Ethan having a zionist crybully meltdown is unsurprising but disappointing.
Ethan having a zionist crybully meltdown is unsurprising but disappointing.
I’ve had far less obnoxious people in deadlock compared to Dota. There was some smart decisions to have fewer defined “roles” and less emphasis on having one or a few players pop off with all the resources.
The game itself is so solid, has good balance, the movement and abilities are fun… It’s good. Some people are going to get annoying and sweaty in a comparative snowbally team game. I like to thank them for making my games a win-win. Either I get to win the game, or my obnoxious teammate gets to lose.
I too hate the average g*mer but I’m not going to let them steal my enjoyment.
I’m glad you’re finding amusement in other people’s struggle with drug addiction.
“You see, I have depicted you as the Soyjak and me as the Chad. I am very smart.”
Gross
Whichever one you pick, you’ll be learning plenty of lessons that apply in both places. Java and C# have incredibly similar design philosophy, terminology, etc. Both have plenty of jobs available. I’d worry slightly less about choosing based on min-maxing employment opportunities and more toward what feels better and inspires you more.
Try writing your backend with browser limitations and see what kind of wild wrappers you make to keep yourself sane.
At least in windows, the hosts file can point from any domain to any IP. In theory you can do things like point advertising domains to 127.0.0.1 if you wanted to make sure web requests never made it off your local machine. I did this a lot back in the day to test websites running locally but pointed to a friendlier name than localhost:randomport