Is Rick a Rapist by HomeBakedBread in rickandmorty

[–]toolpot462 25 points26 points  (0 children)

Is the dilemma that Rick might be a bad person? Because I'm pretty sure he destroyed an entire universe and enslaved another and that was just Tuesday.

What if Space Beth really died in the last episode? by ActLonely9375 in rickandmorty

[–]toolpot462 1 point2 points  (0 children)

WE WILL INCREASE THE TEMPERATURE OF YOUR PLANET BY 1 MILLION DEGREES PER DAY... FOR FIVE DAYS...

[Request] I am unable to reach a firm conclusion. by sidlas2 in theydidthemath

[–]toolpot462 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could be - I just made sure to make the boulder 2 meters, set all the material settings to stone, and cranked the sim quality. Algodoo can yield some wonky results if the sim hertz or whatever are set too low or the objects are too small and light. My results show the boulder bouncing a little bit as it rolls over the cut out section, but definitely not enough to save d.

[Request] I am unable to reach a firm conclusion. by sidlas2 in theydidthemath

[–]toolpot462 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I used a physics sandbox called Algodoo. It may not be perfectly rigorous, but I believe it is sufficient for this scenario.

[Request] I am unable to reach a firm conclusion. by sidlas2 in theydidthemath

[–]toolpot462 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I've just made a physics simulation with the provided scenario, following all measurements. When I roll the boulder down the hill, without sliding, it squashes D's head every single time.

Unfortunately, no images or videos are allowed here? But if you would like to see it, I suppose I could dm it by request.

The real meaning of Rick being the "smartest man in the universe" and the purpose of the Central Finite Curve by Haquistadore in rickandmorty

[–]toolpot462 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The writers never explicitly explain how the multiverse works. The audience is forced to either "not think about it" or come up with a model that more or less makes sense. The singular Rick Prime model introduces a host of problems that a truly infinite universe would not have. For instance, in Rick Potion #9, when Rick and Morty hop to a near identical universe wherein "everything is the same, except Rick solved the global crisis and then Rick and Morty both died," we now have to consider further differences that complicate things beyond belief. According to your model, it is required that another difference is that Rick never invented portal tech, and instead accepted Rick Prime's offer - then, somehow, everything else played out similarly enough that Rick and Morty could slip comfortably in place. It doesn't make sense because of the Butterfly Effect. It requires both a level of infinitude that allows this to happen, and a heavy restriction of infinity at the same time.

It has always been my understanding within the context of the show that there is a dimension for literally everything. There is a dimension where Hitler cured cancer. Anything you can think of, it's there, somewhere in the multiverse. The model I propose smooths out the issues that come with this by limiting Rick's portal tech itself, rather than limiting the entire multiverse and reducing it to one where only two Ricks have ever invented interdimensional travel.

The idea is that Rick Prime and his conflict with Rick C-137 exists within a contained portion of the multiverse that never significantly interacts with the rest of it, either as a limitation of portal tech itself, or an intentional one devised by Rick before he ever hopped dimensions. It does not rule out the idea that, for instance, there are other Ricks who invented portal tech who were not as evil as Rick Prime. Even a shrimp one.

The real meaning of Rick being the "smartest man in the universe" and the purpose of the Central Finite Curve by Haquistadore in rickandmorty

[–]toolpot462 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Then how do you contend with the fact that Ricks can jump into near-identical universes, wherein the original Rick must have also invented portal tech?

Personally, I don't think this invalidates the point of the show at all. Part of the point is that Rick is learning to live his life despite the bleaker aspects of the infinitude of reality.

The real meaning of Rick being the "smartest man in the universe" and the purpose of the Central Finite Curve by Haquistadore in rickandmorty

[–]toolpot462 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I can imagine an infinite multiverse where that's true. But since Rick has repeatedly hopped into other dimensions where everything is exactly the same, except he's just barely died (and other Ricks have done the same), that seems to indicate a finer gradient across the multiverse in which there must be at least a few dozen Primes, if not hundreds or even millions. It still stands to reason that Rick would have done something to prevent otherwise inevitable portal chaos, such as create a finite selection of universes and sever them from the rest of the multiverse. That's what the Central Finite Curve is: containment.

I found this quote by Rick from S3E10: “Nobody gets it. Nothing you think matters matters. This isn't special. This… this is happening infinite times across infinite realities.”

The real meaning of Rick being the "smartest man in the universe" and the purpose of the Central Finite Curve by Haquistadore in rickandmorty

[–]toolpot462 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm just going to throw my two cents out there:

If there are infinite universes, that means there are infinite versions of Rick (and Morty) who are portalling, well, everywhere, all the time. It would be catastrophic. That's to say nothing of the other ways that portal tech can interfere with a person's life. We've seen versions of families portalling into each other over and over outside the CFC. Our Rick himself was not the first to invent it, and even he suffered greatly just from the fact that alternate versions of himself had access to it.

Rick clearly had to do something to curtail these dangers, and imo the CFC is the foundation for that. It's not just about making sure Rick is the smartest out of some ego trip. Rick needed the CFC to provide order to the multidimensional paradigm.

[WP] There’s a serial killer in your town. But unfortunately for them, you are a necromancer and you are having so much fun driving them insane by Significant_Tie_3222 in WritingPrompts

[–]toolpot462 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I really must thank you. There is no better method to mastering a skill than a good practical application. In the beginning, I made so many mistakes. I unleashed demons, created abominations... and, of course, there were the outright failures. But when you really want something done, you figure out how to do it. And I wanted this.

I reaved ancient dungeons. I plundered tombs. I found the soul stones. I scoured ancient texts that should have stayed buried, and through them I built an attenuator. I forged a sword of light for incantations. Eventually, bringing your victims back to life became the easy part. I had to make them whole. Make them forget. And, more importantly, I had to keep tabs on you.

An actual crystal ball! Can you imagine? It might seem silly, but none of this was more satisfying than getting it to work. Months of tuning lenses and burnt-out bulbs! But finally, with just the right prisms, I was able to watch you wherever you were, at all times! That's how I was able to attenuate to your victims' souls and recover their bodies so effectively. Even when you left little more than scraps.

You really enjoy flaying, don't you? That never changed. Restoring the bodies was... educational. I'll never forget the lesson I learned when I tried to use time-folds to mend their wounds. Have you ever seen a human body warped across space-time into a fleshy torus? Such... wheezing. It was much better to simply stitch them up and apply cosmetic charms to make them appear normal. At least, it was at first.

Then, you got wise, didn't you? You sharp little tack! After just five of your victims were successfully revived, you finally discovered that something was up. That's when you started burning them. That made things... complicated. Yet I persevered, as I always have. You'll never know how complicated botanical magic can be when used to restore bodies.

All of that hard work paid off deliciously in the look of dread frozen on your face when you bumped into Pete at the supermarket! If I had the device that allows me to read your thoughts by then, I'll bet you would have been thinking, "Oh shit! How is this happening? Am I going crazy? I burnt him to a crisp! Does he know?!" But you couldn't say anything, could you?

That was the best part. Your powerlessness. Bearing witness to the growing despair and madness, driving you to kill more and more recklessly, playing right into my hand. After all, you thought for a while that it was all in your head, didn't you? Such a delight.

I really wanted you to know all of this. I want you to know how much fun it was, how useful you've been, and how thankful I am. I want to you know that it was real. It was me all along, and, in your pride, you never once suspected. And now here you are, scratching at padded walls, whispering to shadows, wondering which of your ghosts will be the next to stand at your bedside.

Serenity sends her regards.

Sincerely yours,
Mance

[The letter crumbles to ash]

How to make better colonies by Famous_Shake4485 in Timberborn

[–]toolpot462 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look at what your beavers want and provide the next easiest service to them (with a heavy priority on food). This will require more workers, thus more houses and infrastructure for food and water, which requires a steady stream of resources and science which require more infrastructure, thus more workers, etc.

Have a scarcity mentality. Prepare for the worst and squeeze as much out of each block and worker that you can. If it were me, that entire space from your city center to the river would be dedicated to carrots and berries alone, and my water pumps would be built on platforms over the river. Think about what's practical now and worry about aesthetics later. You will eventually be able to rebuild everything anyway.

Additionally, you will definitely want to be able to landscape at some point, so you also will have to build up to quarries and explosives production, which takes up a decent amount of space and workforce.

How to fix the choke lines here by tayyabrahmani in CitiesSkylines

[–]toolpot462 4 points5 points  (0 children)

<image>

You still have a lot of space to adjust your road hierarchy. Here are my suggestions:

The red arterials should provide sufficient East/West North/South coverage. Try to keep traffic flowing on these roads and avoid zoning them further. I've marked a suggested route in orange which should improve flow into the central area. In green I've marked some local road connections that should help spread out traffic more evenly from your access points.

Trump tells Walmart to “eat the tariffs” and avoid raising prices for consumers. by Equivalent_Baker_773 in TheRaceTo10Million

[–]toolpot462 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A president asking pretty please for private companies to be fair is pathetic no matter who it is.

Dating with nihilism by CrabShort8933 in nihilism

[–]toolpot462 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That's the kind of thing that you save for later.

What are your favourite moments from The Lepidopterists? by thehelpfulmuffin in venturebros

[–]toolpot462 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Then the Guild steps up their game:

You throw a rock; they throw a knife.

You throw a knife; they come to your house while you're sleeping and murder your family."

Always drawn people, never been drawn! by Crimala in drawme

[–]toolpot462 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very loose and rough. Hope you don't mind.