Says he’s a rescue. I’m assuming the person who sent him to fat camp isn’t the person who let him become obese.
Says he’s a rescue. I’m assuming the person who sent him to fat camp isn’t the person who let him become obese.
“The Deb of Night” radio show from Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines is consistently hilarious and a great way to relax between the more horrific parts of the game. Bonus points for one of the regular callers guessing the plot of the game by complete chance and one of the main villains calling in to threaten whoever might be listening.
Try Noir. It’s a crime thriller about a pair of assassins who stumble into a conspiracy. Never tries to be sexy even though the leads are women in their early twenties. Has a bit of that Samurai Jack energy where there often isn’t much dialogue and it’s carried by action and the musical score. Also never went past cult classic status so you’re not likely to run into creepy fans. Or any fans, really.
I first saw this on the ml equivalent community and a decent chunk of comments were pretty unhinged.
granduncle?
Great-uncle is the term you’re looking for.
So, this is likely just the randomness of gene inheritance.
If we express cosanguinuity as percentages, you and your parent are at 50%, you and your grandparent 25%, etc. You get half your DNA from each parent, after all. But what about siblings? With siblings, you get into averages. You and your full sibling each got half your DNA from your mother and half from your father, but because the selection from each is random you could share anywhere from 0% to 100%. Rather than a flat 50%, you get a bell curve that peaks at 50%.
What if your sibling has a child with someone unrelated to you? Well, you and your niece or nephew are probably at about 25%, but because siblings are on a curve and there’s a pair involved, you could be anywhere from 0% to 50%.
Similarly, first-cousins are typically about 12.5%, but 25% wouldn’t be out of the realm of possibility and you could even get 50% if, say, their fathers are identical twins. If you and your cousin are simply on the upper end of the cosanguinuity bell curve, I could easily see one of those systems getting confused and thinking you’re half-siblings, who would have a curve from 0% to 50% and peaking at 25%.
In short, testing just two random relatives doesn’t actually tell you a lot unless you’re testing a (supposed) ancestor and descendant. You would need to also get your parents and your cousin’s parents tested to get anything definitive, and testing your grandparents too wouldn’t be a bad idea for accuracy.
I primarily remember Lichtenstein because of A Knight’s Tale.
I did 30 instead of 3 and forgot about it once. Granted, I was about eight or nine at the time…
He’s clearly a divine soul sorcerer who went to zero HP one session, then remembered he had Unearthly Recovery the next session but had already rolled a new character.
They’re cool, but the runabout is where it’s at. It’s basically a warp-capable RV. And the Danube-class has a torpedo launcher to clear up trafic jams.
Druid-barb combo? Rage while wildshaped?
For some, sure. Pathfinder 2e doesn’t allow full multiclassing, though, which some characters would probably benefit from in terms of adaptational accuracy.
The Sorcerer Supreme is, ironically, a wizard.
Might have wondered if it was something that was going to melt.
I was with you until that last part.
Should have practiced kynodesme, like the ancient Olympic athletes.
Other things that have been broken by one update and fixed by new drivers were shadows in Oblivion not rendering and Arkham Asylum crashing at a specific moment if physx was anabled.
I’ve got a box with several levers and wheels that runs on fire.
This reminds me of the magic / more magic switch.
And controllers. Nobody gets rid of a controller unless it’s dying.