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almost home

Kiana Khansmith

titsay

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todays bird
Misplaced Lens Cap
Cosimo Galluzzi
hello vonnie
tumblr dot com
Not today Justin
trying on a metaphor
dirt enthusiast
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styofa doing anything

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@zopsgameshit
✨ these dorks ✨
Drawn with my lovely friend @every-lemon in mind
look at this photo graph
prompto in-game, basically
It’s hot outside🥵 (Gladio may or may not be incoming because TATTOO)
Prompto Argentum icons ✨️ for @chivalrousvictini hope you like them <3
Like or reblog <3
Go For It, Noctis!! (2017)
Happy new year’s everyone! I’m still stuck on these two (no surprise) Hope I can draw more this year than last (it was tough one😞) love you all❤️
ready-made-to-order
meet the jean
In case anyone isn't aware, connections like that are literally called 'illegal' techniques in LEGO parlance.
Illegal building techniques are ones that aren't allowed in official LEGO sets, which always use building techniques designed for and intended by LEGO. The reason they're called illegal is because they stress the blocks in a way they weren't intended for, causing various kinds of material failure overtime.
As an example, the blocks in the example above slowly deform over time because, slowly warping until they don't connect very well to other blocks or each other.
How do you pronounce etc?
Etsa
Ehkt
Eee Tea Sea
Etsy
Other
Thanks, Anon!
-submit your poll!-
Armatron
(Picture credit)
Armatron was amazing. Your own robot arm! You could do experiments with it! The kids on the box were wearing lab coats and safety goggles!
The reality was very different, but pleasantly bonkers. Armatron actually only had one motor, which kept spinning continuously. The joysticks used to control it were like a gearbox, pushing different gears against the spinning motor which transmitted the power through linkages to the degrees of freedom. With absolutely no computer assistance, and no chance of ever having any, it could be a frustrating affair to try and lift a ball up and put it on a stand. But it was the 80s, and kids loved frustration because there were only 4 TV channels.
Armatron has special memories for me, as best friend Gareth had one which we’d use for terrorising woodlice with, as 11 year old boys would. Armatron could just about manage to hold one, resulting in a full-on evil scientist experience.
The Sord M5
(Picture credit)
The Sord M5, marketed in the UK by CGL, was an also-ran of the home computer wars in the early 80s. I only ever saw one once, in the computer department of Debenhams. To program it you needed to have a BASIC cartridge plugged in and the keyboard sucked worse than any other keyboard of the time. (Look where the space key is!)
The Register did an excellent article on the history of the Sord M5 last year, in case you care.
Day 33– Hatteno Village
Welcome to Hatteno Village! They like to insist Link and Zelda are their local cryptids.
(Wanna see more of this totk au? It’s called familiar familiar and it’s a what-if-zelda-doesn’t-go-back-in-time and then spiralled into crit-rewrites-totk-into-a-self-indulgent-botw-continuation)
((Wanna support me? Check out my patreon for sketches and early access! Remember to use web or android folks, apple charges 30 percent tax.))
I actually legitimately had so much fun with this sketch series
How the fuck do you get a gif this specific
Yakuza is just that kind of series