They've got a lot of old manuals scanned in, so I use it to reference those a lot.
LMagicalus
Hotel breakfast was my first experience eating a bagel outside of New Jersey or New York. It scarred me deeply.
Oh, then you're about to unlock phase 1, right? I'd say that's pretty much the biggest wall in the game. There are others, but the path to unlocking phase 1 is generally the biggest slog.
How far in are you? If you haven't started unlocking the MAM tree, I'd start there.
"You are now using a piece of shit like a bar of soap while humming a tune." "Dave swings his hammer at you, misses, and hits himself in the face, dying instantly."
Factorio is a total slog to me. Which is funny, because my favorite game of all time is Satisfactory.
As another member of gen z, I concur. Clearly our generation lacks tongues
That's definitely true, but I think the problem ends up being that when you're in the hole of depression, that kind of interpretation is against your current thought pattern. People say the latter as shorthand for the former, but when depressed that shorthand breaks down because the stupid fucking depression gets in the way and just says "yeah, but you can't cheer up no matter what, because you're depressed."
It's ridiculous cyclical logic, but it seems perfectly fine unless directly contradicting by someone else being very blunt (like with the more detailed example you gave)
If I played Stardew I'd be all over this. Alas, I am not a farmer.
What Remains of Edith Finch was the first game to make me cry. I think I played it when I was around 12, and it just kinda broke me for a few days, particularly Walter's story. Just an entire game of people trying and failing to escape their fate. The narration is pitch perfect. Edith sounds so real, and so tired.
I fell off LTT once I fell into his massive pile of rich people problems videos. Like, there was one where he was complaining because his WiFi didn't reach to the gate of his mansion.
Who needs everyone? You only need 5. The other 4 can do whatever they want.