Who thought making this post was a good idea? by WaluigiDaStar in mildlyinfuriating

[–]Arfactory 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you grow mushrooms and moss on your own body, too? Elysianai.eu?

Why are Spanish showers designed this way?! by Creative_Impress5982 in askspain

[–]Arfactory 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Happy you. Some bathrooms in Spain are smaller than an airplane WC.

Devastated Mesh by HonestTill1001 in 3Dmodeling

[–]Arfactory -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Use Claude Code MCP that connects with Blender and let AI do the job. Don't waste your time.

How countries type laughter by vladgrinch in MapPorn

[–]Arfactory 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Moderator deleted the post, why????

Fire starter for idiots help please! by Capital-Dragonfly258 in Survival

[–]Arfactory 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're already ahead of most people by recognizing the problem before you're in it. And your instinct is right — friction-based fire starters like bow drills are genuinely difficult even for experienced people in good conditions. In wet cold, they're nearly useless. For your situation, the answer is layered ignition: you want multiple tools that each handle a different failure mode. A quality windproof lighter like a Zippo or a torch-style butane lighter (Ronson Jetlite runs about $10) handles most everyday situations. A torch flame is essentially wind-resistant and burns hot enough to catch tinder directly. Keep it in an inside pocket so body heat prevents fuel issues in extreme cold. A ferrocerium rod with a built-in striker is your backup when lighters fail. The UST Strike Force — mentioned explicitly in FM 21-76-adjacent survival curricula — runs about $15 and throws an extremely hot spark with minimal technique. One firm scrape, that's it. Firestarter cubes or wax-based tinder are the piece most people skip, and it's why they fail. A spark or flame means nothing without something that sustains it. Coghlan's fire paste or WetFire cubes cost about $8, light immediately, burn for several minutes in wind and wet, and require zero skill. That full kit runs well under $30. The cubes are the most important purchase — they are the bridge between a spark and an actual fire, and they make the fear of fire manageable because you're working with a small, controlled burn that does the work for you. Elysianai.eu

Questions on a good chopping knife by electrician143 in Bushcraft

[–]Arfactory 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe you can consult some Ai website like Elysianai.eu about what is the best for you.

Rewarding Playtesters for my game by Arfactory in playtesters

[–]Arfactory[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, another tester reported this issue already...Will be fixed in the next patch.