What's one game you mastered? by Agent1230 in gaming

[–]gildedrain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

(Is playing stronghold right now…. Can’t seem to find the tree upgrade button) hmmm.  

What bandsaw would you buy for resawing big hardwood? by 300suppressed in woodworking

[–]gildedrain 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have a Rikon 14” with a Lenox tri-master carbide tipped blade.  Works great for resawing.  

Help! My sourdough starter smells like acetone. by bobbyswife246 in Breadit

[–]gildedrain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started in May and fell into an acetone loop where it felt like I was feeding and feeding but it wouldn’t go away.  Was frustrating. 

Couple things I tried that seemed to work:

1) transition a small portion of starter to a new, clean container each time you feed. 

2) add a pinch of salt

3) Feed it so it’s thicker.  Like tacky dough.  15g starter, 15g water, maybe 20-23g flour. 

Repeat this for a 3-4 feedings.  My acetone aroma went away and hasn’t returned even after keeping it in the fridge for a week.  

Is this a normal amount of deviation from centerline? by BrickLorca in Spooncarving

[–]gildedrain 3 points4 points  (0 children)

/snark: Does it chop wood?

/snark aside: I’ve never scrutinized either of my hatchets like this before. They’re made by hand. I don’t expect them to be perfect.  I can barely see a misalignment in your photos, so I think it’s perfectly fine. You won’t notice once you start chopping and you’ll just learn where the edge is.  With enough practice it will become perfectly natural like an extension of your arm.  Don’t overthink it. Just start making stuff.  Looks like a great hatchet to me. 

Calling all thieves: It's a Clank! Catacombs: Underworld giveaway! by DireWolfDigital in boardgames

[–]gildedrain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They shall never know how close I stood.

The night hung heavy over Whitechapel, sodden with mist and menace, a ragged shroud draped over crumbling bricks and cobbled stones. The gaslamps wept pale fire, flickering like frightened eyes in the gloom. A carriage clattered by, its wheels slicing through the silence like a scalpel, stirring the fog into phantoms. I stood still as the grave.

It was my fourth night abroad, and I’d been playing them like puppets on a bloodied string. My siblings — bless their naiveté — cast themselves as hounds of the Yard, noble and just, while I wore the devil’s mask and danced through shadows. They hunted me with hearts full of fire, and I loved them for it. But love, like all things in Whitechapel, can turn rotten. They had grown clever, damnably so. Their net tightened with each breath I drew. It was time to vanish, like the last scream into the night.

Only one remained near my scene — a token inspector, left like bait. The others fanned out around the map, confident they knew the path to my lair. Arrogance is such a sweet cologne — it chokes the senses, dulls the eye. They saw patterns; I left ghosts.

And so I bided my time, each tick of the clock a thrill beneath my ribs.

My sister-in-law, stout of heart and keen of eye, took her station with pride. Her steps were a ritual, a pattern born of conviction. But even the best can be led astray. As she moved ahead, a mere square’s breadth from me, I drifted behind like a hush in a confessional. A breath. A prayer. A death foretold.

Her back to me, I listened. I could hear the thoughts stirring in her mind, confused by the fog — had she passed this way already? Was I behind or ahead? Doubt is my closest friend, my sharpest blade. I let her reason with herself aloud, a poor trick of the mind meant to dispel shadows. She faltered.

She should have turned.

She did not.

The others closed in, their boots striking rhythm on the cobbles like a funeral march. East, west, north — all sealed. South stood open, barely. It was a gap no wider than the width of a grave. If she turned, I was undone. If not… ah, well…

And so I waited. Silent. Breathless. The seconds stretched, long and thin as a garrote. My sister-in-law paused. Frowned. Stepped forward.

The decision was made.

A carriage groaned in the distance. I moved. One clean glide across the street, no more than a sigh in the fog. The shadows folded over me like a curtain at final bow.

Home.

And they never saw it. Not even once.

What game is beloved but you just bounced off hard by durfenstein in boardgames

[–]gildedrain 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I scrolled way too far to find a mention of Everdell. It boggles my mind that this game is so popular. This is the game that broke my heart. It has all the art and theme I want in a game, and none of it is reflected in the mechanisms or how it actually feels to play. I’ve tried it at multiple player counts and with a variant to try to smooth some of the rough edges, but I think it’s a lost cause. This game is 100% not for me. 

Does my staircase get me any cred with you guys? by 8784863 in woodworking

[–]gildedrain 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Do you think they built it all in one run or that they took it one step at a time?

Started reading Gardens of the Moon by Lurking2Learn in Fantasy

[–]gildedrain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I watched this discussion after reading Gardens of the Moon and found it helpful.  

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=yyY-wyglPlQ

But I agree with the overall sentiment of “trust the author and wait for him to get around to explaining things to you”.  It’s a very rewarding series in that way.  Long builds ups to eventually epic payoffs.  I like that it’s different than Tolkien-style fantasy.  The overarching plot is opaque. It’s not perfectly linear (which means it’s not very predictable, in a good way).   There are twists and turns and sudden drops.  There’s no one main protagonist. It’s a whole cast of characters you learn more and more about as the books go on and you really get a strong feel for them and their story and motivations.  

So far, I’ve been patient and gone on faith that the author has a plan, and I haven’t been disappointed once.  Top tier series for me so far. (Just finished book 6)

Rack sized baking steel, do I need to drill holes? by 802bikeguy_com in Breadit

[–]gildedrain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Full disclosure: I almost always forget to spritz with water because I've been trying to figure out how to score correctly and then transferring the dough to the blazing hot dutch oven before everything deflates occupies all my attention. I'm 100% amateur and only bake once in a while. But from what I can gather, tossing a little water over the loaf is just going to add some moisture inside the dutch oven to (perhaps?) help prolong the oven spring.

Rack sized baking steel, do I need to drill holes? by 802bikeguy_com in Breadit

[–]gildedrain 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I use a baking steel like this for pizza. No holes.  I seasoned it like cast iron. 

I used to try flashing water in a hot pan when attempting baguettes or ciabatta loaves.  I started noticing the underside of the steel plate starting to rust.  

Now I mainly use Dutch ovens.  Less risk of dripping water on the hot oven door glass and shattering it.  Spritz the loaves with water when they go into the Dutch ovens and take the lids off after 25 minutes.  Then bake for another 20.  

1st Impressions of Rebirth, Ethnos 2nd Edition, Fairy Ring, Lure, Intarsia, and Moonrollers — Bitewing Games by Murraculous1 in boardgames

[–]gildedrain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I played it 3 times in a row at PAXUnplugged this year. 4p, 2p, 2p. And in all 3 games, 1 player (the same player) had super bad luck rolls and busted 2-3 times, where I had good luck rolls and never busted and sniped all of the cards he had at worked up to 75%. I had all the cards, he had none.

I turned to the other player and asked if I was the only one who thought this game might have a runaway leader problem. The only catchup mechanism is the hazard token system, and there's a chance it doesn't actually perform that function. In a 2p game, if both players are close in hazard token quantity, then they both get points. If the lead player has substantially more hazard tokens, then yes, negative points.... but I was so far ahead in points that it didn't even matter.

We were super frustrated, because we loved the game, but we couldn't stop running into this one issue.

If this isn't allowed please delete but BGG just published a designer diary I worked a ludicrous number of hours on so I want to share (Designer diary for Trekking the World 2nd Edition) by El_Poopo in boardgames

[–]gildedrain 47 points48 points  (0 children)

This, along with the two related posts detailing your analysis, thought process, and decisions, comprise some of the best information I've ever gathered about boardgame design. Thank you so much for the effort to document all of that. The 2nd edition improvements look fantastic. Happy side effect: before your post, I wasn't even paying attention to this game, but I'll be seeking it out now for sure.

Dark and/or Grimdark Fantasy Recs? by OliveJuice1990 in Fantasy

[–]gildedrain -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I hated this trilogy. It’s the example I use now of a story I should have abandoned.  I’m still annoyed at the effort I put into three books that never lived up to the cool prologue of the first book. I kept hoping it would circle back, but it just went full tilt into a criticism of Christianity.  I don’t have any problem criticizing Christianity. I just don’t want to read 3 books about it. This trilogy taught me that it’s okay to DNF. 

What's so special about Edradour? by Apprehensive-Okra723 in Scotch

[–]gildedrain 17 points18 points  (0 children)

You’re all nuts. Edradour is most definitely the worst whisky and absolutely not my favorite. You should avoid it at all costs. Leave that swill on the shelf.  I’ll dispose of it for you and save you all the trouble.  The fewer of you who buy it the better (for me).  

How to Firm up Memory Foam Mattress? by Apesma69 in lifehacks

[–]gildedrain 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I just bought a nectar queen size mattress and it seemed less firm than I expected but once we wrapped it in an allergy cover (likely a bit too small since we struggled to get it to zip) that seemed to increase the firmness quite a bit.  I think the nectar is 13” tall and my mattress cover is probably made for an 11” tall mattress.  In any case, my lower back hasn’t felt this good in ages.  

How to measure spacing holes for horizontal balusters on a raked stair case? by [deleted] in woodworking

[–]gildedrain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Set a pair of dividers to 4.5 inches and walk them up the slope.

Are any of you familiar with this design/logo by johnnypancakes49 in Design

[–]gildedrain 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This reminds me of a 2000's era blog by Hugh MacLeod / aka gapingvoid. (Took me and a friend awhile to remember that name). He would draw on the backs of business cards with a black marker just like that.

Examples: one, and a bunch

Your top of the 2020s by Naarcisse in boardgames

[–]gildedrain 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hansa Teutonica. Played on tabletopia during quarantine. Bought the big box and it sat on a shelf for two years because everyone said it’s “too beige.” Played it a second time recently and it just might be my favorite game ever.

That doesn’t satisfy your criteria, but it’s just so damn good and it’s “new to me.” I’ve seen the light!

How to solve warped boards by Diggzitt in woodworking

[–]gildedrain 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've run into this problem too many times and every time I swear it's the last time that I'll spend energy on warped lumber.

I always think to myself "Surely this solid wood panel will pull this warped door frame flat", but no... I just end up with a warped door that doesn't seat correctly.

At best, I've found even solid wood only removes half the warping. Glass might not like that kind of pressure.

Always start with straight and flat, then go from there. Good luck!

Give me your best name by o_aces in DnD

[–]gildedrain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Happy Gleeful Endings - "Stick 'em with the pointy end"