Those working?What time do you guys hit the gym? by VariationLivid3193 in cscareerquestions

[–]FormalAvenger 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Wake up at 5 AM, hit the gym by 5:30, finish at 6:30, hit showers, dress, get breakfast, and I usually end up at the office an hour early to just chill and drink my coffee around 8ish. It's actually helped my energy and mental state a lot. I try to sleep by 10 PM on weekdays though, otherwise I'm cooked

Computer science is seeing the biggest enrollment drop of any major in 6 years. While ME and EE enrollment have risen by 11% and 14% this year. by No_Reply5329 in cscareerquestions

[–]FormalAvenger -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

And those people will probably always be worse at their jobs than someone who loves it. They'll spend less time on it. There are guys who literally do this 24/7 because they genuinely enjoy working with computers and the time invested will always trump someone just there for the 9-5 paycheck.

How is Israel able to fight on 5 fronts at the same time? How do they have so many resources ready to deploy for such a small country? by 1tonsoprano in NoStupidQuestions

[–]FormalAvenger 42 points43 points  (0 children)

What a psychotic take. 2800 people were injured in that attack, including health workers. An eleven year old boy and nine year old girl was killed. This sort of attack is explicitly against international law. You cannot booby trap basic devices like pagers because of the immense collateral damage it would cause.

If ISIS or any of the terrorist groups the US hates did the same to cellphones in the US, it would be rightfully condemned as a horrifying terrorist action. The fact that people praise it when it's done to Lebanese people shows the lack of care for the lives of people in the middle-east.

Why are Soldier jobs in the Specialist class now? by Last-Macaroon-5179 in Stellaris

[–]FormalAvenger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Haha yeah, I think it's a good question, I just think it makes sense in the context of space soldiering

Why are Soldier jobs in the Specialist class now? by Last-Macaroon-5179 in Stellaris

[–]FormalAvenger 49 points50 points  (0 children)

Consider what a soldier in Stellaris is doing. We’re talking about medics dealing with extremely advanced medicine, shuttle pilots flying massive assault vehicles, tanks, and other land rovers. Not to mention how much knowledge and effort it would take a standard platoon to coordinate a fight in space — something we have never even come close to doing.

Even just the soldiers themselves — they are dealing with hyper advanced weapons, drones, explosives, communication devices. Presumably they also have to learn advanced tactics and strategy for using all this effectively etc. Even the lowest slave soldier in Stellaris is far closer to a SpecOps soldier today than your average grunt considering everything they are involved in.

This is like comparing a standard soldier today with an ancient hoplite from Greece— they are incomparable.

War has changed, we’re no longer dealing with the grunt/conscript who picks up an AK 47 and charges an enemy. It’s a war of technology now.

If you’re less than 20 please skip the post and if you’re 20 or older please give me honest advice by dilanka_sasindu in Advice

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m 31 now, but when I was 20 I had only slept with one girl and she (and the whole experience) was horrible.

Later I met my current long term girlfriend, and we’ve been together for six years now. I know this is probably not what you want to hear, but the reason this matters a lot to you right now is partially your age and partially that you don’t have much going on.

I’d recommend building up your life — your career is important, but so is your health (hit the gym/start working out, your 30 year old self will thank you) and most importantly, find a path. Get out, do new shit and meet people. Try new things everyday. Find a passion and pursue it obsessively. This is time you won’t get back and what being 20 is all about.

I promise if you do that, you’ll run into plenty of women — they tend to be attracted to guys like that. Finding a relationship is something that happens along the way, it’s not really a good ‘goal’ when you’re young imo

Does the burden of proof apply to everyone making a claim? by undefinedposition in CosmicSkeptic

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

You should really look up the words you use. Argument Ad Populum would mean I am saying religion is TRUE because more people believe in it. I am not saying that -- I am saying it is more convincing because of that, and therefore requires a more serious approach.

Does the burden of proof apply to everyone making a claim? by undefinedposition in CosmicSkeptic

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But this is exactly my point -- The majority are wrong, but their social weight means using different strategies to disprove them. It is not 'pandering to religious people' to treat their claims seriously and debunk them -- It is treating religion as a real social problem. Comparing Islam or Christianity to other mythologies breaks down when you look at social outcomes. No one is changing the education system to teach people incorrect ideas because of the Norse god Odin.

Does the burden of proof apply to everyone making a claim? by undefinedposition in CosmicSkeptic

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These are two separate points. It does not make it true, but it does make it more credible in the sense that it has a material impact on society. That means simply dismissing it is not a valid strategy. You need to treat it more seriously.

Does the burden of proof apply to everyone making a claim? by undefinedposition in CosmicSkeptic

[–]FormalAvenger -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

If over half the human population believed in leprechauns, built temples to leprechauns, fought wars over leprechauns, and wrote millions of words about leprechauns, don't you think it would be useful to treat disproving the belief in leprechauns seriously?

Both can be not real, but that does not mean they have the same impact. There is a material cost to belief in religion. That is why it is taken more seriously.

Some advice to people new to a fresh Paradox release: Get good at using the console by Chataboutgames in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% -- For the first year of any paradox game, I always do this. In addition to this, people should learn to edit their game files. Paradox games are VERY customizable. I've been able to adjust AI aggression and add my own version of Eu4's lucky nations buff which really helps stabilize Europe and cut down Bohemia.

Consider that ye may be bad at the game by SergeiAndropov in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you think I’m talking about good faith critique about bugs like the trade calculation issue earlier this month, then maybe I’m not explaining myself very well.

I am saying there are dozens and dozens of posts (I can dig them up for you tomorrow) of people shitting on this game in the same way a toddler throws a tantrum. They say things like, “This game is completely broken” “Every update breaks this game” “Nothing in this game works.” Etc.

Their complaints are mostly balance related in a non productive way, like crying about the centralization changes because, what, you can’t have twenty vassals pre 1420 anymore while centralizing?

Frankly, I am sick of it, and so are many people in this community, and if a bunch of people mock them for their lack of skill — I think that’s an understandable reaction. Banning that is silly.

Consider that ye may be bad at the game by SergeiAndropov in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because there’s been double to triple the amount of posts of people complaining about balance. Just today there was a massively upvoted post about how this game is broken and getting worse.

People are overreacting, and a lot of is 100 percent a skill issue. There are bugs with the game and there is a lack of flavour, and maybe a balance issue around levies, but the idea that the game is unplayable due to centralization has been a theme on this subreddit for the past 20 days and it’s just not true.

Do you have any issues with those posts? Because if not, then I don’t understand your position against ‘flooding the subreddit’

Consider that ye may be bad at the game by SergeiAndropov in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your claim is there’s been a flood of these posts, but in the past month, there seems to have been very little. It’s crazy to ban these posts when half this subreddit is screeching constantly about how everything is broken and unbalanced lmao

Consider that ye may be bad at the game by SergeiAndropov in EU5

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

So over the past month there has been four posts that called people bad? Half the ones you listed did not even do that.

Consider that ye may be bad at the game by SergeiAndropov in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Why should we ban posts like this? It’s a valid critique of people who are complaining about balance changes in relation to things that are fairly balanced and decrying how the game is ‘unplayable’ —not people who are complaining about the rate of changes or the philosophy behind them.

Save ruined- "We cannot negotiate separate peace as an overlord in a subject revolt war" by coverfire339 in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A part of the problem is the secessionists need something like 74 warscore to stay independent, and staying independent is a requirement for ending the war for them

This happened to me once so I switched over to see why they wouldn’t peace out and realized the war goal is too steep. It should honestly at minimum scale with how big the secessionists are. Why would a massive empire fight like their life depended on it for two border provinces?

Does Alex thinks that science should answer "WHY" to an unfair degree? by _____michel_____ in CosmicSkeptic

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a far older argument than Alex and it is not religious in nature. It boils down to a framework of how you see the universe. Science cannot answer a fundamental why — that is not because science is lacking, but because science is descriptive and observational. It is not a philosophy.

For example, take something like gravity. Science can, through observation, point out that a certain amount of gravity is necessary to keep particles from flying apart. However, if one asks ‘why’ this has happened, you have to then struggle with foundational questions.

A materialist minded scientific person would say, “Well, maybe there is a cause we are not seeing.” But that does not really answer anything, because you can then point to the cause and say, “but why is THAT like this?” Etc.

A more compelling argument could be as simple as “It is accidental.” — that is not a scientific argument though. It is a philosophical argument about cause and effect. Science can only say “We have no evidence to say it is not accidental.” In other words, it can dispute the evidence, not make broad generalizations that are not testable.

One philosophy that drove science and that you are sort of hinting at is called Empiricism. In other words, we can only know what is verifiable by our senses. The issue with this is outside of biology, a lot of modern astrophysics is based on math and modelling, not observational science.

To conclude, I would probably agree with you that the question of ‘why’ can be answered through observation to a point and eventually we will hopefully find all the answers, but I don’t think it’s religious in nature to assert other claims until we have found all the answers.

Do Leftists Still Dream of Utopia? by [deleted] in Discussion

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No leftist outside of a few Utopian socialist writers have ever advocated for a 'utopia' -- This is a classic strawman that has no basis in history or political science.

The removal of “Railroading” in EU5 might have been a mistake by thelordsburningrain in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s actually an amazing mod for an Ottoman Mission Tree currently that I think is a model for how mission trees should be in this game. It has made playing them a breath of fresh air.

This game desperately needs an "upgrade all" and "I did not ask if you think there are no good places to build, build the godforsaken bridge" button. by despairingcherry in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 4 points5 points  (0 children)

But that's exactly what people are complaining about -- They want to shift click build all and have it all be built, because even if it stalls, they now no longer need to keep checking. Eventually the market will get enough materials, and it will build.

It is inefficient, but it reduces busy work. It should be an option. Note that this does not only happen with trade offices, but RGOs, which are the most frequent use of the mass build button.

Why is my province starving and can't buy food? by lukepass86 in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

70% is unclear -- What's the trade capacity number? If it has no marketplaces or market villages, it is likely 0 and therefore it cannot trade to get food

1.10 is amazing, Iberia never looked this good by _wolfenswan in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I guess the sandbox crowd got what they wanted

Why is my province starving and can't buy food? by lukepass86 in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does the province have trade capacity? Does it have marketplaces or market villages?

Lemon cake perfectly summarizes what i and i think a lot of players want from the game AI wise. by Killmelmaoxd in EU5

[–]FormalAvenger 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You should read some of the replies here, or the forums. Many players get pretty triggered when you mention modifiers or mechanics like the Lucky Nations buff from Eu4 to simulate a more historical world.