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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: August 11th, 2023

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  • British English has a lot more variance than Yankspeak.

    We’re more likely to use “help V+ing” than “help INF”. An average larger vocabulary, atop different usages. Even with US dominated media eroding our dialects faster than ever there’s still a lot of difference out there.

    I will need a more specific question to give more response. Are you a non-native English speaker living in the UK?


  • We acknowledge that the game is a work of fiction. Historical fiction, but fiction none-the-less.

    If every fifth character is also black, I think there is a point that can be made about verisimilitude and taking liberties; but since we know he really existed and that there has been debate on what he did, having a work of fiction that portrays him as a samurai under Nobunga doesn’t seem unreasonable.

    To compare, we know that Leonardo Di Vinci didn’t hand out guns to people or build functional flying machines - but we know he designed all sorts of stuff ahead of its time, so it kinda fits in a fictional story with him in.

    But only one of those seems to draw huge amounts of complaints online… And it’s actually the less historically accurate one.









  • There is a baseline of quality that is hard for a plucky individual to match outside of mono-medium media.

    While it is possible for good video games to be produced by a single indivudal or very small team, it is a lot of work on their part and hard to do if worried about paying for food, rent, etc.

    Filmic media (is there a good noun that joins movies and fiction TV shows as a unified object?), a solid level of difficulty above that.


  • Semjaza@lemmynsfw.comtoGames@lemmy.worldNostalgia and remake culture
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    17 days ago

    Or maybe in a post-modern world we use (mostly empty) signifiers to give ourselves meaning and show allegiance to a subculture.

    Its why we pepper our speech with allusions and cultural in-jokes - but where in the past they were tied to more concrete ideology, now they are simply signs that one has consumed the same media as someone. And the existing signifiers have more cultural clout than new ones, except to signify an interest in non-mainstream cultural products.
    For the self has become simply a vessel for consumption. There is nothing beyond the consumption of product.
    Especially as public allegiance to a non-neoliberal ideology is seen as uncivil. Unsurprisingly more peaceful Left-wing ideologies less civil and more incorrect that violent far Right ones, because the Left will always be more critical of consumption as the purpose of life.

    Despite being wrong, Fukuyama’s inflammatory title has polluted the mind of the Anglophone and European cultural zone.



  • Danger Mouse - I think the consistent 4th wall breaking, kidnapping narrators, and sense of humour as a whole had an effect on my from a formative age.

    Monkey Dust - the cartoon that made it clear to me that cartoons weren’t not at all nesseccarily safe for kids. I was too young to appreciate it at the time, it was too disturbing for tween me.

    Sealab 2021 and Excel Saga both crazy animations that I found easier to digest about that time, too.

    Watership Down, other folks have already mentioned.




  • Webadict’s statement:

    you have to admit that the bottom line is the chief concern here, and not the safety of the workers of consumers.

    Clinicallydepressedpoochie’s response:

    We are far beyond seamstresses burning up in a building with no escape route. The cost of an incident has tangible costs. How will production continue if your sugar mills keep blowing up? Who will make your product if your workers keep breaking their backs? How will tribal knowledge of your process be preserved if your workers keep dying from inhaling toxic fumes? How will you meet deadlines if you’re equipment keeps igniting?

    As an aside: what profit do workers make when they’re employees? They didn’t invest in the business. They are selling their time/energy (or labour) to the company at a certain rate. You’d have to compare that rate to the value of any other potential salary, as well as minus health and stress costs, plus take into account the value of non-economic activity that could also use those resources.


  • I agree, but add the proviso that since under capitalism capital is power, those with the most capital will slowly find ways to use their capital to deregulate their income streams again.

    Supporting friendly politicians, editorial control of the media, or even just the good old Starbucks/Wallmart practice of squashing independent competitors by leveraging economies of scale to outcompete on price - which at the end of the day, the poor customer has to pay attention to. These are all examples of how capital will find ways to get ahead.

    Even if companies can’t donate, the CEO or every member of the board still can.


  • That’s the thing, merit can be defined however we want be any value system.

    One could define it as any of the things you said. I can define it as bringing happiness or health as easily as boosting profit, and if I wanted to facetiously make a point I could define it as strength or even “being closely related to previous leaders”.

    What is deemed as merit is itself a statement of what has highest value under that system.

    Under Capitalism the merit that’s rewarded, in my eyes, is the ability to make money.

    I personally, would rather a system that places ability to support peace and raise quality of life as the merit that is rewarded.