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    2. Autumn
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    • Following 0
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    • Posts 226
    • Best 105
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    Best posts made by Autumn

    • RE: FCs on Comic MUs

      @tnp said in FCs on Comic MUs:

      A female Cap would be problematic since women combatants were not a thing in WWII and would certainly not be the subject of super soldier experiments. If possible at all, there would need to be a lot of consultation with staff on how that would work.

      This is a bit of an aside, but I feel like a female Cap would be totally in line with the story of Captain America. After all, Steve Rogers doesn't become Captain America because he's totally suited to be a heroic American super-soldier; he gets to be the guinea pig because he's completely unsuited to it. Pre-Super Soldier Serum, he's 4F. It's not just that if he didn't get picked by Dr. Erskine, he'd be one more grunt with a helmet and a rifle; absent the experiments he doesn't get to be in the Army at all.

      And I don't think it would even be a challenge to draw a straight line from that idea, to having a female Captain America, and making it a compelling idea in the process. Stephanie Rogers wants to fight the Nazis, too, and she's at least as brave as any of the men lining up to enlist, but she'll never be allowed to -- partly because she's a weak and sickly young woman, but mostly because she's a woman. So when Dr. Erskine needs a test subject for his dangerous, and possibly fatal, experiments, she's quick to volunteer, and he's quick to accept. Because if his experiments kill someone who wasn't going to fight anyway, it doesn't hurt the fight against the Nazis -- and if his experiment works, then they'll be cranking out battalions of super soldiers in no time, and the marginal cost of having tested it on a non-combatant is pretty close to zero.

      And she knows it, too. She doesn't expect to be anything other than a guinea pig, but she's willing to risk her life, because if this is the only way her country will allow her to help beat fascism, then by God that's what she's going to do. When it works, and she turns out to be the only one there'll ever be, she's going to have a very similar experience to Movie Cap, where the Army just wants to send her on morale tours and raise money selling war bonds and she has to defy her own government to punch out the SS.

      I think it would totally work. And kick ass.

      posted in Mildly Constructive
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: Coming Soon: Arx, After the Reckoning

      @Lisse24 said in Coming Soon: Arx, After the Reckoning:

      This is a result of what I view as the major falling down of Arx. Don't get me wrong, this is the best thought out game I've played on since RfK and it generally provides what I look for in a game. However, the help files read like they've been written by someone with a technical background and they don't actually tell the players how to use the systems or commands or what these systems and commands are for.

      I just want to echo this for emphasis. The game has a lot of really neat ideas but the need for more and better documentation is pretty dire.

      posted in Mildly Constructive
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: San Francisco: Paris of the West

      I have mixed feelings when it comes to equipment.

      On the one hand, the core book is pretty sparse. I think you could make a reasonable argument that it's too sparse for some concepts that people actually want to play.

      On the other hand, there's also such a thing as Too Much. Mostly, what the extensive equipment lists in Armory seem to do is make more work for staff and provide advantages for people who want to dumpster-dive through page after page of handgun minutiae (or whatever). A handful of items in any given category are quickly quantified as the best, and everything else in that category might as well be wasted space.

      As long as staff is reasonably flexible I don't think a short equipment list is necessarily a problem. So there's no Lucerne Hammer on the equipment list; so what? Figure out what's closest to it that is on the list, run it by staff to make sure they think it's reasonable, and just call it a Lucerne Hammer when you get into a fight. I think most people will be fine with that as long as you don't try to start arguing that your Lucerne Hammer gives you 8-again even though the Great Ax stats say no such thing.

      posted in Adver-tis-ments
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: RL Anger

      @thenomain I'd be fine if they just made another Wonder Woman movie with some cameos from Jason Momoa and called it "Justice League."

      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: X-Men Game

      @prototart said in X-Men Game:

      as somebody who's done them, imo with comedy chars (and tho it hasn't been brought up I think it's also valid for horror chars just for different reasons) there's a p thin line between, like, actually contributing to stuff/adding comedic elements to scenes where they're appropriate and just, idk, laughing at your own jokes/jacking yourself off in a room where literally nobody wants any part of it

      Comedy characters work best when their player is focused on entertaining the rest of the game -- unfortunately most comedy characters seem to end up played by people focused on entertaining themselves.

      posted in Mildly Constructive
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: Game of Thrones

      ***=NSFW content***

      click to show

      I would argue that not only does Jaime's fate respect the evolution of his character over the previous seasons of the show, but that his evolution is what makes that fate the right and necessary one.

      He's been in this situation before, after all; Cersei's situation is a mirror image of the Mad King's before opening the gates to Tywin Lannister. There's a vastly superior force outside the gates, there's a mad monarch, the life of someone he loves is threatened. Maybe that callback is an accident, but I really, really doubt it. I think it's entirely on purpose, and I think awareness of it colors Jaime's in-character response. And he responds by trying to save lives, rather than trying to take them. It's a quixotic, hopeless, suicidal response, and that's kind of the point: the old Jaime, the Jaime we met at the start of the series, would never in a million years have responded that way.

      Jaime's done some terrible things, and he knows it. If he stays at Winterfell and waits for news of the city to fall, he's going to have to live with the knowledge that on top of all those terrible things, he not only betrayed the king he'd sworn to protect (no matter how justified it might have been), but also failed the woman he loves in her hour of greatest need (no matter how undeserving of that love she might be). Old Jaime could have lived with that, but the new Jaime would be destroyed by it, and he knows it.

      He doesn't go to King's Landing for Cersei, he goes for himself and his own conscience, and the fact that he even has a conscience is evidence of how different he really is now. He goes because he needs to be able to tell himself that everything he's been through taught him something, that he wasn't just a weak, vain man entirely defined by his family and his fighting skill and worthless without them; and that when he was put to the test, he did the best he could no matter what it cost him -- just as Brienne, the catalyst of his transformation, would have in his shoes. The irony in the woman who loves him being the one whose example he follows into death is pretty delicious.

      It's a wonderfully tragic end, and I'd argue that he is, in the end, redeemed by it. It's not a happy ending, but it is exactly the kind of bittersweet ending George Martin would write for a character like this.

      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: Character Woes

      @Arkandel said:

      For instance playing a survivor of vast supernatural phenomena, a veteran mystic who's seen too much, can easily make it bland to actually hit the grid and find not much is happening. Those aspects of his personality won't be easy to come out while mixing it up with the random ghoul from next door whose interests include pop music and Call of Duty.

      I try to stick to the principle that RIGHT NOW should be the most interesting period of my character's life, and make their backgrounds and thematic ties work toward that end. That doesn't mean they can't have been an international superspy or a world-famous fashion model-slash-actress or a member of the SEAL team that shot bin Laden, just that I have to come up with some reason why their life today is not just a series of wistful glances back toward when cool stuff was happening to them.

      posted in Mildly Constructive
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: RL Anger

      I've never understood why people get so peeved about being carded for alcohol, and, now that I'm closer to retirement age than underage, I understand it even less. So, you're saying I'm not obviously well over the age of 21? How nice of you to say so!

      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: The Savage Skies - Discussion Thread

      @lordbelh said in The Savage Skies - Discussion Thread:

      Furthermore, clearly while the character worships the Emperor, she blames the higher ups in the military for the actions of Imperial Japan at present. We can argue how much blame Hirohito deserves (seems a decent amount), but that's really besides the point.

      I wanted to go back to this post for a minute, just to think through the more general question of how informed we should expect characters (not just this specific character) to be in the context of their time. The abovementioned hypothetical Russian Communist character in 1938 might very well be ignorant of a lot of horrifying things that have been done at Stalin's behest; probably the great majority of actual Russians at the time were. As far as this brawny Russian lad who wants to go and shoot some fascists in Spain is concerned, Stalin is the warm, benevolent, fatherly figure who protects the Soviet Union from fascists and counterrevolutionaries, not the guy who had the kulaks rounded up and shipped off to Siberia.

      Is that problematic? Is it less problematic if the character finds out about the horrible stuff that's happened in the Soviet Union since the revolution, and, revulsed, abandons their loyalty to Stalin? Conversely, is it more problematic if the character finds out about them and refuses to believe it, remaining convinced that Stalin couldn't possibly do those things and it must all be the fault of counterrevolutionaries? Or if he finds out and believes it, but supports Stalin anyway, because sometimes hard measures are necessary to stamp out the cancer of fascism? Does whether or not that character continues to profess adherence to Communist principles make a difference?

      I'm not suggesting a particular answer to any of the above questions. But it struck me as interesting grist for discussion in light of the rest of this thread.

      posted in Mildly Constructive
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: Health and Wealth and GrownUp Stuff

      So I made this post a while back and now that the move is finished (as chronicled here) I'm sort of blown away.

      We pulled off the move without any major hitches. We love the house we rented on the basis of a few blurry iPhone pictures and some short video clips. We love being up on a mountain with ravens hopping around the backyard. The property backs right up to a national forest. We narrowly escaped the polar vortex in the northeast and the climate in our new home is being super kind to both of us, after years of waking up in the morning aching and stiff. My partner started getting freelance work literally the Monday after the Friday we arrived. And in under a month I had a job that should (cross fingers) be extremely secure, for more money than I was getting before despite the cost of living being around 75% of what it was. I struggle to think of literally anything that went seriously wrong with the whole process.

      I say all this not to brag about how awesome I am and how great my life is. I say it because I am acutely aware of how ridiculously, absurdly fortunate I've been, and I don't want the universe getting to thinking that I expect this. So this is my version of Polycrates throwing a ring into the sea.

      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: Real World Peeves, Disgruntlement, and Irks.

      If you in one breath denounce the "Republican war on science", and in the next talk about crystal skulls, planetary influences, the "metaphysical properties" of the gemstones in your jewelry, and how Trump's astrological chart tells us everything we need to know about the man ... you aren't helping.

      I'm sorry. I like rocks and the stars, too. But you're not helping.

      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: The Dog Thread

      I have a great love for blue heelers: alt text

      But ... and this is a significant but: they are extremely human-focused. If you don't think you can handle getting that 'WHAT NOW MAMA' look for 16 of every 24 hours in the day, or if the idea of trying to keep a very, very smart breed entertained through their waking hours does not sound practical or enjoyable ... maybe something else. Because they will make their own entertainment if you don't provide any, and the way they do so may not be entirely to your liking.

      Greyhounds are also a wonderful low-maintenance dog. I know everyone thinks of them as sprinting all over creation, but the truth is they're active for about thirty minutes every day and sleep on the couch for the other 23:30.

      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: Pokemon Go

      The upside of working at a university, Pokemon Go edition:

      • Can reach two Pokestops without getting up from my chair.

      The downside of working at a university, Pokemon Go edition:

      • Every gym owned by insane people who live here 24/7.
      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: Interest Check: Exalted 3rd ed Mu

      I've always been really charmed (pun halfway intended) by the Dragon-Blooded and I think a game centered on them has great potential to be a fun mix of action-adventure and lords & ladies hijinks ... sort of like a less uptight anime-flavored Amber game!

      So I would recommend being super cautious about copying one of the long-time pain points of Amber games: having a higher up tier of PC that's, well, better than the sort the average person gets to play. The other flavors of Exalted might be better kept as NPCs and/or villains; otherwise you have to walk a very narrow line between allowing too many in play (which risks the game becoming entirely different and no longer meaningfully about the Terrestrials at all) and allowing too few (which runs the risk of DB players getting cranky about being reduced to second fiddles in a game ostensibly about them).

      I'm sure it's possible to handle this well. And honestly, the first option is probably a feature rather than a bug for a lot of Exalted fans. Just makes me twitch, is all.

      posted in MU Questions & Requests
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: Optional Realities & Project Redshift

      The problem with being a dick because other people are being a dick to you is that you'll also end up turning off people who aren't being a dick to you. Which ... I mean, maybe this is just me, but if I were hoping to attract some of the lurkers and infrequent posters to the site I'm advertising, that's a thing I'd try to avoid

      posted in Adver-tis-ments
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: How to Change MUing

      The other factor, with me, is that I rarely know exactly what my day's schedule is going to look like. If I don't log in to a game unless I know for sure I have time to devote to a scene, I will probably fill my working hours with other things. Sometimes those things will be actual work, but sometimes I'll read a book or watch Game of Thrones or lie down on my couch and take a nap. Even if I do find myself with an afternoon free and log in, there's no guarantee other people will be available.

      On the other hand, if I log in, I might find I have time for a scene after all. I'm certainly more likely to make the time for a scene if I've already mentally committed enough to log in. I might not be able to predict when people to play with become available, so it may not happen right away -- but if I keep the option open to jump right in when the opportunity arises, I can front-load my other obligations for the day to try and make sure I have time if the opportunity does arise.

      Or, to put it another way: you miss 100% of the RP you aren't logged in for.

      posted in Mildly Constructive
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: RL things I love

      @Arkandel A long, long time ago I went to a showing of Baz Luhrman's "Romeo + Juliet." As the credits were rolling, one of the teenagers a few rows ahead of me said in a tone of horrified surprise: "I didn't know they died at the end."

      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: Coming Soon: Arx, After the Reckoning

      Sometimes a little RP blocking is excusable. Heck, sometimes it's the right thing to do.

      If you've been playing a character in an established situation, and a new player comes in and wants to establish something that would change your character's world in a way you aren't comfortable with, it's okay to say no. If you're not happy with saying that your character's childhood guardian, whose death set her on the path to be who she is today, is actually secretly alive and turned to evil, that doesn't make you a terrible person. (If you are willing, awesome, but there's nothing terrible about saying no.) "Collaborative" doesn't mean you have to bend over so far backwards that you break your own spine.

      I just try to remember that this is equally the case for everyone else. No matter how minor a revision I think it is to existing continuity to have the Marquis of Montrose have a secret illegitimate daughter, I don't know what other people may have built on top of continuity as it exists.

      posted in Mildly Constructive
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: RL things I love

      Used bookstores. Not that I don't love bookstores of any kind, but there's just a special place in my cold, dark, shriveled little heart for crowded shelves full of books that range from well-loved to never-read. And then I find something really obscure that I totally love and it's like I'm looking across the book at the previous owner and putting a finger to my lips like, "Ssh! It'll just be our secret."

      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
    • RE: RL Anger

      "What's that? You want to pay for something online? No problem at all! We'll instantly debit your card so you won't have to endure the sight of that money on your balance a moment longer than necessary."

      "Oh, you're getting a refund? Sorry, it'll be 3-5 business days before your funds are available. Maybe more! But usually 3-5. Have a nice day!"

      posted in Tastes Less Game'y
      Autumn
      Autumn
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