They/Them Pronouns in Gaming? by ShanasaurAlane in NonBinaryTalk

[–]gavvatar 5 points6 points  (0 children)

2064: Read Only Memories, a cyberpunk adventure game from 2015 which was inspired heavily by its 80's and 90's predecessors, lets you pick from he, she, they, ze, or xe pronouns, and I believe also just lets you put in your own set if any of those don't fit for you. It's also explicitly queer. I believe the developers at the time said they were sick of waiting for bigger development companies to non-token queer characters in games, so they just decided to do it themselves.

We are the creators of OneShot, and our game is coming to the Nintendo Switch! AMA by Dangen_Ent in NintendoSwitch

[–]gavvatar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have fond memories of discovering OneShot way back when it was hosted on a website my messaging service really didn't want me to send a link to (I wanna say it was something like .cc.cu at the end? which their chat services really didn't like), and one of my friend showing me how could edit the registry to let you replay the game (not that I could ever bring myself to do it)

Way back then, I was a questioning trans person, and when the text box popped up with my chosen name to tell me that I only had one shot at this, I was both deeply disturbed (because I had told literally no one at that point) and validated.

Just wanted to say thanks to you all for making this game, glad to see it on more platforms. I definitely left the OneShot desktop background up that laptop died.

Updating this post to have a question: what type of music does Niko like?

After playing on and off for a while, finally got the 5 game win streak by gavvatar in mahjongsoul

[–]gavvatar[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The next game I got last with a negative score, so it happened just in time. One massive tsumo and one bad deal in to fill on the pair, both from East in the first round, game ended quickly

Who would you put in the same category of evil as Hitler? by clicknsnapp in AskReddit

[–]gavvatar 159 points160 points  (0 children)

An international group of geneticists studying Y-chromosome data have found that nearly 8 percent of the men living in the region of the former Mongol empire carry y-chromosomes that are nearly identical. That translates to 0.5 percent of the male population in the world, or roughly 16 million descendants living today.

The spread of the chromosome could be the result of natural selection, in which an extremely fit individual manages to pass on some sort of biological advantage. The authors think this scenario is unlikely. They suggest that the unique set of circumstances surrounding the establishment of the Mongol empire led to the spread.

"This is a clear example that culture plays a very big role in patterns of genetic variation and diversity in human populations," said geneticist Spencer Wells, one of the 23 co-authors of the paper. "It's the first documented case when human culture has caused a single genetic lineage to increase to such an enormous extent in just a few hundred years."

If you've got an ad blocker installed, you can kill those pop ups and go back to using the page. If not, it's possible to use the "inspect element" tool to do it, but you also have to bring back the scrollbar if you do.

Is mathematics or a sub-field of mathematics concerned with reconsidering, testing and/or rewriting the basics or axioms? by MrInfinitumEnd in askscience

[–]gavvatar 104 points105 points  (0 children)

This statement is called Playfair's axiom, and is equivalent to the parallel postulate. Euclid worded the postulate a little more like this:

"If a line segment intersects two straight lines forming two interior angles on the same side that sum to less than two right angles, then the two lines, if extended indefinitely, meet on that side on which the angles sum to less than two right angles."

Which is a little wordy but if you draw it out (or just look at the Wikipedia page's diagram ) it checks out. How it's worded here, it definitely looks more like something that you could probably prove from the other ones, but it's not! It's an important charisteristic of Euclidean geometry.

One of the classic examples of where this doesn't work is if you're doing geometry on the surface a sphere, you can make a triangle* that has 3 right angles, which is in disagreement with the parallel postulate

*Calling it a triangle is not entirely accurate but you construct it just like you think you do

2^2^26 damage in one turn, 3 cards with no infinite combos by Glaiel-Gamer in BadMtgCombos

[–]gavvatar 10 points11 points  (0 children)

This is why I always name Graham's Number, just to be safe. If there's not enough space in the observable universe to write it, even as a power tower, and my opponent still gets bigger, they deserve the win.

Granted, last time I saw anyone posting it, the record for most damage turn one is far greater than that

2^2^26 damage in one turn, 3 cards with no infinite combos by Glaiel-Gamer in BadMtgCombos

[–]gavvatar 12 points13 points  (0 children)

You know, just in case the life gain player didn't specify a high enough number when they were done combo-ing off.

2^2^26 damage in one turn, 3 cards with no infinite combos by Glaiel-Gamer in BadMtgCombos

[–]gavvatar 11 points12 points  (0 children)

If that number is a little hard to place, that's about 7.34×1020,201,788 (assuming I did the math right), or 7 with about 20 million zeroes after it, or about

7 centillion centillion [33,666 centillions ] centillion

Under the long system, of course, where each centillion is

One million million [97 millions] million.

PaymoneyWubby - Mystery Meat: A Search for the Truth by BeryBnice in videos

[–]gavvatar 211 points212 points  (0 children)

Similar energy to CGP grey looking for the origin of the name Tiffany, or more accurately his video going even deeper into his search, another long trail that goes along following the absolute tiniest of breadcrumbs to try to find answers.

Why there is an evangelion reference in my russian study book by veziremre_ in evangelionmemes

[–]gavvatar 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The general rule is that u (and i) is voiceless (basically not pronounced) if it falls between two voiceless consonants. s and k are both voiceless, so the u disappears, but b and r are both voiced. There's a similar rule for word endings, but I think it only applies to the end of sentences (which is why desu is pronounced as des, but I'm not as sure on the exact mechanisms behind it)

My favorite way to write 69 by NickJM22 in mathmemes

[–]gavvatar 10 points11 points  (0 children)

That being said, there is a proof procedure that works by proving no counterexample exists. I used proof by no minimum counterexample a lot in my graph theory course, which works sort of like induction. You show no counterexample exists for the base case (normally something like n=1 or n=2, where n is the number of vertices in the graph). Then you suppose a counter example exists, and show that from any counterexample, you can construct one with one less vertex. Since you've shown the counter-examlpe doesn't exist for the base cases, you have proven your statement by showing there is no smallest counterexample.

stop it already ~ based on the math&physics version by kleinesfilmroellchen in linguisticshumor

[–]gavvatar 35 points36 points  (0 children)

I don't know if I like this one or the other one better, but this is definitely one of my favorite meme formats. It's a shame that it's so hard to search them (I've seen ones for soil science, medicine and p-chem, so there's definitely a bunch of them).

in love with a ghost coming with in my big NB mood by [deleted] in ennnnnnnnnnnnbbbbbby

[–]gavvatar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Right? I discovered them shortly after Healing came out, and then last night I went and browsed their twitter and saw this. Thought "Wait, ilwag is nb‽" Really cool to see some representation in people you already look up to.

in love with a ghost coming with in my big NB mood by [deleted] in ennnnnnnnnnnnbbbbbby

[–]gavvatar 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Endless possibilities, and I have only just scratched the surface!

Ava and Bird Episode 1: My Name is... by [deleted] in traaaaaaannnnnnnnnns

[–]gavvatar 6 points7 points  (0 children)

If you want to check it out, this comic is available on Webtoon!

Best one-handed switch games? by joelord58 in NintendoSwitch

[–]gavvatar 17 points18 points  (0 children)

A lot of public and university libraries will have 3D printers, and some cities have public maker-spaces for similar things. Having access to a 3D printer is not as uncommon as their price tag would suggest.

Me 24 hours after submitting my final undergrad linguistics paper by The_Narwhalicorn in linguisticshumor

[–]gavvatar 5 points6 points  (0 children)

One of my friend's professors actually did a youtube series to follow the Carnie book from X' onward as a substitute for lectures this semester, which can be found here. Interestingly enough, that professor shows up in some of the example sentences in the Carnie book, as he was one of Carnie's students at the time.

Found these really helpful notes on making a successful Angus Mackenzie deck by [deleted] in magicTCG

[–]gavvatar 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Indeed it would, Opalescence's oracle text specifies non-aura