LemmySoloHer: Across the Fediverse

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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • I know of the Genesis game but never played it (though I do own the newer titles in the series), but did some digging to see what I could find to answer your questions:

    Am I imagining this games difficulty? I feel like I am making little progress and I’m always getting ganged up on. / Does this game require a lot of grinding or repeating tasks before moving on?

    Everything I’m finding is saying yes to both, with the grinding resulting in the increased money, stats, contacts, equipment and practicing/refining your own strategy for completing runs. Luckily, there are multiple strategies for “quick” grinding, and certain equipment and stats that really help whether it be just straight up powerful stuff or specifically helps to deal with pesky foes like ghouls. Because there are different sections to the grinding with different strategies to doing it efficiently, I’ll leave the specifics out since they get a little spoiler-y in case you want to figure it out on your own. But, do let me know if you’d like me to reply with specific strategies that may be seen as too much of a walkthrough or too spoilery for some (they don’t seem like gigantic story spoilers or anything so if the grinding gets too tedious and you stop having fun, they might be worth knowing about).

    Should I be killing these innocents I see on the street? I try to get shadow runs but they seemingly always involve killing ghouls, which bend me over and spank my samurai butt. I’ve put my morals on hold and have been tediously murdering the population for the little nuyen and items they have.

    Luckily the Karma explanation section on the Shadowrun strategywiki actually explains this pretty well. I went through it and it looks like a straight up explanation without story spoilers so I feel comfortable just linking it here for you: https://strategywiki.org/wiki/Shadowrun_(Sega_Genesis)/Karma#Karma

    -is the samurai class the all-rounder character or should I just restart as a shaman or netrunner?

    I found a really good explanation on the Shadowrun wiki: https://shadowrun.fandom.com/wiki/Shadowrun_(Sega)/Archetype. Thankfully this also gives a much needed explanation of the differences between classes without spoilers. It seems like this info is very important to know upfront depending on what your playstyle is like.

    As far as the game itself, I did not play the genesis version but definitely looked into it after I got the Shadowrun trilogy that GOG games gave out for free a few years back. From what I found, the Sega Genesis version is superior to the SNES version in a few ways but a lot of people enjoyed both. I really like the style and concepts presented in the series and the newer Shadowrun trilogy seems to have taken all of that and improved on it, with each game getting better and better at giving the experience intended. I’d say it’s worth taking a look at if you enjoy the Genesis game, or if you really like the elements of the Genesis game but aren’t enjoying it so much, the newer series might be what you’re looking for.

    Edit: Spelling, grammar and formatting.

    Edit 2: Also, here is a link to a PDF of the original game manual for the Sega Genesis version, which helps navigate the UI and buttons, etc., just in case you need it since manuals were kind of a big deal back in the day!



  • I’m not a fan myself but I think the right amount of ketchup on Mac and cheese is generally how much you like.

    But there is such a thing as too much. Ketchup is great because the sugar and salt makes it appealing. Start pouring it on and all of a sudden you’re guzzling down a lot of sugar and taking a dish high in sodium and exacerbating it. Not so bad every now and then but a constant high-sodium, high-sugar diet is rough for kidneys, blood glucose levels, etc.

    There are also “no salt added” and “no sugar added” versions of ketchup but even still, a reasonable amount is just not pouring a ton on. For anyone eating the dish like twice a year, I’d say go nuts! But for those eating it regularly, make sure to enjoy yourself but also take care of yourself! I say this as someone that has a kidney issue in remission and was asked way back at my first appointment “how much sodium do you consume in a day?”





  • Great suggestions here already, I’ll throw a few more on top:

    • Omori (similar and often compared to Earthbound but the silly fun stuff gets darker and more serious as the story goes on)
    • Super Mario RPG (another Squaresoft JRPG from the era of Chrono Trigger and FFVI, very fun and satisfying turn-based combat mechanics, quirky to the max, Squaresoft really had a blast creating a Mario style world. The remaster just released for the Switch, but if you don’t have one then you can easily get a digital port of the original SNES version)


  • Just a clarification, Trigun Stampede is not a prequel but is an alternate universe re-imagining of the original.

    When the producers approached the creator about doing something very different from the source material, the creator mentioned that the first anime adaptation was “really excellent”, and that “anything beyond the original anime is more of a bonus time, so you could pretty much do whatever you want to with it.” They liked the idea of how, for example, there are different versions of Spider-Man in the Spider-Verse (so that the 90s Spider-Man show, Ultimate Spider-Man, etc., would all be very different from each other). This is them doing that for Vash and company.

    It’s very different in a lot of ways, you can think of it as an alternate universe from the original. I would strongly recommend first time viewers watch the original anime in its entirety first and then check out Stampede if they’re itching for more of that world in a very different flavor.





  • LemmySoloHer@lemmy.worldto196@lemmy.blahaj.zoneRule
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    5 months ago

    For me I currently have state healthcare in the U.S. Under my plan, I can only see a specialist when referred to one by my primary health care physician. I made an appointment with them, gave them my story and asked to be referred to an allergist. They issued the referral (takes about two weeks to show up in system) and I called into the allergy office a couple times until they confirmed they received my referral and could then schedule an appointment that my insurance would cover.

    My allergist went over questions first (e.g. what brought you in today, do you seem to have more symptoms during different seasons, do you have constant runny or stuffy nose, itchy eyes, etc.). The second part is the prick test. I lied on my stomach and the nurse marked different spots on my back and numbered each spot. Then they have a bunch of little needles, each one with a small amount of a different potential allergen. They then prick one in each spot and measure the size of the bump that happens to determine how allergic I was to each allergen, if at all. This test also took place in two parts: the first time was for food allergens (dairy, crustaceans, mollusks, etc.) and the second time was for seasonal/household allergens (pollen, ragweed, mugwort, dog hair, etc.).

    It’s definitely worth getting tested since a lot of the symptoms and discomfort can be treated, as well as the benefit of having the knowledge of what to generally avoid if possible so that substitutions can be made. The shots are for the seasonal/household type allergens, but since there is some crossover (for example, celery is a food allergy, but the reason it can produce a reaction is because the body can mistake it for mugwort, which is a treatable seasonal allergy), and in my case is thought to help my body be more at ease instead of constantly being agitated by the allergens, which could reduce overall discomfort and sensitivity when eating spicy foods eventually.

    They’ll go over treatment options and if the shots are recommended based on your results and discussion. It’s also good to know if you have a food allergy or a food intolerance, since apparently they are different. Really I learned a lot and feel a lot better than I did a year ago. Check with your health insurance (and/or managed care plan within your insurance) and see what you need to do to ensure that a visit to the allergist is covered. If it requires a referral from your PCP, they will likely make sure to refer you to a specialist that is in-network, but do confirm with them or the specialist before you take the appointment.


  • LemmySoloHer@lemmy.worldto196@lemmy.blahaj.zoneRule
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    5 months ago

    Ugh this is me. I used to love spicy food but something happened a few years ago where it switched to just destroying me.

    All it takes is a little bit and I’m sent into an uncomfortable, mouth-searing sweating fit for essentially the rest of the day. I’ve got bottles of alcohol-based mouthwash like Listerine stocked up since it’s one of the few things that helps in those times when I accidentally get a hit of the ol’ spicy stuff. Once I do that and wash off my lips with face cleaner I’m alright, otherwise I’m struggling to keep hydrated because I’ll sweat for hours and hours.

    Finally went to see an allergist that found a ton of underlying allergies and thinks that having all those go untreated is what increased my sensitivity overall. I’m currently getting the allergy immunotherapy shots and hoping that results in some regained resistance to capsaicin. It’s super embarassing to be out and start sweating like a maniac when I get a bite of an appetizer I didn’t know had pepper extract or one of those steaming plates of hot spicy stuff that sends a pepper cloud in my face and just leaves me drenched the rest of the night.


  • Disco Elysium is a fantastic one. There are an insane amount of choices that shape how you go about the investigation of the hanged man and ultimately what happens beyond that investigation. Choices of who to side with, how to side (openly or playing multiple sides, etc.), choices that ultimately define what kind of detective you are (by-the-book boring, superstar douchebag, violent tough guy, Sherlock Holmes-esque genius, etc., including my favorite: Twin Peaks Lynchian detective that bases their decisions off of dreams, intuition and imaginary conversations with the dead body), and even how failing or succeeding at something can lead to progress in very different ways. If you fail to hit that person you tried to punch, or miss that shot with your gun, or utterly fail to convince someone to help you, you progress through in very different ways so that failing your way to the truth is just as satisfying and entertaining as succeeding your checks to get there.

    And of course Fallout: New Vegas. Whether you choose to support the New California Republic, Caesar’s Legion, Mr. House, or a truly independent New Vegas, none of them are perfect. Each succeeds in an ideal society in some ways but completely fails at others, leaving you to decide which imperfect system you feel is the right one for the world instead of shoving an obvious answer in your face.