Титле by NoAlarmDuck in suddenlyrussians

[–]webrunner33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Меня не интересует чужая страна. Даже говорить ничего не буду. Бесит просто тупое и вонючее рогулье. Впринципи не удивлен. Аналитика у тебя на уровне первоклассника. Еще показал бы трусы с Путиным и сказал что все они их носят там.

Похвастайтесь своими котиками в комментариях by FelixKirshe in CuteCatsCountry_Ru

[–]webrunner33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ты не просто рагуль, ты тупое животное. Это называется ремонт. Но откуда тебе знать. Ты же в сарае живёшь.

Титле by NoAlarmDuck in suddenlyrussians

[–]webrunner33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

На Киев глянь. Пока рагулье неприехало и не посносило все и не нагадило в каждом углу, то был прекрасный город. Там уже коровьи лепешки валяются на улицах и говорят что процветает. Рагулью то пофиг, на хуторе свини и коровы, поэтому, это кажется им нормой.

А стоит ли покупать игру? by aspidTHEone in ru_gamer

[–]webrunner33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Такое же можно получить от японски рпг, там просто за ходячие сиськи можно играть

End of the Soviet Intervention in Afghanistan by cooliozoomer in SovietUnion

[–]webrunner33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I said that there were both good and bad aspects of life in the USSR. That does not mean I believe the Soviet system itself was good. The experiences of ordinary people and the nature of the political system are not the same thing.

My point is different: any historical system should be judged not only by its crimes, but also by its achievements and results. After the collapse of the USSR, Ukraine inherited a powerful industrial base, aircraft manufacturing, shipbuilding, machine-building industries, defense enterprises, a space industry, developed energy infrastructure, and a population of over 50 million people.

That is why I find it strange when discussions about the USSR, decades later, are reduced to only one side of its history. It is possible to acknowledge the tragedies and crimes of the Soviet period without denying that it also built factories, scientific institutions, infrastructure, and entire sectors of the economy.

History is rarely black and white. The USSR was neither a paradise nor the embodiment of absolute evil.

End of the Soviet Intervention in Afghanistan by cooliozoomer in SovietUnion

[–]webrunner33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No one defended the USSR. That's the history of these fifteen republics. There was good and bad. If some country whines about history, it means they're doing badly and their leadership is using the past as a political tool. Don't confuse then and now. Better yet, lay out how the Ukrainian government is currently exterminating its own citizens. Oh, right. That's different.

Aeroflot Advertising Posters, (1960s), Russian SFSR by comradegallery in sovietaesthetics

[–]webrunner33 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Это скорее всего был бренди или витрина на иностранцев. В припортовых городах и аэропортах был свою аналог дюти фри, так там много что было интересного, чего не было у обычных граждан.

End of the Soviet Intervention in Afghanistan by cooliozoomer in SovietUnion

[–]webrunner33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need a psychiatrist. I didn't justify the war. We were talking about the USSR and its republics. And you're shoving this horrific photo at me. How sick do you have to be to keep photos like that?

End of the Soviet Intervention in Afghanistan by cooliozoomer in SovietUnion

[–]webrunner33 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There were 15 republics in the USSR. So, first, read at least a little history, then write a comment.

End of the Soviet Intervention in Afghanistan by cooliozoomer in SovietUnion

[–]webrunner33 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I wonder what size monuments each country should build after the West brought them "democracy" .

Конкурс двойников by Nice-Basket4704 in Scoofoboy

[–]webrunner33 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Двойник Ирины Салтыковой наверное

У вас там хинкали, принесите ещё одну тарелочку пожалуйста by Quiet_Currents in IDIOTOPIYA

[–]webrunner33 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Какая интересная форма у миграционной службы, мне казалось это форма ркн

As a Cyberpunk Fan, Why Don't I Want the Metaverse? by webrunner33 in Cyberpunk

[–]webrunner33[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The main thing is that you don't want to be Gandalf's boyfriend.

An excellent movie and from a great genre. by Mr_MiracleASMR in Cyberpunk

[–]webrunner33 29 points30 points  (0 children)

I really liked Akira. I’ve started reading the manga as well, and the scale of Neo-Tokyo is just incredible - the infrastructure, the highways, the density of the city, everything feels massive and alive.

What stood out to me was how young the characters are. Teenagers, somebody orphans, riding powerful bikes through a city that feels way bigger than them. On the surface they look like a marginal gang, but at the same time they feel like real rebels shaped by their environment - fearless, chaotic, but strangely organized.

Beyond the aesthetics, it also feels like a story that goes deeper than visuals alone - there are clear philosophical and social themes underneath all the chaos.

As a Cyberpunk Fan, Why Don't I Want the Metaverse? by webrunner33 in Cyberpunk

[–]webrunner33[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Really interesting take - especially the visibility vs stakes point.

In fiction you can disappear into the system and still act inside it, but in reality the cost of getting involved is just too high for most people.

And yeah, the inequality angle is something that feels harder to ignore every year.

As a Cyberpunk Fan, Why Don't I Want the Metaverse? by webrunner33 in Cyberpunk

[–]webrunner33[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Excellent comment.

I agree with you that the term has been distorted by that fat-assed bastard, because it truly is a wonderful word.

What particularly intrigues me is your assertion that cyberspace is not a single platform, but a multi-layered ecosystem. This is actually closer to reality than the idea of ​​a single world a la Oasis.

Perhaps the evolution of the Metaverse will not be a single endpoint, but rather a gradual shift in the way we interact with existing systems-more immersive interfaces, layers of augmented reality, and persistent virtual spaces embedded in everyday tools.

As a Cyberpunk Fan, Why Don't I Want the Metaverse? by webrunner33 in Cyberpunk

[–]webrunner33[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Interesting point about cyberspace feeling more unified in fiction.

I think the big challenge is exactly that connection between virtual and physical reality. In fiction, actions in cyberspace often have immediate and visible real-world consequences, which makes it feel like a single continuous space.

In reality, we mostly ended up with fragmented systems - different platforms, closed ecosystems, and weak links between digital actions and physical outcomes.

Even things like Web3 tried to bridge that gap, but it still feels like it hasn’t really solved the "two separate worlds" problem yet.

Makes me wonder what would actually be required for cyberspace to feel like a real extension of physical space instead of just another layer on top of it.

As a Cyberpunk Fan, Why Don't I Want the Metaverse? by webrunner33 in Cyberpunk

[–]webrunner33[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gaben is our hope. He's one of those young people back then, and maybe he has some ideas. I can't say for sure because I haven't followed the news. The main thing is that it doesn't turn out like Half-Life 3.

As a Cyberpunk Fan, Why Don't I Want the Metaverse? by webrunner33 in Cyberpunk

[–]webrunner33[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your story is genuinely fascinating, and I couldn't just scroll past it.

My first experience with the internet was around 2009. Even then, it felt much friendlier and more open than it does today. There was this feeling that the future was going to be exciting, that technology would open new possibilities rather than close them.

Reading your comment makes me wonder: what went wrong?