
You don't really find those so much as make them.

Friends actually explains how Monica can afford her spectacular apartment, too. Her grandmother is the actual person on the lease and locked the rent in at $200 per month decades ago. Monica is illegally subletting the place and there's either an episode or an arc where one of them convinced the building manager to ignore it instead of reporting it to the owner.

Especially noticeable when they find a fake option that's a better fit for their wants/needs than the one they actually chose and the same price or cheaper.

There isn't even a federal sales tax to replace, just state sales taxes.

"Well, it was made from vegans."

Wandavision was really good the first time, but it honestly has no rewatch value whatsoever. Loki is great, though.

They usually have a favored appearance, though. Azura, for example, almost never manifests a masculine avatar. Boethiah shifts back and forth so much that their followers in Skyrim are depicted as switching pronouns mid sentence when referring to them.

Cyberpunk actually ties your pronouns to your voice selection. You can't have the feminine voice and be called he/him. There might be a mod for that, though.

When a khajiit calls themself 'this one' is 'this one' technically a pronoun? I'm honestly unsure about the grammar for that.

After Tamriel Rebuilt and OpenMW have their next releases, I am absolutely playing as a khajiit through Morrowind's main quest.

The Sangheli in Halo actually have two fingers and two thumbs on each hand.

Doesn't work in the remaster; they changed so that all skills contribute to level up progress.

Oblivion and Skyrim are 200 years apart, but geographically border each other. Classic Oblivion didn't render Skyrim, but that was more for technical reasons than anything else. If you get high enough up in Skyrim on a clear day you can see the entire continent.

Morrowind also had a lot of static loot, though, and humanoid enemies had static levels. Some items, most notably Daedric armor, also never appeared in Morrowind's levelled lists, so they could only be found at predetermined points. Exploring in Morrowind could get you some really neat stuff even at low levels.

So, we should summon a Lovecraftian Horror?

They would definitely watch Forged in Fire, at least.

Yes, but you have to shake the cow pretty vigorously.

I've actually seen some arguments that requiring ID for voting would be legal if it were easy to acquire and free. Of course, the politicians arguing for ID requirements also oppose any attempt to make ID free.

I like to describe classic Oblivion characters as looking like they were all carved from the same potato.

You could also watch Chappie, which is essentially the same concept but darker and more South African.

Akira Inspired Poster, Revised Again


After having printed the previous version of my poster and discovering that the overall darkness made it difficult to see when framed (light reflects off the glass or plastic and the glare kills it) I have done a bunch of post processing in the hopes that it will turn out better.