insurgentrat

joined 2 months ago
[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 2 points 1 week ago

Sure. Just timed out on gypceros last night. Might be a while while I learn to play again.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 3 points 1 week ago

Not via the online simulation, but there is a different mode that is 'local play' on the same lan. Might work with a virtual network configured correctly.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 4 points 1 week ago (5 children)

We have literally just started again. I think we've done 1 hub quest and cleared 1 star village. We are usually available for a couple of hours in the evening UTC+10/11

 

The news about the new mh game has me thinking about this silly series I've spent way too much of my life playing (without improving! Impressive!) so I finally got around to setting up emulation to play it with my wife as she needs m&kb and started with mhworld.

Turns out there's a neat emulated network on ryujinx so you can actually play with people all over the world! Kinda like Hamachi if anyone else is old enough to remember that.

Anyway the long and the short of it, if anyone wants to play together you can set passwords either on the hubs/on the emulated lan. So I thought I'd see if anyone on hexbear had interest in revisiting it (or playing for the first time!). If there's enough we could set a password on the lan and hopefully just be able to pop in and out.


Just so there's some discussion here, I had forgotten how sticky combat was in old gen. I'm trying sns and it feels like the moment you hit attack you're basically glued to the floor. I am generally a bit mixed on some of the changes (although I thought rise and sunbreak were amazing fun overall), but the increased fluidity in combat does make it hard to go back in some ways.

I do prefer the slower pace of the older style though, just in terms of increased time wandering around and gathering. I feel like the newer games have been much more action focused for both better and worse.

When did you start playing and what are your favourite and least favourite changes in the post world era?

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 13 points 1 month ago

Can you imagine the backlash though? From chuds and boomers alike.

I spend too much of my life in games (board, social, or video I play them all!) and I really do wish more people who enjoy them were interested in critical analysis of them. Outside of gamedev circles and weird youtube channels asking "why is this being presented the way it is?" is a technique for speedrunning slur%. Especially if a game is non, or non traditional, narrative. Like I dare you to try analyse the themes of slay the spire or whatever on the subreddit haha.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 15 points 1 month ago (1 children)

How dare a piece of media, I product I bought, challenge me by pointing out that the standard media of this type depicts horrific acts. Clearly it wants me to feel ashamed for playing, and not to reflect on why it's so uncomfortable when highlighted, but so banal it goes unacknowledged when not?

Could I use this moment to grow? To ask how we got here and whether we should stay here? Certainly not, because games are masturbatory toys of indulgence and nothing more. Unless of course I'm defending how I spend my time, then they're art.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 25 points 1 month ago (5 children)

Gamers are the least media literate of people who's entire hobby is about exposing themselves to media.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 16 points 1 month ago

That's honestly one of my favourite jokes on Wikipedia.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 7 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

James is a weird one. I am a pretty big fan of his books "the art of not being governed" and "seeing like a state" as academic examinations of the conflict between everyday life and statism. I also think his "against the grain" is a fascinating look at how agriculture actually came about. This book though is not it, he writes with the casual defeatism of someone who is among the highest rungs of society. Mustering the same casual defense of the status quo academics and philosophers have been deploying for generations, most humourously skewered in this comic imho https://existentialcomics.com/comic/350

I think if people who might be the audience for this would be better served reading something like Graeber's Debt or The dawn of everything. While they focus on different things they both appeal to the same intellectual liberal audience (as well as other ofc) and the analysis of history is more interesting; Nudging people towards more radical conclusions.

Honestly it's quite sad to see someone who studied peasant resistance and wrote a very even handed criticism of centralisation reduce anarchism to crossing the street on a red light and sometimes listening to crowds.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 1 points 1 month ago

Um that 8 folf star is the symbol of chaos from Moorcock's work. 40k appropriated it, in Moorcock's stories chaos and law are balancing forces. It also saw extensive use in occult stuff before warhammer.

My understanding of why it's popular as a symbol in like Greece, Chili etc is in the Moorcock sense. I.e. when states centralise and suffocate chaos is needed to restore freedom and balance. Similar to flying a black flag as the negation of flags.

Nothing in 40k is original and everything in it is a shallow ripoff of something more interesting.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 11 points 1 month ago (4 children)

lmfao, I ended up getting into cleaning old soviet straight razors (cheaper than the Sheffield ones but also good steel) and foisting them on all my friends/family. As well as getting quite competent at sharpening blades due to trans shaving needs. Legit though, they're waaaaay faster even for just legs and stuff plus if you can splurge for a stainless one basically 20 minutes maintenance once a month or so.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 5 points 1 month ago

Alas, I've just got the grey hair (coming through in a streak but, gonna enjoy this while it lasts), arthritis, large pores, and brittle nails.

Still, I love my most battered tools most of all as they're the ones that have been both useful and durable. It would be inconsistent not to try apply the same love of imperfection to this silly meat bag. Mostly it's just the becoming invisible and the aching that's a bummer. Yay, patriarchy.

[–] insurgentrat@hexbear.net 17 points 1 month ago (3 children)

My neighbours are nice to me. Was walking the dogs with my wife and one of the friendly people on the corner yelled out "morning girls!". I'm very obviously trans and it's just nice to have this community of people that are all like 20-40 years older than me (aging little burb/village) be so uncaring about it.

Also I'm starting to age and feeling insecure about it instead of silver-foxy. Have I finally accepted myself? :P

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