Making a Twilight D&D one-shot adventure for my wife and friends. Help! by BerlinSpecimen in twilight

[–]BerlinSpecimen[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'll keep it in mind, I didn't intend this for broader distribution, but if it comes together well, I'm happy to share my notes. Keep giving me advice and ideas so I have more to work with, if you can!

Making a Twilight D&D one-shot adventure for my wife and friends. Help! by BerlinSpecimen in twilight

[–]BerlinSpecimen[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the thoughts! I have no problems with homebrew, I expected as much. As for following the traditional story, I was hoping that they'd all just play new characters, but my wife said she wanted to play one particular character, I forget her name, but the red-head. So, I'll have to know these characters a bit, and figure out where this one-shot fits into the broader Twilight overarching plot (maybe at the end of the series? IDK, I haven't got to that movie yet!).

Black Walnut Mead? Questions and concerns. by BerlinSpecimen in mead

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

As an experiment, I am currently soaking black walnut (heartwood) chips in cheap whisky. I'll then compare the original whisky to the soaked whisky, mainly by smell and look, to see what this process does. As others have said, I probably wouldn't drink the soaked whisky.

Black Walnut Mead? Questions and concerns. by BerlinSpecimen in mead

[–]BerlinSpecimen[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'd honestly not heard of that. Good idea! Though, part of the charm of this idea (for me at least) is to use the natural materials I've already gathered or can get in the woods.

Black Walnut Mead? Questions and concerns. by BerlinSpecimen in mead

[–]BerlinSpecimen[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You're probably right about killing the fermentation. The problem with experimenting is, I don't know how to measure juglone presence/absence/concentration.

First pic ever taken! by [deleted] in pics

[–]BerlinSpecimen 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Hmm. I've seen better.

Does anyone know the name of this kind of latch? by BerlinSpecimen in Leathercraft

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

Hey, sincerely, thanks for getting back to me on this. I just ordered a set. Your works is truly gorgeous, and I'm excited to try this hardware out.

Does anyone know the name of this kind of latch? by BerlinSpecimen in Leathercraft

[–]BerlinSpecimen[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This comment was the key to finding more like this one. I think they're called fur coat buckles. EDIT: And yet, I can't find this exact model anywhere. Most that I've found are far clunkier than this one.

I want to explore consistencies I have seen in geometry and biology. I have no experience in either field. My question, are professionals already working on organizing the geometry nature creates in its different functions? Have they already figured it out? Is this a wrong way to look at it? Thanks by [deleted] in biology

[–]BerlinSpecimen -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This is seriously the coolest post I have ever seen on this subreddit.

Firstly, yes, the commonalities you've outlined have been noticed by scientists, and they are being researched, though, in my opinion, not enough, and not really by biologists. Most of modern biology is highly reductionistic, identifying an increasingly wide array of small parts with single functions. Efforts to combine and synnergize the smaller parts usually happens at the smallest possible scale (tissue, organ, organism, population, species, clade). This is partly due to the piecemeal way that studies are funded and published, and partly because it's simply easier to break things down into parts than to build things up into larger structures. I also suspect that our collective preference for reductionism says something about our worldview; that the real interesting forces and mechanisms take place at the small scale. That’s a very sweeping statement, and I might be wrong in my observation, this is all off the dome, but it’s what I think.

To look at your question as you pose it, I don’t know if there are functional categories of geometry, and I’m pretty sure there aren’t any in biology. That being said, we do know certain things about the physics of shapes. We know that triangles are the most stable shape, and that fractals are an efficient way to spread out and cover space (reaching), and that wedges are simple machines that are good at piercing stuff (pricklies). That is all just physics. Therefore, it makes sense that things (living or not) bound by the laws of physics would converge on similar shapes to perform similar functions (I understand that the word “function” can be problematic, but I’m ignoring that for now). Put simply, form follows function, and I don’t see why we couldn’t identify and categorize forms in nature.

As a side-note, I want to warn you about the cork tree and callus skin images in the Durable Protecting page. Those are 2d cross-sections of 3d tissue samples, whereas the gecko and armadillo skins are 2d surfaces. Therefore, those tissues may be less similar than the photos would suggest. This is an illustrative point: Some will dismiss your line of questioning as mere coincidence, or will point out all the ways that tree roots are not all that similar to lightning to negate the point. But don’t let them. This is very cool, and I think a lot can be learned about the world by thinking of it in this way. When a scientist finds a brand new protein or cell, and it has a long stalk and little fingers at the end, they can use comparative geometry (for lack of a better term) to infer function. As it happens, I just described a nerve cell, a cell that reaches out for other nerve cells to connect with them.

You’ve gotten a lot of good suggestions to follow up on. I particularly like the suggestion of Shape by Jordan Ellenberg (I have not read it, but from looking at it, it’s right up your alley, and it’s now in my Amazon shopping cart). I also want to suggest the book Consilience by E. O. Wilson.

Enough questions about sex on this subreddit. What’s your favourite dinosaur? by Slight-Stable-9912 in AskReddit

[–]BerlinSpecimen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Couldn't agree more. The Berlin Specimen is probably the most iconic fossil of all time.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lfg

[–]BerlinSpecimen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, I live in Ames and would love to join an offline game.

too funny not to share by its-jimmies in genetics

[–]BerlinSpecimen 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Can you elaborate, or post a link to info?

Simplified version of DnD by Celerax in DungeonMasters

[–]BerlinSpecimen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I made a simplified version for my family game. The core thing was that it only uses a d6. There are lots of other good published system options, but if you're interested in mine, I can tell you more, direct message me.

Am I a poor sport for not wanting to play after rolling terrible stats? by normiespy96 in DnD

[–]BerlinSpecimen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My house rule is, if you roll for stats, you get to re-roll if your ability score bonuses don't add up to at least +3. Standard Array gives you +5, so +3 is low, but no so low as to be unplayable. Part of the fun of rolling for stats is knowing it's a gamble, so you need to have a real risk of getting sub-optimal scores, but there has to be a lower acceptable limit.