You try to keep smiley faces from turning red until cats inevitably make your game run at 0.2 FPS.
Turns out that information warfare is trivial when you own all the rights and the lights and the locks on your own platform.
I once spent an entire Starfinder session sitting in a bar and ordering different drinks with the rest of the party. We still joke about it.
Not only do I think bots should be banned from making posts, I also think that people that display bot-like behavior should be warned and then banned if they don’t stop.
I hope to one day live in a world where people only do things for the skill/experience/craft, instead of out of necessity.
As soon as I saw “flexile vs tensile strengths of different materials,” I knew what was up.
I’m of the opinion that they should try to start as many fires and destroy as much of the value of the website as possible, all the while directing people to alternative communities. It’s not sustainable, but enough chaos and loss might cause the admins to reevaluate the risk of trying something like this in the future. There’s a reason some animals evolved poison that only works after they’re eaten.
I know /r/RPG wants more users to vote than they have any chance of getting before they’ll consider further closures, and /r/Minecraft wanted to respect the users that voted, but caved as soon as the admins said they’d be removed, despite the poll.
You’ve got handful of loyal users that have been very resistant to changes.
Let’s be real: almost all of the subs’ mods caved when they were threatened with loss of their precious power. A bunch of subs have been operating as business as usual this whole time. Give it a month, and scabs leading apathetic users (many of whom are children) will have settled the ruins and filled in the cracks.
IDK, I’m having fun running around and throwing fuel on the fire in communities that have been forced open.
I bailed off of Reddit three months ago, after /r/Pathfinder2e started reaching peak echo chamber.
If you’re posting a link, it might be caught by the spam filter.
Plant-based foods also can create acrylamide (carcinogenic) when they are cooked at high temperatures.