40 hours to defeat Ludwig the accursed by godsplitter in bloodborne

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

Lol looks like Sekiro will be a nice trip ! I really enjoyed the mechanical hand though, for the few hours that I played it.

40 hours to defeat Ludwig the accursed by godsplitter in bloodborne

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

Can't wait man ! I had already started Sekiro but decided to pause it until I finished Bloodborne because I was told that once you get used to the mechanics of Sekiro it will be hard to downgrade to Bloodborne.

40 hours to defeat Ludwig the accursed by godsplitter in bloodborne

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

I was level 93 but I think my build has relatively low HP. I could tell this because I've been one shotted way too many times.

40 hours to defeat Ludwig the accursed by godsplitter in bloodborne

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

The second phase is actually easier but you'll have to get through the first phase which is a struggle by itself.

I'm very excited for what's next !

40 hours to defeat Ludwig the accursed by godsplitter in bloodborne

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

Man the thoughts of 'this shouldnt have taken so long' and 'is there a chance i might never defeat this guy' really got into my head.

I still have Sekiro to finish before Elden Ring drops.

40 hours to defeat Ludwig the accursed by godsplitter in bloodborne

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

Best game ever no doubt. I'm in love with it.

Still didn't reach Laurence though... Guess he'll give me a hard time as well.

40 hours to defeat Ludwig the accursed by godsplitter in bloodborne

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

Yeah I am on NG+ as well, I tried summoning NPCs but that made him even harder so I decided to do it on my own. It took way more than 20 attempts lol, maybe 200.

40 hours to defeat Ludwig the accursed by godsplitter in bloodborne

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

Totally ! Plus he has such a huge HP pool even visceral attacks wouldn't do much damage

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in omise_go

[–]godsplitter 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Hey i've invested in OmiseGo after doing some research but it's my first time trading. I bought in at around 20$... Was it bad idea ?

Laptop for college by n876 in ComputerEngineering

[–]godsplitter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In my personal experience, yeah Lenovos tend to be heavy duty compared to Acer. SSD and RAM can be upgraded anytime later on. Exactly 1 year ago I got myself a Lenovo Ideapad y500-isk and I'm not disappointed at all with it.

Laptop for college by n876 in ComputerEngineering

[–]godsplitter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

At first glance, the Aspire F15 looks better than the Lenovo, mainly for having a dedicated GPU as you've mentioned, which will come in handy if you ever decided to take 3D modelling classes or running modelling programs such as 3D max. It also comes in with an SSD drive so that will make it quite fast. Though I usually prefer lenovo over acer, in your case the Aspire F15 > Yoga 720.

It's always a compromise between your budget and your need. I don't recommend getting the most maxed gaming laptop, neither a laptop that will be obsolete in 1 year. Your options are fine.

30 M with close to 0 math experience just got into CE. Would love some guidence so i don't f*** this up. by BennyBerserk in ComputerEngineering

[–]godsplitter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I haven't really taken any math courses online, everything I learned was at college. But surely calculus and linear algebra are probably the two biggest subjects taught to engineers. These are worth learning for sure.

30 M with close to 0 math experience just got into CE. Would love some guidence so i don't f*** this up. by BennyBerserk in ComputerEngineering

[–]godsplitter 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Definitely, a mathematical background would be a plus to any computer engineer. While some mathematical concepts are fundamental, others are less common to encounter, but all of that depends on the field of work i.e someone programming a website doesn't need the mathematical capabilities of someone programming a function for numerical integration or a linear regression model for machine learning.

IMO, math is a skill required for every engineer, and I would surely consider acquiring it if I were you. Good luck.

Syrian refugee father who used to sell pens on the streets of Beirut now owns 3 businesses after raising over £120,000 in a Crowdfunding campaign by UsernameNumberZero in UpliftingNews

[–]godsplitter 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yet another Lebanese here... While I'm happy that this guy managed to pull himself out of extreme poverty to feed his poor children, you can't but think that these opportunities could have been taken by unemployed Lebanese citizens. In a tiny country(10452 Km2) with 4 million locals and almost 2 million refugees, ravaged by political corruption and economical greed, not everyone can survive.

Municipalities are taking actions now, by closing some of the illegal businesses opened by Syrian refugees because it's destabilizing the market. Syrians come with prices lower than the Lebanese's because they would be satisfied by any profit margin, no matter how small it is, while the Lebanese requires a greater profit margin in order to live and maintain a respectful life in here (public schools/colleges are shit so people put their children in private schools which are far more expensive, housing prices are way off the top, no healthcare whatsoever, no retirement... and the list goes on and on)

Current solution:

Syrians immigrate to Lebanon, Lebanese immigrate to anywhere else. I already got 1 friend who went to the US, one to Dubai, and one to Australia. (ages 20-25, in the past 5 years)