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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 18th, 2023

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  • If you’re interested in playing corporation-based, slightly occult, TTRPG, there is Corp Borg that fits the bill.

    https://heltung-storytelling.itch.io/corp-borg

    Corp Borg is an award-nominated (NDU, The Indie Groundbreakers), rules-light, office-crawl OSR tabletop RPG. While inspired heavily by MÖRK BORG aesthetics and gameplay, it’s a standalone game - all you need to play is this book.

    The world of Corp Borg is bleak, bloody, and brutal, exactly like corporations are. They rule the world of Corp Borg, as they do in real life, but are a bit more obvious about summoning demons, making blood sacrifices, and performing occult rituals.



  • MikinaOPtoGames@lemmy.worldFactorio is 50% off on Steam currently
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    9 days ago

    I have no problem admitting that, it is indeed a repost from Reddit. But it’s also the only April fools that I found genuinly funny, and since I didn’t see it here I wanted to spread the joy :D

    I thought about creditting it, but that’d kind of ruin the joke, plus I don’t really care about creditting Reddit anyway.




  • MikinatoMemes@sopuli.xyzQuiver, ladies, quiver
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    10 days ago

    In case anyone is interrested in this, I highly recommend the book Mind Illuminated.

    It’s what sold me on the whole meditation idea even through I was mostly sceptical, by clearly explaining it, and givng reasonable arguments about why it works. It also has a pretty good guide in general, with clear steps to follow and pay attention to.

    I’ve been told by a lot of people that meditation is good and you should do it, with vague reasons why, and this book explained it to me clearly enough to finally get me to give it a try.


  • For me, the best proof that magic does indeed work in a sense, is the Pulitzer prize photo of the burning monk from Tibet, and in general the self-immolating budhists.

    It’s a proof that once you get your subconsious under reins, you can affect your life to an extreme degree. Budhists learn to do it through sheer training and willpower, western magic does it through rituals, belief and symbols, but I think the goal (and the mechanism that makes it work) is the same.

    Of course, it means that it’s limited just to things you can reasonably affect, so no i.e cursing people.

    But, if a ritual nudges your subconscious to i.e. make you study more instead of procrastrinating and you thus pass the test, it did work after all. It’s just not as flashy as people expect.

    This is my theory about how it works, and at least for me it makes sense. Plus, it’s fun!




  • I’m guessing you want fantasy/history, but since you didn’t specify it, if cyberpunk is something ypu’re interrested in, I highly recommend https://store.steampowered.com/app/2001070/Heart_of_the_Machine/.

    It’s a unique game. Not exactly 4x, but kind of choose your own adventure / rpg / 4x game, where you play a newly awekened sentient android/AI in a dystopic city, that is left alone by corporation because they want to see what you do.

    There’s extremely branching story that works across timelines/playthrough, you have a lot of options from “fuck humans uplift animals” through “i’m your god”, " I house the homeles", to “this is my city now” or “VR torment nexus”, with numerous civilization destrpying dooms you’re trying to solve along the way.

    It’s pretty cool, and I don’t think I’ve seen anything like it.

    While it doesn’t have dynasties or span ages, it does work with time travel where you affect your new/other timelines, which are new playthroughs.

    So, it’s probably not the fantasy kingdom management sim you’re looking for, but just in case you don’t mind cyberpunk and a smaller scale, I highly recommend this. It’s my top 4x hybrid I’ve played so far.



  • My experience is that it can work reasonabky well, but you have to waste absurd amount of tokens and have the 1m token context window.

    I only do gamedev, which means a little bit more simple scriots, but it could handle even more involved systems.

    If i force it to first document and explain the wholw architecture and data flow.

    Did it help? Yes, but it still did take only a slightly faster. I could do it in a day more, probably.

    It also cost like 50$ in tokens, in today’s prices - where every AI company is loosing trillions of money, so the costs will get a lot worse. And if I tried to conserve tokens, it’s shit. You have to feed it 10$ of data to be useful.

    Add to that the fact that it also causes skill attrition, so once the expensive-cost future arrives, you probsbly won’t be able to afford it, and good luck getting your skills back after that.

    Our company wants us to use it, and the average token consumption is like 100$ per day in consumer prices. How is that even considered for such a minor gain?

    So, I’ll pass.




  • You can do a task pretty well if you nudge the AI, have it write an exact explanation about every part of the architecture, code and data flow it’s working with and throw relevant files into context, and correct anything that’s wrong before you send it to do the task. You still have to review, but I didn’t have to correct much in my experience.

    But that burns like 20$ of tokens per task, at current prices that are way below the costs AI companies are paying.

    While it does help me, especially with parts of the codebase I’m not familliar with, it’s not sustainable, and it’s actively and very quickly robbing me of my skills and knowledge. It’s really a bad idea to use it, in two years time you’ll be royally fucked once they raise prices to recover the trillions they are loosing right now.

    So, however tempting, I simply don’t use it. I won’t throw away years of college and experience just to do a task a little bit faster today.