@sc what's better is there is no indication that they intend to badger you with shareware popups in the readme; you don't know it's not free until a few days after using it
@firescotch bets on E3 getting canned this year too?
@karma good luck!
@triumph_forks this is literally an adult swim video
burnout brain: but you can totally build a quake-like engine from scratch in 1 week
no! nope
re: madoka rebellion second watch thoughts
The more I think about it, the more I feel that Rebellion is not the followup that I expect it to be. But maybe that's for good reason.
Rebellion is a rumination on itself. Rebellion is self-absorbed in the same way people criticize the entire postmodernist philosophical movement for. Rebellion rejects itself and ultimately becomes a farce which obviates the entire franchise.
Maybe that is the point. Maybe we have to look at Rebellion in its broader cultural context to really understand it.
madoka rebellion second watch thoughts
The first time I watched Rebellion, when it had its limited theatrical run in the US, I really enjoyed the movie but I thought it was kind of counterproductive to the themes of the anime.
Having finished it again just now with a fresh analysis and renewed love for the original anime series, I have even more complicated feelings about it.
I appreciate its observations on the curse of knowledge that was touched upon in the anime. Knowledge is isolating. Homura's Isolation Chamber is a literal manifestation of that. There's imagery of the forbidden fruit.
But I can't help that its narrative feels like it meanders between several different ideas, unsure of what overarching statement it wants to make, and ultimately ends up in a scenario where it is forced to negate the meaning of the anime's ending. It's as if the very hope the anime conveyed succumbed to nihilism. It seems ill placed as a conclusion to the main story.
There's a lot to be said about Homura's selfishness in bringing about a world where hope again doesn't exist, and instead we simply forget the horrible reality of the world they lived in. Homura takes the burden of hope away and instead shoulders the responsibility of despair on the Incubators. It's basically a revenge fantasy. I think in isolation the narrative of the movie does come together. But it ultimately doesn't quite feel right in context.
When I first watched Rebellion, I accepted that I would take the anime's ending as the true ending, but enjoy Rebellion's narrative by itself. Even having matured as a person since then, and coming to appreciate the anime all the more, I think this second watch has reinforced my thoughts on Rebellion. Which comes as a bit of a bittersweet disappointment.
us ppl (Dem primaries, MSM)
Holy shit, what the fuck is going on with neoliberal pundits. Chris Matthews calling Bernie (Jewish with a family killed during the Holocaust) a Nazi, Joy Reid suggesting the Democrats will have to do something to subvert Bernie's meteoric rise, Chuck Todd calling supporters Brownshirts,
They are shitting themselves live on TV harder than they ever have about Trump. The charade is up.
has poor taste in video games
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