homhom9000 [she/her]

  • 0 Posts
  • 132 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: May 25th, 2022

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  • I think competitive games can teach you skills applicable real life but those skills are largely trained when competing in anything.

    Not to be dense but like what? The only one I can think is teamwork. But I don’t think the skill from gaming will transfer over for working on a project or a sport as easily. I think it’s just getting good at a game. Unless it’s like an education/learning game.

    Tone: this is not intended to come off as argumentative.


  • I like playing games but it’s not my only hobby so I go weeks in between playing sometimes (unless it’s baulders gate 3) meaning I frequently forget the game mechanics. I save hard mode till after I beat the game else I’ll never be motivated to replay if I know what’s going to happen.

    The git gud crowd believes paying hard is to hone a skill but I have a very hard time believing playing video games is gaining a skill. The only skill I get is being better at games. It’s cope, everyone should play disrespectfully. I’ve offended all kinds of gamers with how I play my games







  • These changes open up many channels to be exploited, at least from troop desertion or from the below points:

    Hegseth wrote that the Pentagon will also relax the frequency of training on Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI)

    Another memo issued Tuesday addresses reforms to the Department of Defense Office of Inspector General, which investigates cases of fraud, waste and abuse inside the agency, as well as misconduct, command issues and violations of law. The memo calls for the office to complete a “credibility assessment” of every complaint within seven days of receiving them. “At that point, the complaint must either be closed or the investigation initiated,” Hegseth wrote.

    Hegseth instructed “artificial intelligence with human oversight” to help speed up the process.