almost didn’t reblog this and then that last one made me start cackling like a madman
@maxthejew123
Shoot I was out of touch and almost out of time for out of touch thursday!

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
noise dept.
almost home
Three Goblin Art
trying on a metaphor
todays bird
dirt enthusiast
🪼
cherry valley forever
Claire Keane
ojovivo
Peter Solarz
Keni

Kiana Khansmith

izzy's playlists!

blake kathryn
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Jules of Nature
tumblr dot com

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@chrisonline127
almost didn’t reblog this and then that last one made me start cackling like a madman
@maxthejew123
Shoot I was out of touch and almost out of time for out of touch thursday!
I DONT WANNA PAY BILLS I WANNA USE MY MONEY FOR FOOD AND LIL GIFTS FOR MYSELF AND MY LOVED ONES
this post was a big hit in the adults who have bills to pay fandom
EHHH 😵
I think that if I unsubscribe I should stop getting the emails
having an actual consistent set of morals in a vibe-based world full of people who say they have a "strong sense of justice" as shorthand for "I get really pissy when I don't get what I want" is kinda exhausting lol
Do You Have Any Idea How Much Meaner I Wish I Could Be
One thing that makes me kinda sad is seeing people who feel like TTRPGs just aren't for them because they bounced off of some element that is clearly just a symptom of them trying out D&D5e. Like people who have had a hard time with learning the rules would probably do well with any system where the rule formatting and play culture around learning them aren't a mess. One friend of mine didn't like waiting a long time for turns to come up in combat, not even knowing that many games don't even use a turn-based structure.
A lot of D&D5e defenders on here like to claim that asking someone to learn a new system is "gatekeeping" somehow, but I'd argue that acting like one game is emblematic of the entire medium to the exclusion of people who don't click with that one game is way more meaningfully a form of gatekeeping, even if it's fully unintentional.
I strongly believe that not all RPGs are gonna appeal to everyone, but there is an RPG out there for everyone, and I just hope that people who haven't clicked with the most common option to be introduced to can find something that works for them.
"Hey. I've never played a computer game before. Can you recommend one too me?"
"You should try DOTA."
"I didn't really like that. I heard about first-person shooters and those seem fun. Can you recommend one?"
"Have you tried DOTA? Just ignore parts of the game and it's basically what you want."
"I didn't like that. Can you recommend a good puzzle game?"
"Have you tried DOTA? Just ignore parts of the game and it's basically what you want."
"Damn. I guess I don't like computer games."
This pic is ancient and still relevant
Every time there's another Hasbro scandal I have to restate this thing and it's painful.
May I interest you in a Skateboarding Corgi during these troubled times?
Water goblin
Wet Beast Wednesday
Historically, one of the most reliable sources of widespread banditry was rulers ramping up military recruitment for major wars, then cutting their soldiers loose afterwards without pay, leaving a bunch of heavily armed men with military experience floating around broke and homeless.
Knowing this, whenever someone jokingly refers to raccoons as "trash bandits", I get a vivid mental image of, like, a raccoon succession crisis leading to a raccoon civil war, the aftermath of which forced the former soldiers of the losing side (who are all raccoons) to take up the life of the raccoon outlaw.
Foul beast ate that adventurer whole, RIP
kids don't belong anywhere in public, lol. no one is trying to hear a bunch of screaming brats when they go outside.
other people do not exist for your convenience
Look, look, I know it's bait.
I know it is.
But I'm old, and I need y'all to just listen to me a second. Ten seconds maybe.
Twenty years ago, thirty years ago, there were kids outside. 40 years ago I was among Those Screaming Kids Outside.
Suddenly, kids being outside became a PROBLEM.
Some dumb fucks started suing parents when their kids got injured at their homes. They started calling CPS on kids who were "unattended" outside and levying abuse charges.
We went from It Takes a Village, to I'll call the cops on you if you hang out at the mall for too long without buying something.
It went from Hanging Out at The Park with Your Friends, to getting escorted home because a group of teens was automatically a Gang, and Gangs were terrible and awful and no one wanted their property values to go down because of hooligans.
No big kids outside. No one to watch over the littler kids, so no little kids outside. Less kids outside, more kids inside.
And hey, hey - Look At ME - I loved video games and computers and I was not a fan of "Outside". But I walked down to the Blockbuster than was 3 miles away from my house, and I rode my bike through parks and I played basketball in the street, and now that's gone.
Sure, kids carve out space here and there where they can, but as a general rule, it's all gone. It's paved over, under surveillance, with "This will be exhibit A" signs plastered all over the place.
The cacophony of loud, irritating, barely contained children missing from the day to day sounds of society were the first sign of its death, frankly. I don't know how it lined up to happen so fast, I'm sure someone smarter than me could point to the assholes that got the ball rolling in the wrong direction.
But it's really eerie to be at my desk, at work, during the summer months, and there's not a sound on my residential street. It's fucking creepy.
This also actively contributes to the problem the anon was talking about! Kids who can’t be left alone to do kid things = kids brought by parents to places inappropriate for kids because how else could they do literally anything when they are expected to be tied to their child umbilically at all times.
And kids who aren’t allowed to have any freedom with parents who never get a break and are expected to helicopter them, will not learn how to exist in society without being annoying little pieces of shit.
And on a related note, I'd like to point everyone to the writings of Lenore Skenazy, and also once again mention what I call "Magic Age theory."
"Magic Age theory" is the largely unspoken, but seemingly near-unanimous belief that children just automatically become adults at a certain age. I think one of the less heated places this pops up would be where people think the age to start driving. 16 and 17 year olds are the most dangerous drivers. Some people think that this means we should raise the driving age to 18.
The problem with this solution is that it completely ignores why 16 and 17 year olds are the worst drivers, which is a lack of experience in its myriad forms. If you raise the driving age to 18, you'll just get the same problem from 18 and 19 year old drivers. Fail to learn the lesson in that case, and the new solution will be to raise the driving age to 20.
Or as another post put it, ban babies from grocery stores, and you'll get children who don't know how to behave in grocery stores. Ban the children too, and you'll get teenagers who don't know how to behave in grocery stores, which is worse. Ban teenagers, and we get adults who don't know how to behave in grocery stores.
But I think today's perspective on yesteryear is skewed, because parents of past decades no doubt took some safety measures, just ones that were less paranoid. But in the push towards stranger danger and mandatory helicopter parenting, they were likely swept under the rug in favor of portraying the opposition as dumb and negligent.