@timecrash

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"Where'd you learn to cook, Truck Driving School?"

Sci-fi/fantasy writer.

Pronounsthey/them
OpenPGPAEF6AA7C68DA8BC3621E1A6D4D549A9014D8A146

I love the game, but I hope Ninty doesn't think they can only do BotW sequels for the series now. I want to see them experiment and take the formula in more new directions, while also respecting what came before.

(please port Wind Waker/Twilight Princess HD to Switch already)

I don't want to write a whole thread about it, but in eschewing so much of the Zelda formula, it excels at having its own identity, while not really being what I'm looking for in a Zelda game.

It's its own thing, and that's great.

Beat Breath of the Wild, after five years 🥳🥳🥳

While I do think it's excellent, the best open world game until Elden Ring, it's aged a bit weirdly, and I question whether I think it's 'the best' Zelda game.

I admit I feel a bit out of touch with my life now. Most of this is COVID fucking up my ability to be social, but life feels lonelier now than it ever has. It's harder to engage with what's going on around me. Don't really know what to do about that.

Life has changed so much since I graduated college. I miss a lot from that time, but the debt certainly isn't part of it.

There's good (financial independence, awareness of my neurodivergency/gender identity) and bad (friends moving away, friend breakups, COVID) since then.

I just paid off my last set of student loans. Apart from some credit card debt I can clear next month, I'm debt free.

A decade ago, even five years ago, I doubted I could pay them off early. I figured I'd be paying my loans late into adulthood.

And now they're all gone.

Am I a bad person for making my friend watch the stargate scene from 2001: A Space Odyssey while she's really high

I do find many of the lines are heavier on the English edition, blotting out some detail, as Ashinano prefers thin lines and cross-hatching.

I think this is due to the different paper and printing process. A very minor nitpick which doesn't impact my appreciation of the product.

I made it a point to buy the first volume when I was in Japan, along with the first volumes of the mangaka's other works.

I'd always thought about collecting all of them someday, but now I can do that with the English editions.

I cannot put into words how wonderful it is for me that Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou is finally releasing in English.

I read it over a decade ago, but it has stayed with me more strongly than most other fiction. It's one of my favorite works of Japanese media.