconducting magnets in the world. Just feet from the reactor’s core, the magnets will be cooled to two hundred and sixty-nine degrees below zero, nearly the temperature of deep space. Caught in the grip of their titanic forces, the artificial earthbound sun will be suspended, under tremendous pressure, in the pristine nothingness of ITER’s vacuum interior.

Rest of the article here for anybody interested.

Thoughts?

174
I call it quits now for the evening. Lock or ban or whatever. Can't send a PM so I'll put it where it can be seen.

Spoiler
So why not work on them right now? Why post, all that you've posted in the last hour? When you could be doing something?

Why?

Because this place is your routine. It's a comfort zone. A buffer. Except that your buffer is backfiring. You're fed up of things. Fed up of being here and being greeted by people you don't enjoy who don't enjoy you.

Can you tell me this last hour wasn't a complete waste of your time?

I can tell you, that on my end, I'm only typing this with one hand as I eat my supper. I'm only here because that's about all I can do to eat and multitask at the same time. As soon as I'm done this last bit of what I'm eating, I'll be gone to work on things of mine.

But I didn't waste this hour.

I didn't spend it trying to get a raise out of people to make myself feel better like a troll. I didn't spend it moping around like my depressive, overpowering side these days. I didn't spend it shitposting the most random thought that came up into my head.

I spent it talking to you because you're spending your time here caught in a trap and you know it. Instead, why not focus on your work? Why not make something special, and post it here when you're done?

Or why not, just keep doing your projects, in peace and quiet?

No need to make the posts you made here because they were wasted time, with no benifit for yourself.

Time is precious. Don't waste moments of your life with bullshit, and bulshitting on a forum.

Make your time count as much as you can.

And there we go. I'm done eating. You won't see me again tonight. I bid you farewell and leave the choice and thinking up to you.

You're the only one who can change your life. The only one who can put your foot down and say no. The only one who can choose to break out of your cycle.

175
The Flood / This some surreal shit here
« on: March 12, 2015, 10:50:30 AM »
A house burned down in the area yesterday. Family just finished building it not a few months ago. I took cinderblocks out of that yard when they demolished the old structures there. Apparently a strong east wind yesterday, the garage caught on fire and it jumped immediately onto the roof of the house.

I'm heading out later to take a peek. Might bring back pictures.

Always strange shit when folks you know have that happen to them. Lucky them though. Rich house. They can rebuild. Big family and lots of support. Wouldn't be so lucky if it were my restaurant.

176
The Flood / Just Occurred to me that this forum.....
« on: March 11, 2015, 09:34:30 AM »
Is essentially the equivalent of my morning middle table of old guys. Everybody here generally knows one another to some degree, everybody's cranky about some shit, and the only thing to discuss is how much shit's falling apart, that, or fuck around.

And the people leaving are just like the old guys at the middle table who pass away.

We need a new business plan gentlemen.

177
The Flood / Balancing Shit
« on: March 10, 2015, 11:44:22 PM »
Question. How do you balance shit? How do you find a balance between trying to keep yourself happy. And doing the ugly things required of you in today's world? Money in today's world, is the gateway to everything. If you have it, and a lot of it, nothing is off limits to you.

But the price paid to get it, to get that much of it, is high. It's hours of your life spent, working, truly working and devoted to making it. People say that money buys a hollow happiness. You can have all the money in the world but still be depressed.

But is that really the case? Those bits of time, those little moments you earn because of the money, are you not happy and enjoying yourself in them?

It's a wager and a balance. Work your life, spend all that time away for short little moments, using all that money to get yourself something grand. Or try to live your life happily day by day, but come face to face with the reality that you've no money and so you're poor. Unable to take those doors that others can.

And what of people? How do you balance that?

Their tired, boring routines that are predictable, so predictable and played out that you can practically smell it on them when you see them? It's so expected and cliche that it's boring.

And yet when you turn away, isolate yourself, and bring someone along for the ride, it gets old. It gets stuffy. Cabin fever of sorts.

Not enough work. You get bored of your spare time. Too much work, and you break down.

Where do you find that acceptable middle ground that rests in between either sides when both are so easy to fall into?

What's your wager on that?


178
The Flood / The Viability of a "Generation Ship"
« on: March 07, 2015, 11:46:40 AM »
It's a relatively old sci-fi concept. the idea of sending off a space craft, a starship, out into space with the capabilities of sustaining life indefinitely aboard it. The ship is basically a cradle, containing self contained ecosystems and environments, with room for people to live aboard it.

The idea of a generation ship, is not that it can travel faster than light and reach worlds to offload its cargo, but that the people living on the ship will live their lives out aboard it until they die, fostering continuing generations of people aboard the starship until it eventually reaches its destination, and is then able to finally offload itself.

Space, for lack of a better term, is space. And we can't even truly grasp how enormous the distances are, so vast that the fastest known thing to us, light, is painfully slow. The only viable application of light speed would be travel in a solar system.

But beyond solar systems, and between them, the greater the distance the lower the viability of traveling at light speed to a destination.

So what's your take on the idea of a generation ship?

179
The Flood / Roughly 20 years ago the internet went up
« on: March 06, 2015, 02:26:45 PM »
I was born in 92 and by then it had just started becoming available for major public usage. In rough, general numbers, public internet is roughly 23-25 years old. So I've a question for you.

Most of the people here were born just before the internet went widespread, or just after. And only a few of us here probably remember days when sitting at a computer wasn't a thing. So, I ask, with how much that has happened in the last roughly 20 years since the internet has went up, how much it accelerated, expanded, grew, evolved, and refined,

what do you think will happen in the next 20 years?

Or, even better, what do you think the world will be like when you're in your 60's?

Something that fascinates me, is talking to older people. Seeing glimpses of what it was like here and how much has changed over time. Technology, and trends move so fast today that it's probable to guess where we're headed, but almost impossible to really tell what will really happen.

But for the sake of curiosity, what are your thoughts on what's coming in the future ahead?

180
Gaming / Uproar for a Blank Slate
« on: March 05, 2015, 10:06:37 AM »
That's right friends, I'm here to talk a little bit about the recent death of a well known friend of ours in the Haloverse. Rookie. Now, community uproar aside over comrade Mickey's hesitation, and community uproar aside over supposedly bad writing, what I'd like to talk to you about today is the uproar itself.

Because you have to ask the question. Why is everybody upset?

Logically, you could say that people are upset over shitty writing. That's fair. Everybody has their point to make. But why, THIS particular set of writing? Because let's face it. All across the internet, there is bad writing. Or, correctly said, there is unrefined writing. It's everywhere. And people don't get upset about it. They don't get mad at it.

So, why the uproar over this?

I'll tell you why. It has nothing to do with the writing itself. It has nothing to do with Mickey's freeze up. It has to do with the fact, that a character we know, is dead.

And this is the strange part. From a character standpoint, we know little about the Rookie. As a character, Rookie is undefined. We know he served in some skirmishes prior to joining Buck's squad, (Dirt) and that's it. Now, I'm aware that not everybody particularily cared about the death. Some said "meh" and that was that. But others didn't. And this is mainly what and who I'm adressing here.

The Rookie, from a character standpoint, is a blank slate, completely. And yet, at the same time, you have people who are upset over his death. People arguing about it for the now obvious and varied reasons. But the point is, they're arguing. They are arguing, using whatever points they can to justify why Rookie should not be dead right now.

Which, in itself, is denial. People often go through stages when somebody dies. Denial being one of them.

Which again, cements the fact that despite Rookie being a blank slate, as a character, people cared for him.

And that is today's question. Where do you find care for a blank slate? Or more importantly, how?

Through a very strange manner of characterization. Through a very seemingly hit or miss way of telling a story through immersion. For while Rookie had no defined character to love or laugh with, Rookie had something else.

A shared experience.

Through the majority of the game, Halo 3 ODST, we walked through the boots of Rookie. And at first, you might say that as you played through ODST, you didn't feel like Rookie. You felt like you. You were out on the streets of New Mombassa in the night. You were alone, and on your own. You were the one who went through fights that had you gripping the controller because you'd already died once before on Legendary.

And yet, at the same time, we can appreciate subtle hints that you weren't you. Other characters calling you Rookie, reffering to you by a name that wasn't yours. Watching Rookie in cutscenes, and then, being immersed again in his boots in gameplay.

Rookie's fights were your fights. And then, at the end of ODST, you stepped out of his shoes and said goodbye.

But the memories are all still there. Rookie is a special kind of character. He's not a character that can make you laugh or cry. He's not a character with for lack of a better term, character. But he's an immersive character.

He's somebody you shared an experience with. Somebody you got to know on a very personal, yet impersonal level. On legendary, when you cleared those tough fights, when you finally succeeded, Rookie succeeded. Except that Rookie only ever had one life. Meaning that he did his fights in one shot with no failures. Both making you, as a player feel invincible, and Rookie, as a character himself, seemingly invincible.

So, to essentially see him die, in one shot, at the snap of a finger. To be reminded that Rookie was only ever Human. To be reminded that Rookie was somebody else, those fights that you watched, were his, those memories and those experiences of yours, being his.

And then, boom. Immersion broken.

You were no longer the Rookie, and the Rookie was no longer you. But you still have all those memories of his fights.

So at the point of Rookie's death, he became something more. He became a character separate from you. But all the same, a character that you knew very well in person. Can we say that he was a good character, that was loved because of his character? Or hated? Or anything else in between? Maybe not.

But as an immersive character, he was. And the reason why everybody got all up in arms over his death, which is the central reason for all arguments at this point, is because like it or not, we're saying goodbye.

We're saying goodbye to everything that we and Rookie accomplished together.

We're saying goodbye to a blank slate who never spoke, cried, or laughed.

And at the end of the road, we're parting ways with Rookie as an immersive character, and saying hello to a real character, because at the time of his death, it was just him, and him alone.

No checkpoints, no respawns.

Just Rookie.










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