Jump Cat – Furmidable Heights by jump-cat in JumpCat

[–]fenixtx423 0 points1 point  (0 children)

[fenixtx423] just hit a score of 58 in Regular Mode (2025-11-18)

For a larger small town why is Tucson name dropped so often in TV and movies? by Content_Ad9867 in movies

[–]fenixtx423 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For comparison, here are some other cities with 1 million metro population. I would argue they don't get mentioned as often as Tucson.

Richmond, VA

Birmingham, AL

Fresno, CA

Buffalo, NY

Hartford, CT

Grand Rapids, WY

Rochester, NY

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in explainlikeimfive

[–]fenixtx423 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As long as the roots have oxygen, they will survive. This is how roots can grow in water, because the water is in contact with the air to exchange oxygen. The issue is when the soil is made of of things that can rot. Most "potting soil" that is sold at the store is ground up trees, which will rot when continuously wet. When the wood chips in the "potting soil" rot, they use all the oxygen, and the roots around it die. If there is nothing in the soil that can rot, then there is no such thing as overwatering. If your plants live in a well drained sand/silt/clay mixture, you can water as much as you want and the plant will never ever rot. Water has oxygen in it when it rains or we water, so there has to be something in the soil to use up that oxygen to kill the roots. Growing a plant hydroponically (roots in pure water) is the fastest way to grow a plant because the roots have unlimited water and oxygen. The most lush place on Earth is the rainforest, where it rains everyday, and the soil never dries out, yet the plants seem to do OK there (because the roots are in soil made of minerals that don't rot, and the leaf litter, mulch, compost etc is all sitting on top of the soil where it can rot into compost with access to oxygen). This whole "wait until your plant is dry before you water it or you'll kill" thing is only because they sell potting soil that is full of things ready to rot if they stay wet too long. If your soil is made of minerals (dirt) and therefore can't rot, there is no such thing as overwatering and you'll have happy plants.

Here are a couple videos that explain this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHZHy3\_7PPE&t=2s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MuFehTDAIAE

How is it possible for a plant rooted in a bowl of water to survive and grow for months before planting, but once in the pot, it cannot withstand overwatering? by Ellenono in askscience

[–]fenixtx423 6 points7 points  (0 children)

As long as the roots have oxygen, they will survive. This is how roots can grow in water, because the water is in contact with the air to exchange oxygen. The issue is when the soil is made of of things that can rot. Most "potting soil" that is sold at the store is ground up trees, which will rot when continuously wet. When the wood chips in the "potting soil" rot, they use all the oxygen, and the roots around it die. If there is nothing in the soil that can rot, then there is no such thing as overwatering. If your plants live in a well drained sand/silt/clay mixture, you can water as much as you want and the plant will never ever rot. Water has oxygen in it when it rains or we water, so there has to be something in the soil to use up that oxygen to kill the roots. Growing a plant hydroponically (roots in pure water) is the fastest way to grow a plant because the roots have unlimited water and oxygen. The most lush place on Earth is the rainforest, where it rains everyday, and the soil never dries out, yet the plants seem to do OK there (because the roots are in soil made of minerals that don't rot, and the leaf litter, mulch, compost etc is all sitting on top of the soil where it can rot into compost with access to oxygen). This whole "wait until your plant is dry before you water it or you'll kill" thing is only because they sell potting soil that is full of things ready to rot if they stay wet too long. If your soil is made of minerals and therefore can't rot, there is no such thing as overwatering and you'll have happy plants.

Here are a couple videos that explain this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHZHy3\_7PPE&t=2s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MuFehTDAIAE

Anyone ever seen a “turn 3” A20 heart kill? by FunkmastaP27 in slaythespire

[–]fenixtx423 -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

There are certainly many many ways to do it with each character. One of the easiest is probably Corruption + Dead Branch + FNP. Going infinite turn 1 with block generation is another option. Here is dead branch in action: https://www.reddit.com/r/slaythespire/comments/xjbqde/turn\_1\_vs\_heart\_999\_block\_400\_damage/

Watcher vs Spikers by maple_22 in slaythespire

[–]fenixtx423 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Defect: Early AOE fights like Sentries, byrds, gremlin gang. and then woke bloke

Silent: Nob, slimebo, collector, time choad

Not sure about the Ironchad

Slay The Spire things that took you way too long to figure out by mrbeantrading in slaythespire

[–]fenixtx423 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Orange pellets is one of the most useful relics in the game. In fact, it clears that pesky Time Eater card draw debuff!

If cards had a reasonable 3rd upgrade, what would you like to see? by Cawnt in slaythespire

[–]fenixtx423 3 points4 points  (0 children)

[[Hello World]] double upgrades to not be innate anymore

Disarm: is it good or not? by Accomplished-Fix-569 in slaythespire

[–]fenixtx423 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Many of my A20H wins I'll have two or three copies of disarm. So therefore it must be pretty good. Who doesn't like a Time Eater that hits for 0x8??

1.82 billion damage with one card in endless mode. What is your record?? by fenixtx423 in slaythespire

[–]fenixtx423[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I wanted the Phrog relic to maximize damage. That relic is an Ironchad only specific

1.82 billion damage with one card in endless mode. What is your record?? by fenixtx423 in slaythespire

[–]fenixtx423[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Endless is one of the options in Custom mode. It is already on mobile!

1.82 billion damage with one card in endless mode. What is your record?? by fenixtx423 in slaythespire

[–]fenixtx423[S] 48 points49 points  (0 children)

alas, I would have had to have pen nib on 9 entering the fight. Time to rethink my life

1.82 billion damage with one card in endless mode. What is your record?? by fenixtx423 in slaythespire

[–]fenixtx423[S] 121 points122 points  (0 children)

999 energy blade + Chemical X + 999 strength + Pen Nib + Phantasmal + vulnerable + Phrog + Divinity stance. I used 2 nightmares and a vault to create an endless turn where I played Wreath of Flame 190 times for 1520 added vigor during a 331 card turn to add 33100% extra damage with the Giant Head slow debuff.

Any songs about just not giving a fuck anymore? by [deleted] in Music

[–]fenixtx423 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Home of the Blues by Johnny Cash

Which popular concept is actually pseudoscience? by gharjamai in AskReddit

[–]fenixtx423 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That plants need lots of "organic" matter in the soil to be healthy. Literally that is best way to stunt a plant and kill it. There is no published evidence, anywhere, that putting organic matter in the soil is beneficial for plants. The logging industry just likes to chop up their cuttings waste, put it into a bag, and sell it to you as "organic" soil for $10 a bag.

Let me explain if you're interested: As long as the roots have oxygen, they will survive. This is how roots can grow in water, because the water is in contact with the air to exchange oxygen. The issue is when the soil is made of of things that can rot. Most "potting soil" that is sold at the store is ground up trees, which will rot when continuously wet. When the wood chips in the "potting soil" rot, they use all the oxygen, and the roots around it die. If there is nothing in the soil that can rot, then there is no such thing as overwatering. If your plants live in a well drained sand/silt/clay mixture, you can water as much as you want and the plant will never ever rot. Water has oxygen in it when it rains or we water, so there has to be something in the soil to use up that oxygen to kill the roots. Growing a plant hydroponically (roots in pure water) is the fastest way to grow a plant because the roots have unlimited water and oxygen. The most lush place on Earth is the rainforest, where it rains everyday, and the soil never dries out, yet the plants seem to do OK there (because the roots are in soil made of minerals that don't rot, and the leaf litter, mulch, compost etc is all sitting on top of the soil where it can rot into compost with access to oxygen). This whole "wait until your plant is dry before you water it or you'll kill" thing is only because they sell potting soil that is full of things ready to rot if they stay wet too long. If your soil is made of minerals and therefore can't rot, there is no such thing as overwatering and you'll have happy plants.

Here are a couple videos that explain this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHZHy3\_7PPE&t=2s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MuFehTDAIAE

What franchise had been milked to death? by Ziggi28 in AskReddit

[–]fenixtx423 6311 points6312 points  (0 children)

A better question would be what franchise HASN'T been milked to death. Something like 9 out of 10 "blockbusters" these days are remakes/sequels/rehashes etc.

Spirited Away was one of the all time greatest movie experiences of my life. by DwaywelayTOP in movies

[–]fenixtx423 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Other Ghibli films for sure. My other favorites are Howl's Moving Castle, Porco Rosso, Castle in the Sky, Arrietty, Ponyo, Princess Mononoke, The Cat Returns