I have the arranged in the order I use them most. Spoons are on the left, then forks, then knives. I rarely need knives while eating, just for cooking.
Reading the parahumans story, “Worm”, has changed how I look at people. It is my personal-favorite character study. There are dozens of characters who all have unique world views to explore.
Swinging between feeling like you’re a computer god, and then feeling like you’re horrible at your job.
I guess I didn’t mind the Mako’s handling as much as the big empty planets that felt like they were designed not to be driven in.
For Mass Effect, I gotta say I hate driving anywhere in the first game.
All for a game I picked up on sale for like $2 10 years ago
Nothing, unfortunately.
Bingpot
Yeah that was at GenCon this year.
Oh gotcha. There is a community built around a D&D let’s play who call themselves, “Critters”, as a play on words with the title of said show, “Critical Role”. Thought that was what you were referring to.
Critter as in Critical Role? The CR community here is pretty small to begin with, but maybe you could try posting over there.
Just make sure you find and stick close to the other people at your job who think it’s funny.
Got it, thanks! I’ll play around with it this weekend.
Looks really cool! I’m going to ask what is probably a dumb question: how do I use this?
To quote the video this post is about, I often see this happen:
“wow, these rules are so robust!” followed by, “wow… these rules are so… robust.”
Pathfinder is neat, I play in three 2e campaigns. I prefer 5e, and that’s okay. Personally, I think the rules get in the way of the fun for pf2e. I still have fun, I would just have more fun in a less rule-heavy game.
I shy away from saying 5e is better, because I know many people who prefer pf2e, just like I and many others prefer 5e, or savage worlds, or shadow dark. Different games will attract different players, and sometimes those players who like different things play together. When this happens, compromise happens in order to play the same game. The hobby is better served by us looking for ways to compromise, rather than divide.
Yes, I agree. It does seem a little off base to leverage the ratio of good to bad feats as an advantage of the system though, when they both have good and bad feats in what seems like similar proportions.
As if most of the feats in pf2e aren’t? I enjoy pathfinder for what it is, and there definitely some things I like more than 5e. Pathfinder has more feats, and has more good feats, but also more underwhelming feats in my opinion. How many characters take abberation kinship?
The difference is that pf2e expexts you to have several feats by the time you’re even level 4, while 5e expects you to (optionally) have 1.
I’m still using the same stepper motor, but that was next on my list had replacing the extruder not solved the issue.
Like others are saying, probably a clogged nozzle. However, I want to say I just went through this myself and it was not a clogged nozzle. At temperature, I could put light pressure on the filament with my hand and it would come out smoothly, no clog. It can also be that your nozzle is too close to the print bed. In my case, it would do this even when suspended in the air, so that was not the issue.
I upgraded to a metal extruder, and no longer have this issue.
Despite what most people say, sometimes parts are the problem. This other commenter explained better.
Here it is for anyone who’s curious