Honestly the only downside I can now think of is that if this starts being a trend, it gets harder to surmise what's the "canonical" version of a game. Like if national archives started collecting video games only to neglect their the version, where does that leave you?
Honestly I need to get myself an avocado and pea sprouts as a garnish, toast one bread square to a perfect level of doneness, one not too black nor too bland, spread the fruit with a golden knife and serve it all on a bed of flowers. Ah, a breakfast!
It is day 2014 after I decided to further my attempt at assuming a human form by taking up Twitter and now I am demonstrating my human-likeness by enjoying "sportsball", ha! Those fools! There is nothing as stupid as sportsball. The mere thought is tingling my scales. But this is what you need to do to become a senator as my elder Bilderbergsies have told me.
It'll be pretty stable for some time, I think I'll start making bigger changes next weekend and it may be momentarily wonky then. In the meantime I'll just refactor it into something more manageable and fix a few obvious bugs.
Like at the moment the night mode code is literally 19 lines and mostly just color variables and that kind of clarity would be hella nice on the common side as well.
Normal italicbolditalic and boldOne pair of asterisks too far.
Questions|Answers // The table headings
:--|:-- // The cell alignments
What is your favorite color?|Orange. // A row
Cats or dogs?|Foxes. // Another row
I use a client for twitter just because it makes the numbers less prominent, and it rules. I love twitter, but jesus the number shit is such a pain. Like I see folks post about how many followers they have, or like screenshotting the twitter analytics page, and I kind die on the inside.
Actually I went and got a custom CSS Chrome extension and got rid of almost all number silliness with these settings on my desktop computer:
Moonside wrote
Reply to Why the founder of Traveller's Tales released a director's cut of an old Sonic game 25 years later by missingno
Honestly the only downside I can now think of is that if this starts being a trend, it gets harder to surmise what's the "canonical" version of a game. Like if national archives started collecting video games only to neglect their the version, where does that leave you?