i died and came back so here's the gaster bros(waster and daster) from super deltarunio bros 2!
yay
seen from T1

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seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Hong Kong SAR China
i died and came back so here's the gaster bros(waster and daster) from super deltarunio bros 2!
yay
So, like... is the entire reason they set Dead Space 3 on an ice planet solely just as an excuse to make the new main necromorph type a very cute if kinda on the nose homage to the poster for The Thing?
[Walter’s POV] Saddest stalker on earth for 2,000-ish words. tw: mutual stalking. if that is not your thing, MOVE ALONG!!! I do not want anyone to feel upset by what I write. I do not endorse stalking, I just think it's a form of love for these two. a bit of a longer one as a consolation prize to every commenter i have disappointed.
chapter four is OUT i’m so sorry my beautiful gracious commenters
"I WANT MY EYES BACK, YOU SON OF A BITCH"
based on a brief thought I had regarding a character in my rimworld playthrough, Dek "Drowner" Skary, who came back from death at the cost of her sight
some of my drawings for oc card swap with my ocs (obviously) from my setting Clearfog's Incident for the beginning
Water is Behind the Electrification of Sand
The results of new experiments indicate that surface-adsorbed water molecules are responsible for contact electrification in granular matter, a finding that challenges established models of this phenomenon.
[...]
When two surfaces come into contact, they can exchange electrical charge. This fundamental phenomenon is linked to some of humankind’s earliest scientific experiments—reports suggest that the ancient Greeks uncovered static electricity after rubbing various materials together. Numerous physical processes are at play when two objects touch. But the mechanism underpinning charge exchange—which is known as contact electrification—has bedeviled scientists for centuries [1]. New experiments by Galien Grosjean and Scott Waitukaitis of the Institute of Science and Technology Austria now bring welcome clarity in this field [2]. By levitating a single particle and measuring its charge after consecutive collisions with a surface, the researchers were able to uncover a connection between contact electrification and water molecules on the particle and the surface.
Read more.