I believe it's a single thing mostly, maybe not an ocean necessarily, but something that has spread through tunnels in the ground and so. I do believe it's in every kingdom, the HK hunter's notes on the shade suggest that the void might be something that's some sort of left over from all bugs.
Probably yes, void might have not always been there, or perhaps not as plentiful, and I reject hollow planet ideas so.
No, and iirc team cherry said that HK took place all in a cave, so even Dirthmouth wouldn't be part of the surface (though perhaps close, if we are to assume Silksong's surface is actually a surface and the color scheme means something).
Oh wait, I think you are talking about the surface of the void... I suppose it would mostly be since liquids do that, but that personally bothers me, I wouldn't be surprised if there are some separate "oceans" of void, but still not too far from one another that void creatures can still go from one to the other if they desire, unclear.
They are void given form, if we are to believe the game. I assume void has a "limited" ability to turn into something, but it clearly can be molded into something else, the tendril might just be its default shape when it stops being liquidy.
Hmmm I interpreted this as the king, the while lady and hornet, to an extent it might even extend to the siblings since the flower doesn't seem to repel void just by tough (the knight holds it fine) but by aggression. Pale beings seem rather selfish from one another (radiance and the pale king) so I doubt she talks about the pale beings in general, she would probably say "our kind" or something like that.
As I said I think void comes from regular bugs, Jiji mentions regrets, so perhaps it's something like their twisted, regretful soul when they die, idk, but I don't think its creation is tied to the creation of pale beings. That said, pale beings being the reason so many bugs just die from left to right may or may not increase the spread of void?
about lemons! there's a big swap in the names of lemons and limes, it's mostly language based but not entirely, lemons are green and bitter here, limes are the yellow big ones!
there is some offline VIA app out there but it's not made by the same team, then there's the option of reflashing the firmware which doesn't require internet
I'm not saying you are wrong, I'm saying the distinction might not be done everywhere, if you click the language thing on your wikipedia link and select spanish it will lead you here https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sirenas_(mitolog%C3%ADa) , if you then click to go back to english from there you'll end up in the mermaid page
A tamal is made of dough so the steaming is done so the dough isn't raw, I don't think it's comparable with a burrito which is some sort of taco made of fluor tortilla
There are some tamales that aren't made of dough though and still called tamales, it's usually meats where I live but I'm sure it's different in other areas
Easier than the third for sure, harder than the first I feel? Main issue with colosseum 2 and 3 was the groundless sections, high halls has none of that, so I'm not sure difficulty is all that comparable.
Mexican here, tamal (without e) is a class of foods, think of it like cake or pie, maybe not quite as varied, but definitely not a single thing, there are good tamales and bad tamales.
My first reaction upon seeing Sherma was that he was the Myla of this game, but unlike Myla the game built more attachment to Sherma by having him show up several times through the journey
Just wondering, how far did you get? The begining is certainly the weakest part, Silksong does a better job on improving the general lack of movement and closedness of the map early on
If you were to replace english in the current world, the best candidate, in my opinion, would be spanish.
If you look at list of the most spoken languages you end up with english, mandarin, hindi and spanish, out of those spanish does not require learning a new alphabet.
Spanish is mostly phonetic, there are exceptions here and there with how consonants are pronounced here and there, but vowels are phonetic, you can read text without wondering how something is pronounced.
English has taken so much from latin that it actually looks a bit like a romance language despite having germanic roots, but this does mean that there's a lot of overlap in vocabulary where english words and spanish words are mostly the same.
Of course is spanish isn't perfect, but creating a new language that covers everyone's usecase would just lead to lower adoption so I think it's the one that has the best shot while solving some glaring issues from english.
The article is dated Feb 10, so it was right, either way a delay is not really backing down imo.