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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • I understand the desire to keep kbin a solo project in order to maintain control over it, but if this is going to see any success in the long term, then there needs to be a team. I like kbin over lemmy for the interface and mocroblog integration, but the spam and lack of updates are taking its toll. At the very least, there needs to be another admin or two to look after things whenever Ernest isn’t around.



  • If you’re a bad actor, you could block anyone who downvotes your bad takes or whatever garbage you’re posting, and over time, you could block most active users (or at least the ones who disagree with you) until your posts aren’t downvoted into oblivion. I suppose by then, your total rep would be pretty pretty low and it would probably be easier to just make a new account.

    I’m not sure how viable this would be, just a thought.


  • My personal opinion is stay away until they show positive change. I stepped away from WoW in 2018 when it became increasingly apparent that they are designing to keep players grinding, rather than actually having fun, then the infamous Blizzcon that year (Blitzchung debacle and “Do you guys not have phones?”) cemented my stance on not playing anything Blizzard. They have shown that they only see their players as wallets to extract money from and their employees as cheap labor to exploit and discard.

    So has there been positive change? Not that I’ve seen. It’s still too early to tell if the MS acquisition will do anything on that front. From what I’ve heard of Diablo 4, it’s pretty boring once you get pas the initial “ooh, ahh” factor, and Overwatch 2 has been more or less a dumpster fire since it released.










  • It doesn’t even need to be a degree, honestly. You could go learn a trade. There are many trades that pay much more than many white-collar desk jobs. I’d say check out your local community college, trade school, or similar to see if anything looks interesting. Contact them and request more information or even a tour if something does. Regardless of the route you take, you definitely want to learn some sort of marketable skill. Also, there’s nothing wrong with pursuing a career that’s just tolerable or boring, but pays the bills. You can seek fulfillment outside of work.

    As far as not knowing what to go for at 21, I just worked after graduating high school at 18, and it wasn’t until I was 23 that I decided to go back to school.