I guess this is the thread for it as I went camping via bicycle but didn't take any photos of the bike itself. A single nighter though looking at my loadout you'd have thought I was going on a months long expedition!
One of my friends is cycling to Hamburg this weekend and it's made me deeply nostalgic for the smooth, gentle roads of the north German countryside.
Also I need to get my shit together and do some long rides while we still have evening light.
The pvp stuff is what has me interested - especially 50% loot drop. Open world pvp generally won't take off without some kind of conflict driver.
The comparison I haven't seen made yet is to EVE, and the possibility for fights over valuable resources/nodes leading to metagamey stuff.
As far as loot drop, unless a player is corrupted they only drop unprocessed crafting mats so it isn't really a big deal unless someone is killed while gathering crafting mats though that might just be an alpha 1 thing since the wiki mentions dropping processed goods. Though I honestly don't know if this is gonna stay or not since the possibility of griefing is so high and the amount of players who like this kind of thing isn't very large. In "instanced" PvP like sieges, guild wars, and caravans the penalty for dying is disabled at least which is nice though I am curious if corrupt players will still have the negative PvP stats in those situations.
I do think it is worse that exp debt and stat reduction still happens when dying in open world PvP though.
I'm really fascinated to see how things play out with sieges though. A node declaring war on another and one of them potentially being destroyed is pretty wild.
Quetzi on
PSN: Reaper_Stragint, Steam: DoublePitstoChesty
What is the point of being alive if you don't at least try to do something remarkable? ~ Mario Novak
I never fear death or dyin', I only fear never trying.
0
Lost Salientblink twiceif you'd like me to mercy kill youRegistered Userregular
What's in the handlebar bag? That setup looks pretty tidy if it includes tent, sleeping bag, mattress, but maybe they're pretty light versions?
I'm still struggling to fit everything in my two panniers, something strapped to the rack above them, plus small handlebar bag, because I don't want to drop bank on a bunch of new gear.
Right now? NOTHING. Haha. The Fab's Chest is designed to expand to basically double that size and right now it's basically empty because my best friend who I'm going with owns the majority of the camping-specific gear (the cooking kit, bear spray, tent lantern, water purification kit, two blankets and tarp, probably a bunch of other shit? I am not a camper by nature, he is). We're planning to sleep in hammocks rather than tents on the ground. My hammock and straps, mozzie net and camp pillow are packed in one of the panniers. The only things I tucked into the handlebar bag in that photo are my magsafe wallet, um, an umbrella (won't be bringing that), a hand sani bottle, chapstick and a paperback?
The panniers also have plenty of additional space in them right now to add food items and divvy up the camp shit between us.
Handlebar bag photos:
Quetzi on
"Sandra has a good solid anti-murderer vibe. My skin felt very secure and sufficiently attached to my body when I met her. Also my organs." HAIL SATAN
What does that mean for a node if it gets destroyed during a war. Does the node progress reset to 0?
Yea, node goes to zero, all upgrades and player housing is gone and it could potentially be turned into a vassal node and not be able to get back to where it was previously.
Quetzi on
PSN: Reaper_Stragint, Steam: DoublePitstoChesty
What is the point of being alive if you don't at least try to do something remarkable? ~ Mario Novak
I never fear death or dyin', I only fear never trying.
That actually sounds pretty good. Will give a lot more significance to battles. Hopefully they will find some way to counter balance it though, so that one faction or one guild or however it’s divided up doesn’t ruin a server if they get too strong.
Quetzi on
+1
StragintDo Not GiftAlways DeclinesRegistered Userregular
That actually sounds pretty good. Will give a lot more significance to battles. Hopefully they will find some way to counter balance it though, so that one faction or one guild or however it’s divided up doesn’t ruin a server if they get too strong.
Yea, it will be interesting to see how things play out and how servers develop. Since there are no inherent factions in the game the factions will basically be made by the players and I'd assume probably represented by a guild/guild alliance that decided to either take residence in the primary node for that area or control one of the few castle nodes near the primary nodes zone of influence.
It is kind of going to suck that the mayor of a node will more than likely always be from the largest guild of that node.
There are a lot of extremely interesting implications with how this game can go but I feel like a lot of it runs on good faith and expecting people not to be scummy which makes me nervous.
Quetzi on
PSN: Reaper_Stragint, Steam: DoublePitstoChesty
What is the point of being alive if you don't at least try to do something remarkable? ~ Mario Novak
I never fear death or dyin', I only fear never trying.
0
AthenorBattle Hardened OptimistThe Skies of HiigaraRegistered Userregular
edited April 19
Head's up! Best Buy just got in the Loftwing again! WOOOO !
... and of course I forgot to check my shipping address and it's going to the wrong place, but I can fix that. Hopefully.
Edit: Or maybe not? I can't select to order another one.
Quetzi on
He/Him | "We who believe in freedom cannot rest." - Dr. Johnetta Cole, 7/22/2024
I managed to get one in my cart at best buy a couple times yesterday, but it just kept telling me it wasn't available for delivery and none were within 250 miles of me. :rotate:
I'm not sure what in their system was allowing people to add to their carts when they couldn't actually buy them, but it is what it is.
I'll just keep on hoping Nintendo will restock it in a meaningful way once or twice in the future, and I'll grab it eventually. Even playasia has jacked up the price to the absurd scalper resell price, for the import version, when they've in the past just had a minor premium on the imports. Bleh. EDIT: Looks like they've got other import amiibo's pretty jacked up too. Maybe the time of them having reasonable prices is gone?
I usually buy amiibos from Amazon Japan. I recommend jumping through the hoops of creating an account if you want to buy amiibos without stressing out over short preorder windows and low supply. For example I completely forgot about the Monster Hunter Stories 2 amiibos so I ordered them from Amazon Japan and had them in my hand seven days later.
Building your own PC used to be really difficult. You had to worry about DIP switches and IRQs and all manner of godawfulness, but luckily these days it has gotten significantly simpler, and as a huge bonus a builder now has access to countless forums (like this one), innumerable websites, and practically infinite hours of Youtube video tutorials to help get them through the process (as well as help troubleshoot* if anything goes wrong).
Plus there is nothing better than looking at a PC you built with your own two hands and thinking to yourself "That is my PC, that I built with my own two hands".
*by "troubleshoot", I mean "make you feel like a complete doofus when you finally have everything together, and you press the power button for the first time, and absolutely nothing happens, and you start to panic before realizing that you forgot to plug the CPU power cable in".
So, small status update on the 2004 era Gigabyte board I'm going to recap.
When I first received it in the frozen weather of December 2019, it was totally and completely dead. Didn't respond even slightly to a power on signal. I decided to get it all hooked up again to get a baseline of it's functionality, and it actually posted! This was enormously surprising as many of the caps are straight up leaking. I suppose something about the freezing temperatures it was shipped in may have temporarily effected it?
Also, the low profile chipset fan had at some point died, and been replaced with a huge, tall, bulky one that completely blocked the AGP slot. So that whole assembly was going to have to go and be replaced.
Except it was glued on. No wonder the guy just removed the old integrated fan and slapped on something else that I guess kinda worked. I don't want to just yank it off and risk taking the chip with it. So I try the dental floss trick. No luck. I try a hot air gun warming it all up until it's almost too hot to handle. No luck.
It's at this point I did something stupid. I stuck a flathead screwdriver between the PCB and the heatsink and "gently" pried it off.
So the good news. The chip did not come off with the heatsink. The bad news, I severed several of the traces going into the chipset. It can no longer detect graphics cards.
In my defense, I was 3 fingers into a glass of whisky after a long day of potty training.
Now I get to experiment with repairing motherboard traces too. This was allocated as a practice repair board. I only discovered yesterday it could even POST. So in the span of 24 hours it went from "Broken" to "Working" and back to "Broken" again. I feel a little guilty, even though I was already planning on sacrificing it at the altar of practice. Oh well!
Still going to recap it this weekend, and then maybe next month order some of the other supplies I need to make an earnest attempt at trace repair.
Building your own PC used to be really difficult. You had to worry about DIP switches and IRQs and all manner of godawfulness, but luckily these days it has gotten significantly simpler, and as a huge bonus a builder now has access to countless forums (like this one), innumerable websites, and practically infinite hours of Youtube video tutorials to help get them through the process (as well as help troubleshoot* if anything goes wrong).
Plus there is nothing better than looking at a PC you built with your own two hands and thinking to yourself "That is my PC, that I built with my own two hands".
*by "troubleshoot", I mean "make you feel like a complete doofus when you finally have everything together, and you press the power button for the first time, and absolutely nothing happens, and you start to panic before realizing that you forgot to plug the CPU power cable in".
Ah, that good old "feel your blood run cold" moment...
I just got an order to go through at Best Buy, for the Loftwing Amiibo, to have it shipped to me, didn't need to pickup at a store or anything.
Got my confirmation email and everything. I'll report back if it gets cancelled or anything. It said it won't be delivered till the 19th, so maybe it's on future stock, I don't know; but I'll take it if it works out.
Good luck to anyone who sees this soon enough to have a chance to get an order in too.
So, small status update on the 2004 era Gigabyte board I'm going to recap.
When I first received it in the frozen weather of December 2019, it was totally and completely dead. Didn't respond even slightly to a power on signal. I decided to get it all hooked up again to get a baseline of it's functionality, and it actually posted! This was enormously surprising as many of the caps are straight up leaking. I suppose something about the freezing temperatures it was shipped in may have temporarily effected it?
Also, the low profile chipset fan had at some point died, and been replaced with a huge, tall, bulky one that completely blocked the AGP slot. So that whole assembly was going to have to go and be replaced.
Except it was glued on. No wonder the guy just removed the old integrated fan and slapped on something else that I guess kinda worked. I don't want to just yank it off and risk taking the chip with it. So I try the dental floss trick. No luck. I try a hot air gun warming it all up until it's almost too hot to handle. No luck.
It's at this point I did something stupid. I stuck a flathead screwdriver between the PCB and the heatsink and "gently" pried it off.
So the good news. The chip did not come off with the heatsink. The bad news, I severed several of the traces going into the chipset. It can no longer detect graphics cards.
In my defense, I was 3 fingers into a glass of whisky after a long day of potty training.
Now I get to experiment with repairing motherboard traces too. This was allocated as a practice repair board. I only discovered yesterday it could even POST. So in the span of 24 hours it went from "Broken" to "Working" and back to "Broken" again. I feel a little guilty, even though I was already planning on sacrificing it at the altar of practice. Oh well!
Still going to recap it this weekend, and then maybe next month order some of the other supplies I need to make an earnest attempt at trace repair.
Honestly you may be able to reflow the traces; depending how badly you damaged it. You may not need to add any wire "jumpers".
And in the interest of practice, you could try to get a new Southbridge chip from *somewhere* and do a full chip swap(?)
So, small status update on the 2004 era Gigabyte board I'm going to recap.
When I first received it in the frozen weather of December 2019, it was totally and completely dead. Didn't respond even slightly to a power on signal. I decided to get it all hooked up again to get a baseline of it's functionality, and it actually posted! This was enormously surprising as many of the caps are straight up leaking. I suppose something about the freezing temperatures it was shipped in may have temporarily effected it?
Also, the low profile chipset fan had at some point died, and been replaced with a huge, tall, bulky one that completely blocked the AGP slot. So that whole assembly was going to have to go and be replaced.
Except it was glued on. No wonder the guy just removed the old integrated fan and slapped on something else that I guess kinda worked. I don't want to just yank it off and risk taking the chip with it. So I try the dental floss trick. No luck. I try a hot air gun warming it all up until it's almost too hot to handle. No luck.
It's at this point I did something stupid. I stuck a flathead screwdriver between the PCB and the heatsink and "gently" pried it off.
So the good news. The chip did not come off with the heatsink. The bad news, I severed several of the traces going into the chipset. It can no longer detect graphics cards.
In my defense, I was 3 fingers into a glass of whisky after a long day of potty training.
Now I get to experiment with repairing motherboard traces too. This was allocated as a practice repair board. I only discovered yesterday it could even POST. So in the span of 24 hours it went from "Broken" to "Working" and back to "Broken" again. I feel a little guilty, even though I was already planning on sacrificing it at the altar of practice. Oh well!
Still going to recap it this weekend, and then maybe next month order some of the other supplies I need to make an earnest attempt at trace repair.
Honestly you may be able to reflow the traces; depending how badly you damaged it. You may not need to add any wire "jumpers".
And in the interest of practice, you could try to get a new Southbridge chip from *somewhere* and do a full chip swap(?)
Unfortunately it's a pretty gnarly gouge, at least under magnification. Looked purely cosmetic to my eyes, but when I zoomed in, it was clearly more severe. I couldn't even see there were traces there when I pried it off, but I should have known. But now that the heatsink is off and I can see it more clearly, there is a section of about 5 or 6 traces having a small divot taken out of them.
So, small status update on the 2004 era Gigabyte board I'm going to recap.
When I first received it in the frozen weather of December 2019, it was totally and completely dead. Didn't respond even slightly to a power on signal. I decided to get it all hooked up again to get a baseline of it's functionality, and it actually posted! This was enormously surprising as many of the caps are straight up leaking. I suppose something about the freezing temperatures it was shipped in may have temporarily effected it?
Also, the low profile chipset fan had at some point died, and been replaced with a huge, tall, bulky one that completely blocked the AGP slot. So that whole assembly was going to have to go and be replaced.
Except it was glued on. No wonder the guy just removed the old integrated fan and slapped on something else that I guess kinda worked. I don't want to just yank it off and risk taking the chip with it. So I try the dental floss trick. No luck. I try a hot air gun warming it all up until it's almost too hot to handle. No luck.
It's at this point I did something stupid. I stuck a flathead screwdriver between the PCB and the heatsink and "gently" pried it off.
So the good news. The chip did not come off with the heatsink. The bad news, I severed several of the traces going into the chipset. It can no longer detect graphics cards.
In my defense, I was 3 fingers into a glass of whisky after a long day of potty training.
Now I get to experiment with repairing motherboard traces too. This was allocated as a practice repair board. I only discovered yesterday it could even POST. So in the span of 24 hours it went from "Broken" to "Working" and back to "Broken" again. I feel a little guilty, even though I was already planning on sacrificing it at the altar of practice. Oh well!
Still going to recap it this weekend, and then maybe next month order some of the other supplies I need to make an earnest attempt at trace repair.
Honestly you may be able to reflow the traces; depending how badly you damaged it. You may not need to add any wire "jumpers".
And in the interest of practice, you could try to get a new Southbridge chip from *somewhere* and do a full chip swap(?)
So, small status update on the 2004 era Gigabyte board I'm going to recap.
When I first received it in the frozen weather of December 2019, it was totally and completely dead. Didn't respond even slightly to a power on signal. I decided to get it all hooked up again to get a baseline of it's functionality, and it actually posted! This was enormously surprising as many of the caps are straight up leaking. I suppose something about the freezing temperatures it was shipped in may have temporarily effected it?
Also, the low profile chipset fan had at some point died, and been replaced with a huge, tall, bulky one that completely blocked the AGP slot. So that whole assembly was going to have to go and be replaced.
Except it was glued on. No wonder the guy just removed the old integrated fan and slapped on something else that I guess kinda worked. I don't want to just yank it off and risk taking the chip with it. So I try the dental floss trick. No luck. I try a hot air gun warming it all up until it's almost too hot to handle. No luck.
It's at this point I did something stupid. I stuck a flathead screwdriver between the PCB and the heatsink and "gently" pried it off.
So the good news. The chip did not come off with the heatsink. The bad news, I severed several of the traces going into the chipset. It can no longer detect graphics cards.
In my defense, I was 3 fingers into a glass of whisky after a long day of potty training.
Now I get to experiment with repairing motherboard traces too. This was allocated as a practice repair board. I only discovered yesterday it could even POST. So in the span of 24 hours it went from "Broken" to "Working" and back to "Broken" again. I feel a little guilty, even though I was already planning on sacrificing it at the altar of practice. Oh well!
Still going to recap it this weekend, and then maybe next month order some of the other supplies I need to make an earnest attempt at trace repair.
Honestly you may be able to reflow the traces; depending how badly you damaged it. You may not need to add any wire "jumpers".
And in the interest of practice, you could try to get a new Southbridge chip from *somewhere* and do a full chip swap(?)
I don't think you can reflow traces?
I'm curious how people reflow them since I only know of wire jumpers.
In a little less than two weeks I'll be doing a three-day two-night bikepacking trip with my bff at Chequamegon-Nicolet and then a couple of weeks later an overnighter in Croatan
For what it's worth regarding the Gigabyte 850w PSU I have. It's in my son's computer with a my old 2080 Super which is being CPU bottlenecked by a Ryzen 3 1200. I'm not particular concerned enough to replace the PSU as its probably pulling 450w or less in that system. Will consider replacing later if we upgrade it again.
*by "troubleshoot", I mean "make you feel like a complete doofus when you finally have everything together, and you press the power button for the first time, and absolutely nothing happens, and you start to panic before realizing that you forgot to plug the CPU power cable in".
For me, it's forgetting that the PSU has a power switch.
GnomeTankWhat the what?Portland, OregonRegistered Userregular
edited April 19
Yeah, exploding PSU's is not a risk I would take. That could be a nasty electrical fire very quickly. Best case is just fried components. If you have the money replace that PSU.
So this is probably an exceptionally optimistic question, but what's the general vibe on when GPUs are going to return to the land of sanity? Supply seems to have increased a bit in the UK but they're still being advertised for double (or more) than RRP, which remains in no-go territory for me.
So this is probably an exceptionally optimistic question, but what's the general vibe on when GPUs are going to return to the land of sanity? Supply seems to have increased a bit in the UK but they're still being advertised for double (or more) than RRP, which remains in no-go territory for me.
*by "troubleshoot", I mean "make you feel like a complete doofus when you finally have everything together, and you press the power button for the first time, and absolutely nothing happens, and you start to panic before realizing that you forgot to plug the CPU power cable in".
For me, it's forgetting that the PSU has a power switch.
Every time. Every fucking time.
I consider that one a mulligan and still get to claim a clean first boot to Windows.
Posts
The comparison I haven't seen made yet is to EVE, and the possibility for fights over valuable resources/nodes leading to metagamey stuff.
Also I need to get my shit together and do some long rides while we still have evening light.
As far as loot drop, unless a player is corrupted they only drop unprocessed crafting mats so it isn't really a big deal unless someone is killed while gathering crafting mats though that might just be an alpha 1 thing since the wiki mentions dropping processed goods. Though I honestly don't know if this is gonna stay or not since the possibility of griefing is so high and the amount of players who like this kind of thing isn't very large. In "instanced" PvP like sieges, guild wars, and caravans the penalty for dying is disabled at least which is nice though I am curious if corrupt players will still have the negative PvP stats in those situations.
I do think it is worse that exp debt and stat reduction still happens when dying in open world PvP though.
I'm really fascinated to see how things play out with sieges though. A node declaring war on another and one of them potentially being destroyed is pretty wild.
What is the point of being alive if you don't at least try to do something remarkable? ~ Mario Novak
I never fear death or dyin', I only fear never trying.
Right now? NOTHING. Haha. The Fab's Chest is designed to expand to basically double that size and right now it's basically empty because my best friend who I'm going with owns the majority of the camping-specific gear (the cooking kit, bear spray, tent lantern, water purification kit, two blankets and tarp, probably a bunch of other shit? I am not a camper by nature, he is). We're planning to sleep in hammocks rather than tents on the ground. My hammock and straps, mozzie net and camp pillow are packed in one of the panniers. The only things I tucked into the handlebar bag in that photo are my magsafe wallet, um, an umbrella (won't be bringing that), a hand sani bottle, chapstick and a paperback?
The panniers also have plenty of additional space in them right now to add food items and divvy up the camp shit between us.
Handlebar bag photos:
"Sandra has a good solid anti-murderer vibe. My skin felt very secure and sufficiently attached to my body when I met her. Also my organs." HAIL SATAN
Yea, node goes to zero, all upgrades and player housing is gone and it could potentially be turned into a vassal node and not be able to get back to where it was previously.
What is the point of being alive if you don't at least try to do something remarkable? ~ Mario Novak
I never fear death or dyin', I only fear never trying.
Yea, it will be interesting to see how things play out and how servers develop. Since there are no inherent factions in the game the factions will basically be made by the players and I'd assume probably represented by a guild/guild alliance that decided to either take residence in the primary node for that area or control one of the few castle nodes near the primary nodes zone of influence.
It is kind of going to suck that the mayor of a node will more than likely always be from the largest guild of that node.
There are a lot of extremely interesting implications with how this game can go but I feel like a lot of it runs on good faith and expecting people not to be scummy which makes me nervous.
What is the point of being alive if you don't at least try to do something remarkable? ~ Mario Novak
I never fear death or dyin', I only fear never trying.
... and of course I forgot to check my shipping address and it's going to the wrong place, but I can fix that. Hopefully.
Edit: Or maybe not? I can't select to order another one.
I might actually try it.
I'm not sure what in their system was allowing people to add to their carts when they couldn't actually buy them, but it is what it is.
I'll just keep on hoping Nintendo will restock it in a meaningful way once or twice in the future, and I'll grab it eventually. Even playasia has jacked up the price to the absurd scalper resell price, for the import version, when they've in the past just had a minor premium on the imports. Bleh. EDIT: Looks like they've got other import amiibo's pretty jacked up too. Maybe the time of them having reasonable prices is gone?
Origin: Galedrid - Nintendo: Galedrid/3222-6858-1045
Blizzard: Galedrid#1367 - FFXIV: Galedrid Kingshand
Plus there is nothing better than looking at a PC you built with your own two hands and thinking to yourself "That is my PC, that I built with my own two hands".
*by "troubleshoot", I mean "make you feel like a complete doofus when you finally have everything together, and you press the power button for the first time, and absolutely nothing happens, and you start to panic before realizing that you forgot to plug the CPU power cable in".
Starts in around 20 mins from now.
https://slickdeals.net/f/15212713-seasonic-focus-gm-750-power-supply-750w-80-gold-semi-modular-7-year-warranty-for-65-99-w-fs-after-code-and-mir
Sorry for the relative crap link. If you have issues with SD's site, let me know and I'll try to dig up the direct link to Newegg
When I first received it in the frozen weather of December 2019, it was totally and completely dead. Didn't respond even slightly to a power on signal. I decided to get it all hooked up again to get a baseline of it's functionality, and it actually posted! This was enormously surprising as many of the caps are straight up leaking. I suppose something about the freezing temperatures it was shipped in may have temporarily effected it?
Also, the low profile chipset fan had at some point died, and been replaced with a huge, tall, bulky one that completely blocked the AGP slot. So that whole assembly was going to have to go and be replaced.
Except it was glued on. No wonder the guy just removed the old integrated fan and slapped on something else that I guess kinda worked. I don't want to just yank it off and risk taking the chip with it. So I try the dental floss trick. No luck. I try a hot air gun warming it all up until it's almost too hot to handle. No luck.
It's at this point I did something stupid. I stuck a flathead screwdriver between the PCB and the heatsink and "gently" pried it off.
So the good news. The chip did not come off with the heatsink. The bad news, I severed several of the traces going into the chipset. It can no longer detect graphics cards.
In my defense, I was 3 fingers into a glass of whisky after a long day of potty training.
Now I get to experiment with repairing motherboard traces too. This was allocated as a practice repair board. I only discovered yesterday it could even POST. So in the span of 24 hours it went from "Broken" to "Working" and back to "Broken" again. I feel a little guilty, even though I was already planning on sacrificing it at the altar of practice. Oh well!
Still going to recap it this weekend, and then maybe next month order some of the other supplies I need to make an earnest attempt at trace repair.
Ah, that good old "feel your blood run cold" moment...
Got my confirmation email and everything. I'll report back if it gets cancelled or anything. It said it won't be delivered till the 19th, so maybe it's on future stock, I don't know; but I'll take it if it works out.
Good luck to anyone who sees this soon enough to have a chance to get an order in too.
EDIT: Direct link to it, if it helps: https://www.bestbuy.com/site/nintendo-amiibo-zelda-loftwing-the-legend-of-zelda-skyward-sword-hd/6464871.p?skuId=6464871
Origin: Galedrid - Nintendo: Galedrid/3222-6858-1045
Blizzard: Galedrid#1367 - FFXIV: Galedrid Kingshand
Honestly you may be able to reflow the traces; depending how badly you damaged it. You may not need to add any wire "jumpers".
And in the interest of practice, you could try to get a new Southbridge chip from *somewhere* and do a full chip swap(?)
Unfortunately it's a pretty gnarly gouge, at least under magnification. Looked purely cosmetic to my eyes, but when I zoomed in, it was clearly more severe. I couldn't even see there were traces there when I pried it off, but I should have known. But now that the heatsink is off and I can see it more clearly, there is a section of about 5 or 6 traces having a small divot taken out of them.
I don't think you can reflow traces?
I'm curious how people reflow them since I only know of wire jumpers.
Steam: betsuni7
How much distance are you doing day to day?
Steam: betsuni7
See, this is why I should think before I open my mouth.
Steam: betsuni7
Nintendo ID: Incindium
PSN: IncindiumX
For me, it's forgetting that the PSU has a power switch.
At the very least a year, probably several.
Every time. Every fucking time.
I consider that one a mulligan and still get to claim a clean first boot to Windows.