Dune.
Jeeve65
That is what 'automation' often is. You take a working process, then let machines do as many steps in that process as you can. Harvesting crops, sending memos, robots spraypainting car parts, self driving cars (We still have a lot to do there)
Building on that it gets even more interesting as we try to find better, or even completely new processes.
I was part of a gaming club in Europe from 1983. I learned to play D&D basically just like Dragonlance depicted when it was published in 1984. So, for us, it was more of a reinforcement than a revolution.
How was this handled in the age of typewriters?
How on earth did English typography get so weird with mdash, ndash, dash, hyphen, etcetera while most of the readers have no clue about the the differences. IMHO, just use dash.
Can you explain me how the different lengths of dash add to the understanding of the text, when I usually don't even see the difference on my mobile phone screen?
The description of room K3 gives some clues; it describes the different bridges as "the 50-foot-high bridge" and "the 30-foot-high bridge".
No, the spell is only cast once, for all partners at the same time. "A creature can benefit from this rite again only if widowed".
persons. The spell allows polygamy. Also, no gender restrictions. You can marry all of your party into one big family, RAW. You may need to check the local laws, though.
By the way, the spell does not allow for divorce - it's strictly "till death do us part".
Not sure if it can be done for all plants, but it can certainly work for some. It's called Grafting.
Die letzte wochen spielen wir Dorf Romantik. Ziemlich casual (4 denke ich)
Als nicht-Deutscher schauen wir, als wir in Deutschland sind, immer nach Deutsche Spiele - auch diesmal sind wir nicht entauscht.
There's at least one Kidney Lake
No. Read this.