Sure!
Anafroj
I've already heard mention of Thousand Year Old Vampire, never played it, though. There are a lot of things happening in the space of solo roleplaying which are boons for writing, but you will need several lifetimes to try them all. :) I stick to the three ones I use and already know well from tabletop gaming (dnd, shadowrun and traveller), and I don't want to start system hopping, because for me the focus is the story, not the rulesets, and it would get in the way. The only exception I made to that was to start using some parts of Mythic GM Emulator, because it can be used on top of the rulesets I use and it did indeed made my story way more interesting, especially when the pace is cooling down and you're not sure what to do next.
You can think of it like that, a scrapbook that updates everyday with new things about your chosen subjects. Or you can think of it as a newspaper in which there are only news about things you like. It's quite close to a Facebook/Twitter feed where you would follow companies/projects/artists you like, with the notable difference that there is not a centralized authority (the owners of Faceook or Twitter) who can decide to change your experience (by altering what you see, removing some content, adding some ads or whatever). Oh, and also, you can't comment. :) (but the articles you're reading in your aggregator have links to their original web page, which often contain a comment section).
(sorry for the double post, the instance I'm on was throwing errors)
Gotcha, thanks for satisfying my curiosity. :) Of course, you can plug a usb drive on the Pi, but you know better what your needs are. Good luck!
Max-P already provided good options, but I have to ask what I, and probably other people, wonder : why don't you just run that scrapping program from your home server, then?
Well, the good news is that the "fediverse" is actually built on a web standard (ActivityPub), which you implement in any software you want. :) What that means is that the "the fediverse" is more comparable to "the web" than to a given social network. There are people building websites you won't agree with, same goes with fediverse software. Move on and find those that you like, or build them. The fact that it's built on web standards mean that anyone can decide to add their own software without concerting with anyone else, without asking permission from anyone else, you just build and publish. That's what made the web so strong since its beginning, and that's IMO a core advantage of ActivityPub compared to other decentralization projects.
I'm sorry, I'm not taking your word for it, that's not how it works. :) Do you have reliable sources on that?
requested info : I don't use Facebook. I've had an account I opened in 2018 due to peer pressure, and I closed it in 2018.
I'm not familiar with that story, so correct me if I'm wrong, but this looks like a classic case of shooting the messenger. Facebook is a communication tool. The fact that horrible people used it to do horrible things doesn't sound like a problem with the tool, except of course if people from Facebook were aware of it while it was happening (I doubt so, for the simple reason that they would have nothing to gain from that, and much to lose ; but again, correct me if I'm wrong). Genocides have probably been organized using phone and paper mail systems, but nobody would say "stop using phones, it's bloodstained". At least, with Facebook, there's a possibility of moderation that never existed with previous means of communication.
… but fuck Facebook anyway. :P
You're welcome. Have fun, that's the most important part of it. :)
Oh yeah, indeed, there was Mystic Quest (the european name for the first game) before. Although, it was such a different beast it's only with Wikipedia later that I discovered the two games were related.
A fan translation was actually completed in 1999 and kinda big news so you could have played it way back then if you were able to run a ROM patch
Oh really? Nice, I missed that. But well, I didn't speak English either back then, so it probably wouldn't have helped. :)
Playing devil advocate, here : you can expect the life expectancy of bigger instances to be slightly to significantly bigger, if anything because their admins feel more responsibility due to the number of users depending on them. That argument does not hold if we're comparing using a big instance vs self-hosting, though (the life-expectancy of your self hosted instance may be smaller, but if you shut it down it means you're not interested anymore in the fediverse, so no big deal - except maybe for the holes you leave behind you). And anyway, I'm not sure better life expectancy is more important than making sure the fediverse stays decentralized.