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ttrpgposting 

the player then continued on to fail to get a hereditary knighthood, fail to enlist in the Navy, get drafted into “Other” and immediately lose 2 points of Social Status and get essentially nothing out of character creation hehe.
he is the disgraced aristocrat fuckup getting bailed out by more successful family friends or something.

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ttrpgposting 

whoever voted was correct. 1 death.

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ttrpgposting 

gonna spin up a classic traveller side campaign tonight for when one of the players can’t make it for the usual monday game.

now taking predictions on how many characters will die during character generation (for 4 players).

re: idea for a pokémon challenge run 

re: idea for a pokémon challenge run 

@Lady @aescling wait are you doing this in your current HG playthru?

re: idea for a pokémon challenge run 

@Lady @aescling i think it varies depending on the specific challenge.

tho to answer cat's question, this idea seems like its big advantages are that it would encourage one to use mons you otherwise might not by randomly shrinking the available pool of mons (as is common in e.g. nuzlockes) but without bias against infrequently-appearing mons

colonization, christianity 

there was a dude in 17th century spain that argued that the Garden of Eden was in America. and that the forbidden fruit was the banana.

reading about this briefly led me to wonder how i had never realized that the banana is of American origin. (the answer is that i never realized this because it isn't. turns out people have been anachronistically back-projecting plants on the wrong sides of the "Columbian exchange" for a long time)

eugenics, imperialism 

this prompted by reading the introduction to *Las venas abiertas de América Latina", which talks a lot about eugenicist policies in "development"/"foreign aid" stuff and trying to look up more about it

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unsurprisingly the wikipedia is not a very useful source for researching imperialism

poképosting 

i suspect that despite the fact that during this phase of the game i need to evolve a dragonite for this challenge run. i'm still going to end up basically afking for days or weeks to get phone calls for evolutionary stones

poképosting 

one of my fave things about johto is the bug catching contest

mostly in that it is a celebration of bug pokémon! and it lets you catch lots of different kinds :> especially post-National-Dex (not that i'm there yet in this playthru)

food 

one of my favorite things about argentine spanish is that… you know how in US english you call the thin flaky fried potato-based snacks “chips” and in UK english you call the tube-ish-shaped fried potato-based side dish “chips”? (“crisps” and “fries” in the alternate dialects)

both of those are just “papas fritas” here (“fried potatoes”). there is not an established more specific term for either of them to disambiguate. i love it.

ttrpgposting 

side note: that npc’s name? hank the hill giant.

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ttrpgposting 

very satisfying when i get suspicious about an npc and then the other npcs we brought to work for him and who were eating his food fall over unconscious and he looks at sofi’s character and mine like “didn’t y’all eat your food?” (we did but we can eat anything without harm) before tearing out of his false skin and attacking us.

it’s nice to notice things and develop suspicions and i’m right.

linguistics question 

@Lady i agree that "freedom of speech" and "united states of america" are analogous,
but would be inclined to consider "freedom of speech" genitive (or, possessive), too (although it's true that the inflected possessive is not equivalent to the periphrastic one with "of").

it seems even clearer to me with "freedom of speech" that the "of" there isn't serving the same function as in "the two of us". it's not "freedom, which is speech" but "speech-related freedom" (compare "freedom of religion" = "religious freedom"). on the other hand "the us-related two" is close to (if maybe still a little distinct from) "our two", which doesn't even overlap in meaning with "the two of us", i think.

linguistics question 

@Lady yeah, i interpret it the same way, but i'm unsure of other cases where "the X of Y" has that function in english. i'm not sure your "united states of america" example fits; would you not consider that a genitive?

linguistics question 

is "the two of us" a partitive construction or something else?

it seems to carry the implication that "the two" is equivalent to "us", which is not typical of partitives (some claim that a partitive must refer to a proper subset of a set of things)

it's nice when you learn about a person with a street named after them and it's like "yeah he was the first person to translate Capital to spanish and founded the socialist party here"

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A small, community‐oriented Mastodon‐compatible Fediverse (GlitchSoc) instance managed as a joint venture between the cat and KIBI families.