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Messages - Turkey
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721
« on: March 31, 2017, 05:17:12 AM »
anyone know where you can find the blue dragon hanging out (naydra or somethin like that) ? i need his horns to upgrade my tunic now
climb mt. lanayru
i already tried that, nothing
i already did the spring of wisdom quest, if that matters
She spawns at midnight and dawn at the Lanayru Promenade. Very easy to get her mats.
She's also by Lanayru Bay but it's harder to hit her.
alright cool, i'll try it out next time
i was just chilling at mt lanayru, to no avail
I know the feeling. My last play session had me sitting around, waiting for her to spawn at the top of the mountain around 12:00 AM, getting impatient, starting a fire and waiting until night again, only to repeat. Don't know if it needs to be spoilered, but... this is regarding other mystical beasts in the game. It seems a lot less certain she'll appear there than, say, Dinraal or Farosh (Farosh being the easiest to find, Dinraal being the easiest to predict.) Even the guide shows her appearance patters are far less predictable than the other two dragons.
Dragons will not spawn when you sit at their spawn point. Move down the mountain before the right time. Every one of them shows up every night, to the point that I could routinely grab all three in one night.
722
« on: March 30, 2017, 05:59:52 PM »
Hey, at least it's coming out on PC.
723
« on: March 30, 2017, 04:12:37 PM »
There's no compelling evidence against them, which is the crux of the issue. Complaints about Big Agra are irrelevant to whether GMOs are safe.
724
« on: March 30, 2017, 02:57:04 PM »
Had the appointment. Was prescribed a month's worth of sertraline, 50mg once a day. I have a follow up appointment next week to discuss things like side effects, and my GP is going to get me in for proper CBT sessions with a psychologist who also specialises in drug abuse.
I actually feel okay. It's a long road ahead, but for the first time in years I feel like I have the fortitude to not only beat depression, but drag it to the street and break its teeth on the curb.
That's fantastic, man. I'm really happy for you. On a side note, I've heard that it can be a bit of a process to find an effective drug for some people, so don't be discouraged if it's not an immediate magical fix.
725
« on: March 30, 2017, 01:19:03 PM »
The premise for restarting is as generic as they come, and I do miss when the game was advertised as a mystical, almost philosophical story.
But I like Nathan Fillion and they seem to have found their niche, so it's better than nothing and I'll remain optimistic.
726
« on: March 30, 2017, 11:01:10 AM »
How do I stop benching like a little bitch?
My squat and deadlift have skyrocketed but I've barely improved on bench (+10% in 4 months).
727
« on: March 30, 2017, 09:41:16 AM »
that said, villains are overrated--i don't really need to have a personal man vs. man conflict in every game i play
I agree of course, and while I see its attempt to frame it as a man vs nature by dehumanizing Ganon into the very literal embodiment of evil and malice, it does so by using a really simple man vs man structure: the guardians and divine beasts are hostile because of him, and the goal is to kill Ganon. There's no real personal struggle Link goes through, and I'd venture to say he's one the least expressive versions we've seen in a long time. Zelda story is an unfortunately generic man vs self, but ultimately doesn't have too much bearing on the story that the game presents. Big bad villains may be overrated, but the game needs some source of conflict, which we never really see. We're told that Ganon might be set free some day soon, but that never actually amounts to anything. There's no real rising action, and the climax is solely the final boss fight -- and it's not even a good one.
728
« on: March 30, 2017, 06:24:17 AM »
Ok so I've seen some pretty awful reactions to people disliking things about BOTW. Jim Sterling even got DDOSED because some angry children couldn't accept his opinion of the game, real mature. I've even seen people get offended when anyone thinks the game is perfection and doesn't rate it a 10/10
Is it possible to talk about the things we dislike about the game without someone getting mad over it? Go ahead. I'll start, I thought the game lacked an interesting villain and weapon degradation annoys me.
We already have been though. I absolutely love this game but I've been giving it shit up and down this whole thread with only respectful responses given back. I agree with your two complaints though. Mechanics-wise, degredation was only a pain in the beginning. At the end you're so flush with 60+ power weapons it's not an issue. As a story and character guy, the lack of antagonist is the biggest criticism I have against the game. At least in MM the almost non-existent villain appeared throughout the game in the consequences of his actions and the impact he had on other characters.
729
« on: March 29, 2017, 05:40:54 AM »
Bro if you'd just read the Grimoire Cards, you'd understand their genius.
I never said the lore was bad. It's just presented only in such a dumb way that I never even bothered with it much.
Oh, I think the lore is bad. It's mostly just meaningless tidbits of information that don't hold up in-game. I always got a bit of a laugh from killing Oryx with a handful of guns. He's supposed to be just shy of a literal god, but about 5 minutes of being shot with bullets is enough to do it. And your mechanic buddy back at the tower can take his heart and turn it into a gun, for some reason.
730
« on: March 29, 2017, 05:25:40 AM »
Bro if you'd just read the Grimoire Cards, you'd understand their genius.
731
« on: March 29, 2017, 05:21:46 AM »
Ultimately it's a fun flick, as long as you don't take it too seriously.
Yeah but that's the problem So many subpar movies come out and fandoms just say "yeah, but it was kinda fun tho" You should be demanding that the movies you see be good, especially when they have the gall to wipe out dozens of other previously canonical stories beloved by fans like Dark Forces and cash in on nostalgia and fan service instead of truly original, compelling storytelling. Phantom Menace was also fun, told a unique story, had better characters (with some exceptions), but is still universally considered a bad movie.
732
« on: March 28, 2017, 07:18:16 PM »
It was done very poorly in Rogue One and was a lazy attempt to use an already established villain as a crutch.
I disagree, the plot of Rogue One was very closely entangled with Tarkin's grab for power and plot to replace the senate through direct fear.
If he hadn't been in the film, his shadow would've been looming over it so heavily we would only feel like something was missing.
The film itself was, unironically, a mistake. His relevance to the plot changes nothing; we learned nothing in Rogue One that we didn't already know about him from ANH, and the film fails to decide who the villain is. Vader is already established and does almost nothing but give fan service at the end; Tarkin is also established, and has almost no bearing on the plot except to fill that hole that you describe; Krennic neatly fits into the role of Generic Ambitious Bad Guy rendered impotent by the two most significant villains in the series. Really, it's kind of disappointing how well-received Rogue One was. It had a neat space battle, but it was so full of bad writing, flat characters, and told an utterly pointless story. Jyn could have been an incredibly compelling character, but they literally cut out her entire arc.
733
« on: March 28, 2017, 05:35:35 PM »
i'm all about enjoying games for what they are, not what they were hyped up to be--which is why i can enjoy games like no man's sky despite the fact that i'm supposed to hate it
i'm not saying i'll like destiny too but i wanna give every game i try out a fair shake
also, "an ugly contest where everybody's winning"--that's a pretty good line
Bro, Destiny is a ton of fun ...until you finish it. Then it's just a boring grind for slightly better gear so you can grind for slightly better gear so you can do the raid to get slightly better gear so you can do the harder version of the raid for slightly better gear so you can do the hardest version of the raid for slightly better gear so you can start that all over again to upgrade that gear. No story or characters to speak of, but the gameplay is an absolute blast. It's a badly designed game in the sense that Bungie didn't seem to have a clue what they wanted to do with it.
734
« on: March 28, 2017, 02:48:27 PM »
Leaning as hard as ever on the only character that exists in the game. Who are we kidding though; we're all probably gonna cough up for Destiny 2 when it comes out. Just bend over and take it.
735
« on: March 28, 2017, 01:58:30 PM »
Here's a good article ridiculing the emerging attitude of opposition towards automation: https://www.wsj.com/articles/bill-gates-vs-the-robots-1490559460Quoting below in case of a paywall: Spoiler Bill Gates, meet Ned Ludd. Ned, meet Bill.
Ludd was the 18th-century folk hero of anti-industrialists. As the possibly apocryphal story goes, in the 1770s he busted up a few stocking frames—knitting machines used to make socks and other clothing—to protest the labor-saving devices. Taking up his cause a few decades later, a band of self-described “Luddites” rebelled by smashing some of the machines that powered the Industrial Revolution.
Apparently this is the sort of behavior that would make Mr. Gates proud. Last month in an interview with the website Quartz, the Microsoft founder and richest man alive said it would be OK to tax job-killing robots. If a $50,000 worker was replaced by a robot, the government would lose income-tax revenue. Therefore, Mr. Gates suggested, the feds can make up their loss with “some type of robot tax.”
This is the dumbest idea since Messrs. Smoot and Hawley rampaged through the U.S. Capitol in 1930. It’s a shame, especially since Bill Gates is one of my heroes.
When I started working on Wall Street, I was taken into rooms with giant sheets of paper spread across huge tables. People milled about armed with rulers, pencils and X-Acto Knives, creating financial models and earnings estimates.
Spreadsheets, get it? This all disappeared quickly when VisiCalc, Lotus 1-2-3 and eventually Microsoft Excel automated the calculations. Some fine motor-skill workers and maybe a few math majors lost jobs, but hundreds of thousands more were hired to model the world. Should we have taxed software because it killed jobs? Put levies on spell checkers because copy editors are out of work?
Mr. Gates killed as many jobs as anyone: secretaries, typesetters, tax accountants—the list doesn’t end. It’s almost indiscriminate destruction. But he’s my hero because he made the world productive, rolling over mundane and often grueling jobs with automation. The American Dream is not sorting airline tickets, setting type or counting $20 bills. Better jobs emerged.
Mr. Gates may be worth $86 billion—who’s counting?—but the rest of the world made multiples of his fortune using his tools. Society as a whole is better off. In August 1981, when Microsoft’s operating system first began to ship, U.S. employment stood at 91 million jobs. The economy has since added 53 million jobs, outpacing the rate of population growth.
Even better, the Third World is rising out of poverty because of improved logistics from personal computers and servers. This has dramatically lowered the cost of basic food, energy and health care. None of this happens without productive tools—doing more with less.
What’s most disturbing is that the Luddites never totally went away. How many times have we been subject to proposals that would tax progress? ObamaCare’s regulations froze the medical industry. Its 2.3% medical-device tax was even worse, discouraging investment in one of the few innovative health-care sectors. Mileage standards on automobiles were a waste of resources contributing to the moronic Detroit bailout in 2009. Even a carbon tax is Ludd-like, raising the cost of energy to slow its consumption.
There is a murmuring movement out of Europe known as “degrowth.” If this sounds to you like a cabal of cave dwellers, you’re not that far off. Degrowth Week in Budapest last summer featured enchanting sessions like this one: “Popular competence building against the Technocracy.” Channeling Ludd, industrial insurgents and sustainability samurais want to keep things the way they are, like the eco-protesters at Standing Rock. The site degrowth.org is clear about the movement’s unproductive goals: Consume less and share more.
OK, but do you want to give up Google Maps, Snapchat and future innovations? Pry them out of my cold dead thumbs. Surely Mr. Gates knows that his charitable foundation’s efforts to eradicate malaria and other diseases require a lot of productive capital and hard work. I can’t picture him clamoring to tax robots that lower the cost of malaria drugs or mosquito nets. That kind of tax would kill off the next wave of disease-killing productivity.
I don’t think Mr. Gates wants to be the poster boy for the degrowth movement. He knows how hard progress is. After PCs, Microsoft missed the start of every subsequent technology trend: browsers, video streaming, search, smartphones and cloud computing. Today the company is playing catchup with neural computing, which drives image recognition and other robotic cognitive skills. This type of innovation, even if it destroys jobs near-term, needs to be nurtured and encouraged. Burden progress with taxes, and degrowth is what you’ll get.
736
« on: March 28, 2017, 01:54:42 PM »
It's clear you know exactly what you need to do to fix it: get off drugs and alcohol, and begin taking antidepressants.
Antidepressants saved my sister's life several times over, and while I totally understand the fear of side effects and stigma, I truly believe that the necessary course-correction you need to make involves more than willpower and happy thoughts. Best of luck, bud. I really do miss your wit and sharpness on here.
737
« on: March 28, 2017, 01:50:27 PM »
Apparently last time I played, I finished NG+ and started the new one, so now I have to go through all of NG+2 after months off just to get to the DLC, and then experience it at a higher than normal difficulty level. Fuck.
738
« on: March 28, 2017, 01:44:59 PM »
I wonder if some of that is just attrition on both sides. Neither wants to admit to a stalemate (the admission that their arguments were, essentially, ineffective) and both parties end it gracefully by conceding that the other does have some valid points and that they do share some beliefs.
Some of it is just not understanding the opponent's viewpoint. Take the abortion debate: both sides believe their position to be the best outcome for the mother, the child, and society; so often that debate is entirely centered around trying to convince the other person that they don't care about one or more of those three subjects, when that's really not what's happening at all.
739
« on: March 27, 2017, 07:58:58 PM »
Seems like something that'll have to be worked out via your advisor and the professors. I'm sure they want nothing but success for you, and that they understand that you can't be expected to keep up under such stress.
740
« on: March 27, 2017, 09:16:59 AM »
bro
Email your profs and let them know what's up. Call your advisor, too.
741
« on: March 27, 2017, 08:58:20 AM »
It was done very poorly in Rogue One and was a lazy attempt to use an already established villain as a crutch.
742
« on: March 26, 2017, 05:37:51 PM »
Starting playing Dark Souls 3 in anticipation of the last DLC and realized I quit playing right after starting NG+2, and I'm really rusty. Gotta beat the whole game again just to play the DLC.
743
« on: March 26, 2017, 02:54:18 PM »
They've been 100% fine for me. I love how they run along tracks on their own if they're tame enough.
I've had some really annoying control issues even with 100% bonded horses, like running in the opposite direction or stopping suddenly. This happens almost every time I use one, to the point that I don't use them except in open areas because of how often they run themselves off ledges or into walls.
744
« on: March 26, 2017, 11:47:58 AM »
How so?
And the move towards digital markets is itself an affront to used game purchases that absolutely should not be embraced by consumers. Used software doesn't exist. You'll can't sell or buy a "used" digital game.
745
« on: March 26, 2017, 11:35:43 AM »
If it turns out to be a requirement to have played Ashes of Ariandel to experience all of the Ringed City content, I'm gonna be pissed.
746
« on: March 26, 2017, 11:34:32 AM »
I don't know where you live but there's a ton of local game shops in my area that are viable alternatives. They even sell older generation games and consoles too. There's one near Downtown Orlando that still sells original copies of FFXI for the PC in the box.
Kind of sad to see. My local Gamestop growing up was always good to me, and they're the only reliable used game dealer around these days. That's great for you, but in the three cities I've lived in, Gamestop is the only real alternative. Maybe some pawn shops or flea markets have games, but not as consistent or well-supplied (nor do they guarantee their refurbished consoles). And the move towards digital markets is itself an affront to used game purchases that absolutely should not be embraced by consumers.
747
« on: March 26, 2017, 11:26:14 AM »
Kind of sad to see. My local Gamestop growing up was always good to me, and they're the only reliable used game dealer around these days.
748
« on: March 25, 2017, 03:52:27 PM »
In your research, did you come up with anything about upgrading monitors? I've had the same monitors for probably 7 years and they're still 1080p, decent refresh rate, etc, I just don't if it's worth it to get news ones. Let me know what you think of your speakers, too; I've had the same set of speakers for well over a decade, so that's another thing I'm late to upgrade.
Monitors was already something I knew quite a bit about. What would you primarily use your new one for? Gaming? Because if so, I can fully recommend 144hz. I noticed the difference the second I turned it on by just moving the mouse across the screen.
Movies and games, yeah. I'd keep the old ones for utility, but I feel like my current ones are a bit outdated.
749
« on: March 25, 2017, 02:18:43 PM »
In your research, did you come up with anything about upgrading monitors? I've had the same monitors for probably 7 years and they're still 1080p, decent refresh rate, etc, I just don't if it's worth it to get news ones. Let me know what you think of your speakers, too; I've had the same set of speakers for well over a decade, so that's another thing I'm late to upgrade.
750
« on: March 25, 2017, 12:54:06 PM »
Even after replaying Dark Souls several times, I still really struggle with Quelaag, especially if I haven't accidentally over-leveled or upgraded sufficiently. Whenever I beat her I do so pretty easily and it feels like a fluke after numerous other tries.
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