https://ttrpg.network/post/8028793
Link to one of the last ones on Lemmy.
https://ttrpg.network/post/8028793
Link to one of the last ones on Lemmy.
People were in an uproar over “indoctrination” by the game. If your child can be convinced to join the army by playing that game… maybe it’s for the best.
Fair point.
Fun game. Love the writing.
I’m still hoping for combo planets.
Or just not tell us and surprise us in the middle of a MO.
Cashiers fought for WFH?
If you’re talking about other sectors, it’s been done before (off-shoring in the 2000s).
Coworker of mine was handling hardware returns for our main data center. There were two issues with this: It wasn’t his job and he never told anyone about it. Work fired him during his vacation because they saw he wasn’t completing his assignments, but never asked him for reasons.
Six months later, the company got hit with over 200k in service plan renewals for hardware we no longer used.
For Super-Earth!
Interesting strawman you have there.
My point is simply that privacy is not easy to come by in a prison and steps must be taken to ensure votes are truly private and prevent coercion of the prisoners.
There would have to be a ton of work involved to prevent the prisons (being private entities) from attempting to control\influence the votes.
Congratulations on your promotion!
Oh, I thought you got promoted to my command chain.
I have gastroparesis, which means that I’ve been leaning on these pretty heavily of late. I don’t yet have a favorite, really, but the premade Soylent is rather filling. My biggest issue with all of them has be the sugar content.
Olaf Scholz
One way I’ve done swarms in the past is treating the swarm as an amorphous blob of things. At the end of the round, anyone in a space covered by the swarm takes a certain amount of damage.
Alternatively, if they’re more annoying than dangerous, anyone that takes an action in a swarm space rolls with disadvantage.
A Toyota embedded, like a javelin, 6 feet off the ground in the side of an abandoned building.
They made the first 90° turn of a dog-leg, but missed the second and, with the help of a ditch, launched into the air at the building.