- 1 Post
- 101 Comments
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Does anybody dislike anime and manga?English
43·2 years agoOP has been in a lengthy struggle with the world over media. They swore off manga previously due to “christian morals” and the fact that Zombieland Saga contained zombies, then got back into it because of Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure, and now it seems they’ve hit another block within the last month.
And it’s not just manga. They’ve also had an issue with Wikipedia.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•How do we actually get out of this climate disaster?English
41·2 years agoAre you the head of a major international corporation? If not, there’s nothing meaningful you can do.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Trolls of Lemmy, what is up with that?English
25·2 years agoI think they’re under the unfortunate delusion they’re being funny.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
RPGMemes @ttrpg.network•I believe the term is "get rekt noob"English
68·2 years agoAnd we played the first thing that came to our heads
Just so happened to be
The best song in the world
It was the best song in the world
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•If Jesus and his apostles had Chinese food for the last supper, what do you imagine the fortunes would say?English
111·2 years ago“You will reunite with a friend”
“The bad times will be over quickly”
“A sudden windfall will come your way”
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is your favorite paradox or conundrum? I am partial to can god kill god?English
1·2 years agoI find it funny that you directly quoted wikipedia to write that (exact wording from the paradox article, I checked), but ignored the sentence immediately before it (…or a statement that runs contrary to one’s expectation). Also, the linked articles at the bottom include the unexpected hanging page. Maybe read the entire wiki page before citing it?
Also, in case wikipedia suddenly isn’t enough, here’s an article on wolfram to back me up: https://mathworld.wolfram.com/UnexpectedHangingParadox.html
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is your favorite paradox or conundrum? I am partial to can god kill god?English
41·2 years agoMy dude. The paradox doesn’t change based on whether or not the judge knows the truth, or even if the man dies.
The truth is the man was made not to expect a thing by his own logic proving he would always expect a thing. The paradox is based on his own prediction being wrong because of his prediction. In this instance, his prediction was what his emotions would be.
A horse walks into a bar, and the barman says “why the long face?” I haven’t said how they remove the horse from the bar, so does that mean I didn’t tell a joke? Or does horse removal not actually matter to the joke?
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is your favorite paradox or conundrum? I am partial to can god kill god?English
9·2 years agoYou have understood nothing.
Neither statement can be true OR false. If statement A is true, statement B is true, which means statement A is false. To simplify, if statement A is true, statement A is false.
“This statement is false” can be neither true nor false. That is the most basic paradox there is.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is your favorite paradox or conundrum? I am partial to can god kill god?English
14·2 years agoI don’t think you’ve quite clocked it. It’s not that one of the statements has to be wrong, because that’s just a point in the cycle. If A is wrong, then B is right, which means A is right, which means B is wrong, which means A is wrong and the cycle begins anew.
They aren’t wrong, they’re contradictory. There is no logical way to parse the two statements together. That’s what a paradox is.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is your favorite paradox or conundrum? I am partial to can god kill god?English
41·2 years agoCannot be properly defined? “Expecting it” means “regarding it likely to happen”, according to the dictionary. He regarded it as impossible to happen, so he was not expecting it. His own logic disproving the event (him being surprised) allowed the event to happen (he was surprised).
Why does the paradox suffer if he lies about the solution? The paradox has already played out, and anything after that is just set dressing.
Just off the top of my head, maybe the judge has a camera set to gauge his reaction to the knock on the door? Or maybe he goes into denial and tries to explain his logic, thus proving the paradox? Or maybe the judge doesn’t actually care as much as he said, but trusts the logic to hold out and make for a funny story?
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is your favorite paradox or conundrum? I am partial to can god kill god?English
62·2 years agoThe Unexpected Hanging Paradox: A man is sentenced to death, but the judge decides to have a little fun with it. The man will be killed at noon on a day of the judge’s choosing in the next week, from Monday to Friday. The only stipulation is that the man will not expect it when he’s called to be killed.
The man does some quick logic in his head. If Friday is the last day he could be killed, then if he makes it to Friday without dying, he knows he must die on that day. And since that wouldn’t be a surprise, he cannot be killed on Friday.
He then extends the logic. Since he can’t be killed on Friday, the last day he can be killed is on Thursday. Thus, all the prior logic regarding Friday applies, and he cannot be killed on Thursday either. This then extends to Wednesday, then Tuesday, and then Monday. At the end, he grins with the knowledge that, through logic, he knows he cannot be killed on any of the days, and will therefore not be killed.
Therefore, the man is astonished when he’s called to be killed on Wednesday.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
RPGMemes @ttrpg.network•You joke that there's no potatoes one time, and your players will never forget.English
4·2 years agoI believe it was Running who stated “If I have seen further, it is only because I have stood on the shoulders of giants.” Referring, of course, to the works of noted giant Thrynn Walk.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's the worst scam you've fallen for (or gotten close to falling for)?English
2·2 years agoI don’t have trust issues, and I think that might actually be worse. Like, if that happened now, I’d only shirk at going in twice, but I’d still go in once.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's the worst scam you've fallen for (or gotten close to falling for)?English
12·2 years agoIt’s apparently a reference to fattening a pig before the slaughter. Basically, they trick you into feeding their crypto-pig before running off with all the pork.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's the worst scam you've fallen for (or gotten close to falling for)?English
171·2 years agoWhen I was playing that game as a youngling, someone asked me to help get some wine from a cult temple. I did, which made the door slam shut and every cultist in the room attack me. I just barely made it out of there alive.
Then they told me to go get a second one. Yeah, they didn’t need wine, they wanted me to die to a trap so they could take my stuff without killing me.
I’m embarrassed to say I actually went to get that second wine.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
RPGMemes @ttrpg.network•I wouldn't be bringing this back if someone didn't tell me Blades in the Dark "doesn't count" [read description]English
331·2 years agoIronically for a post complaining about reading comprehension, but you misrepresented the original post you’re talking about. Even have the classic “quotation marks around a thing that was never said” in the title.
First, and perhaps most obvious, this wasn’t “everyone”. This was one person, and they didn’t get many upvotes. When I recommend a TTRPG, for example, I’m recommending Genesys (like someone else did).
Second, they weren’t saying to homebrew old editions of D&D. They were saying you don’t need to homebrew at all. At most, they said you could reflavour something in 4th edition. Their entire point was that you don’t need to homebrew when you can just find a system that already has what you would have homebrewed in.
Third, they were suggesting this as an alternative to homebrewing specific material into D&D 5e. Pathfinder can provide the experience of “5e with time travel” that you wanted without any modifications. BitD is so different from 5e that it can’t.
You are, however, correct that they did backtrack. I’ll put this down to poorly explaining their argument to start with, as they downplayed the “5e but better” games in their first comment while that was really their entire point.
Personally, I like homebrewing. It’s fun to tinker with the rules and materials. But there’s also an argument to not repeat work someone else has already done.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Multilingual folks: what are some odd idioms in your language(s)?English
7·2 years agoI feel like it’s accurate to say Texas is completely Texas.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is something that gets a lot of hate for absolutely no reason?English
12·2 years agoAh, the common paradox. Nobody wants to listen to Nickelback because it’s overplayed, and nobody drives in New York because of all the traffic.
Susaga@ttrpg.networkto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What is something that gets a lot of hate for absolutely no reason?English
4·2 years agoScenario 1: It’s your radio. Turn to a different station.
Scenario 2: It’s a friend’s radio. Ask them to turn to a different station.
Scenario 3: It’s a public radio. Just zone out for three minutes.And on the subject of not getting to choose the songs, what station is choosing to play 20 year old songs by a band it’s a meme to hate?
You keep asking this question, we keep saying no, and then you ask it again with LESS money on offer. You don’t get how haggling works, and you definitely don’t get how asklemmy questions work.