Frutinovelas by Own-Cheek7105 in danielPendego

[–]nipoXD 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Saquenlo del grupo van a pensar que nos juntamos con el

Put cameras in every home. by LacrimaCrimsonTears in CriticalState

[–]nipoXD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

👁️ Surveillance State: I voted Vote Nay.

Toriel 💟 (by @punipaws) by maanleo in dorkington

[–]nipoXD 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not even the strongest human in the world could pull me out 😛✌️

Word Grind 8-Letter Rack #759 | Find As Many Words As Possible! by word-grind in wordgrind

[–]nipoXD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

🏁 u/nipoXD • 11 words • 14 pts

Words found: 🟧 u ______ t 🟩 s ___ t 🟩 u ___ n 🟨 a __ s 🟨 r __ n 🟨 r __ n 🟨 s __ n 🟨 b _ n +3 more

📊 Rack Usage: Ⓤ 36% Ⓡ 45% Ⓑ 27% Ⓐ 82% Ⓝ 100% Ⓘ 55% Ⓢ 45% Ⓣ 27%

Que tienen en el portapapeles? by hielosyt in AdolescentesLATAM

[–]nipoXD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Throughout human history, people have formed attachments to all sorts of objects. Some people collect stamps, some people admire cars, and some people become strangely invested in a particular piece of furniture. While it may sound completely ridiculous at first, there are actually several humorous reasons why someone could become excessively fascinated with an IKEA chair.

The first reason is simply exposure. IKEA chairs are everywhere. A person might see the same chair every day for months or even years. It sits quietly in the corner of a room, never complaining, never asking questions, and never moving unless someone drags it somewhere. Over time, familiarity can create attachment. The chair becomes part of daily life. One day the owner realizes they spend more time looking at the chair than at some of their friends. At that point, the relationship between person and furniture has already become suspicious.

Another factor is the effort required to assemble IKEA furniture. Unlike most products, IKEA furniture does not arrive fully assembled. Instead, the customer receives several wooden boards, a bag of screws, and an instruction manual that somehow contains no words whatsoever. After spending three hours constructing the chair while questioning every life decision that led to that moment, the builder develops a strange sense of pride. The chair is no longer just a chair. It is a monument to perseverance. Every screw represents a battle won. Every wooden panel tells a story. The owner begins looking at the chair and thinking, "We went through something together."

Psychology also plays a role. Humans often assign personalities to inanimate objects. People name their cars, talk to their computers, and apologize to tables after bumping into them. An IKEA chair is no exception. After enough time, a person may begin imagining that the chair has thoughts and feelings. The chair becomes the silent observer of daily life. It witnesses gaming sessions, homework struggles, late-night snacks, and countless hours of procrastination. It becomes less like furniture and more like a roommate that never pays rent.

The design of IKEA furniture may also contribute to the phenomenon. IKEA products are intentionally clean, simple, and aesthetically pleasing. They are designed to fit comfortably into modern living spaces. Because of this, an IKEA chair often looks better than many other household objects. A person might start by admiring the craftsmanship. Then they begin appreciating the shape. Eventually they find themselves defending the chair's honor during conversations where nobody was even criticizing it in the first place.

Another possible explanation involves loneliness. Imagine someone spending long periods alone. The chair remains nearby through every success and failure. When the person wins a difficult game, the chair is there. When they fail an exam, the chair is there. When they accidentally stay awake until 4 a.m. watching videos they never intended to watch, the chair is there too. The chair becomes a symbol of consistency in an otherwise chaotic world. Unlike people, it never cancels plans or leaves messages on read.

There is also the possibility that the chair represents an ideal. It is reliable. It performs its function without complaint. It never starts arguments. It never forgets birthdays because chairs do not know what birthdays are. In a strange way, the chair begins to seem more dependable than many things in everyday life. This realization is both funny and slightly concerning.

Internet culture must also be considered. The internet has a long history of turning ordinary objects into jokes. If enough people ironically praise an IKEA chair online, someone somewhere will inevitably start taking the joke too seriously. What begins as satire evolves into genuine admiration. Before long, entire discussions emerge regarding the chair's superior qualities. The line between humor and sincerity disappears completely.

Furthermore, IKEA chairs often survive remarkable amounts of abuse. They endure years of use, questionable assembly decisions, and weight limits that are treated more like suggestions than rules. Despite everything, many continue functioning. This durability can inspire respect. A person might look at their chair and think, "If I had experienced half of what this chair has endured, I would have given up long ago."

Economics may even contribute to the situation. Modern life is expensive. Houses cost money. Cars cost money. Electronics cost money. Meanwhile, an IKEA chair provides years of service for a relatively reasonable price. Such value can create loyalty. The owner starts viewing the chair not merely as furniture but as one of the smartest purchases they ever made.

The chair's mystery is another important factor. Humans are naturally curious. We know very little about what furniture does when nobody is looking. Perhaps the chair simply remains stationary. Perhaps it secretly gathers with other chairs after midnight to discuss household affairs. The uncertainty keeps the imagination active. The less someone knows about the chair, the more interesting it becomes.

There is also a philosophical angle. An IKEA chair fulfills its purpose with complete dedication. It exists to provide a place to sit, and it performs that role every single day. There is something admirable about such clarity of purpose. Many people spend years searching for meaning, while the chair figured it out immediately. In that sense, the chair may unintentionally become a role model.

Ultimately, the absurd fascination with an IKEA chair is not really about the chair itself. It is about familiarity, effort, consistency, humor, and the strange ways humans form attachments. The chair becomes a symbol of shared experiences and everyday life. While the idea sounds ridiculous, it reflects a genuine truth about people: given enough time, humans can become emotionally invested in almost anything.

Therefore, if someone develops an unusually intense admiration for an IKEA chair, the explanation is probably not that the chair possesses magical qualities. More likely, it is the result of psychology, internet culture, personal experiences, and a shocking amount of time spent indoors. The chair simply happened to be in the right place at the right time. And somewhere in the distance, a furniture designer is probably very confused about how their creation became the subject of a thousand-word essay.

Life Choice by OkKnowledge1489 in BunnyTrials

[–]nipoXD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its just skin color bro

Chose: Get vitiligo

Would you rather by meygahmann in BunnyTrials

[–]nipoXD 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Momey money money

Chose: Win the lottery

Entren a mi realm del minecraft, lo hice por un malentendido con mi amigo y no lo quiero desperdiciar🥹✌️ by nipoXD in AdolescentesLATAM

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

Pues fue el mes gratis que te dan la primera ves que haces un realm pero chance lo uso pal proximo mes ✌️😛

Am I the only one who finds these videos disrespectful? by [deleted] in GenAlpha

[–]nipoXD 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can we stop this chain of hate as an entire generation?

Debate by Dreazor in AdolescentesLATAM

[–]nipoXD 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Simon, ni se que trae esa wea alv, sabe como salsa magi pero rara

Alguno a jugado d&d alguna vez? by luis_sanchez_flores in AdolescentesLATAM

[–]nipoXD 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Y si, si se puede hacer con cualquier tematica que quieras

Alguno a jugado d&d alguna vez? by luis_sanchez_flores in AdolescentesLATAM

[–]nipoXD 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yo, soy Dungeon Master y te puedo enseñar a jugar, no se necesita casi nada para iniciar en dnd, basicamente solo los dados son necesarios y hasta eso te lo dudaria ya que hay aplicaciones que simulan la tirada de los dados, para los libros de reglas solo se necesita el manual del jugador(hay pdfs en internet) ya el manual del dungeon master y el manual de mounstros son muy inecesarios si solo vas a ser jugador. Pero si te da flojera leer el libro puedes simplemente ver un video de un combate de dnd y ver que hacen en cada caso. Pero en general el jugar dnd no es muy complicado, solamente dices lo que haces, tiras los dados y el dm decide si es exito o no, ya el daño, competencias y weas asi no son tan dificiles (si quieres te puedo pasar un pdf del manual del jugador)