ladel

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 week ago

Baby's birthweights still seem to be mainly in pounds, but it's very difficult to know what it means given that nothing else is typically measured in pounds. Someone will say about their baby "they were 8 pounds" and you'll say, "oh, very good" and neither of you will think of pounds again.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

There's a bug on samsungs (I think) where the home screen interface freezes, and the only way to unfreeze it is to relaunch Nova. It's super annoying. This probably means it will never be fixed.

[–] [email protected] 41 points 2 weeks ago

There's Dehli Belly as well. No alliteration, but it's got the rhyme.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago

It's fun in many ways, like the puzzles and the items, but coming from "new" Zelda, it's actually really tedious to have to backtrack to old areas when you get a new item that unlocks another part. It's such a staple of old Zelda (and many other games), but now I'm sick of having to visit the same places over and over again. The joy cons also suck ass because of their inaccuracy and gyro drift, but using button input (like using pro controller) is equally terrible because it uses the right analogue for the sword.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I was reading/watching some opinion stuff about Nintendo console owners only buying first-party games (in relation to WiiU and third-party support) and I realised I'm one of those people. I only have a couple of third-party games for Switch, and they're probably among my least favourite, and going back further, like 75% of the games I had were first-party games. I don't think it's a bad thing, but I was just unaware I was one of those fans until I had a look at the games I've owned.

Anyway, I might be able to finish Skyward Sword this weekend.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Red rescue team was sold on Wii U virtual console around the same time as red/blue was on 3DS VC, so it could come to NSO later. It's also so easy to play on an emulator, though.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I had this one back in the day and it was fun for a bit, but like most pokemon spinoffs, I didn't think it was great. A good addition to the GBA library for people to try it out.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I thought Quick Share was just WiFi Direct with a Bluetooth pairing step, so it's surprising there's a noticeable difference. But if you see that difference repeatedly, it must be there.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

What do people think of playing a remake/remaster of a game you've already played the original of? Like one of the Switch Zelda remakes when you played it on GB/Wii, or Paper Mario when you played the GC version? Personally, I just don't feel like buying the game again, even it's been 20 years since I last played it, because I know I'll remember parts of it and won't have that feeling of playing a great game for the first time. Is that just a me thing, or a more widespread attitude?

I don't necessarily think remakes are a bad thing, since it gives people a chance to play classics that they missed.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

If you have the energy to jump through the hoops to get a deal, then great. I can't face it. When I feel my current deal isn't right, I just text the number, get the PAC, and disappear, and I love the freedom. I pay £6/month for 5GB and it's more than enough for me.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 month ago

It's weird how it even became a thing. At least I don't remember it being a thing for my broadband contracts until a few years ago.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

Over the past few weeks:

  • Did the final battle(s) in LoZ OoT. Not actually that easy - for the first part, I thought I was dealing damage, but it was going on literally forever. As a recurring theme for me, I had to read how I was meant to progress.
    spoilerTurns out hitting the energy balls back at him isn't enough! Got to shoot him and run and hit him. But if you'd already raided the all pots below for magic top-up and hearts, you're going to run out of magic before you can beat him...
    The final final battle seemed hard, but was easy enough once I turned off z-targeting.
  • Started playing LoZ ALttP, but I just couldn't really get into it. I loved Link's Awakening (GB version), but maybe I'm just not in the mood for 2D Zelda right now.
  • I bought Need for Speed Paradise City on sale before. It's alright for a while, but you often end up doing a race and then immediately driving the same race in reverse, so it's a bit repetitive. Also the city environment is quite industrial, which is maybe the point, but I usually miss the turns because it's mostly a grey blur. Unlocked the fastest motorbike. It's fast.
  • Bought Skyward Sword HD, mainly for my son. Too early to say much about it, but there's this move where you point your sword at the sky to charge it, and it's quite difficult to actually hold the joy con in the right position for the game to recognise it. It's kinda annoying.

Edit: also did a run through of pokemon blue (emulated, with random battles turned off) because it's so quick. It's one of my all-time top games, and I still play it every now just to enjoy it again

 

cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/877454

This is a post about placenames because I find these kinds of things interesting. Fill in any blanks or make corrections if you can.

For whatever reason, Korea likes to refer to a connection (usually a railway or road) between two places by taking the first part of each word and combining them. When one of those places is Seoul, the syllable used is gyeong - for example Gyeongbu to refer to a rail line between Seoul and Busan, or Gyeongin to refer to the collective area/connection of Seoul and Incheon. Gyeonggi-do, the province surrounding the capital, literally means that. But why is "gyeong" used in place of "Seoul" or "Seo"?

Seoul is, as far as I know, the only native Korean placename in use. Everywhere else has over the course of history been converted to a Sino-Korean name, which can be written using Hanja (Chinese characters). For some places, the old native Korean name is still known, but is never used.

Seoul as a word simply means the capital. It's a word that has transformed from being a general noun (e.g., "the seoul of England is London") to being a proper noun referring to the city of Seoul. (Aside: I think 수도 is now the term to refer to a capital in general sense).

Seoul only became known as Seoul following the end of Japanese occupation. Prior to that, it had a few different (Sino-Korean) names, most recently Gyeongseong - a Sino-Korean word meaning capital city (gyeong/경/京 means "capital"). When Seoul Station was built, it originally took the name Gyeongseong Station. So it makes sense that when they named the railway line between Seoul and Busan, they called it the Gyeong-Bu line, right?

So when you see 경 in relation to Seoul, you might have a slight appreciation of why it's there. But just because you see it, it might not be related. For example, Gyeongnam province or Gyeongju city both have "gyeong" but have a different Hanja and a different, totally unrelated, underlying meaning.

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