Olimar’s always fun to draw. I just did this page and yet I wanna do another one because I think I found the key to warming up: just draw this easy to draw lil guy. I feel like if they found a cakepop, they would lose their minds.
how do conservatives think talking to children works? if a four year old came up to me and said “i’m a cat!!” i would say “really? what makes you a cat?” and they’d say some shit like “i have claws >:)” and i’d be like “oh wow, you do have claws. but wait, i thought cats had pointed ears!” and they’d say “they DO!!!” and then i’d pull up a picture of an elf and ask “is THIS a cat?” and they’d yell “NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO”
u wouldn’t say “fucking hell, Emily, get it together. this is the real world”
So, let me get this straight. Blizzard's plan for regaining audience goodwill with the 1.0 release of Overwatch 2 is to open with a heavily promoted PvE mission pack (i.e,. thereby reminding everyone of the vapourware PvE campaign they built Overwatch 2's entire marketing strategy around, then quietly axed once they had everybody's money), and the premise of this PvE mission pack is basically doubling down on the broadly disliked "our heroes put down a slave rebellion" PvE storyline from the first game? Have I got all that right?
of course not.
they also released it on Steam.
Huh.
I want weird math textbooks. Group theory textbooks in the style of a comic book. Real analysis textbooks written as a long dialogue between forest animals. Elaborate romantic fan fictions about the relationships between Lie groups and their corresponding Lie algebras.
Have you read Surreal Numbers: How Two Ex-Students Turned On to Pure Mathematics and Found Total Happiness? It's an introduction to the concept of surreal numbers told through a conversation between two people coming up with the theory together while hanging out at the beach. I borrowed it from my uni library purely for fun (it had nothing to do with any of my actual modules) and it made an interesting change from straight-forward textbooks.
I learned calculus in middle school from a book called Calculus the Easy Way which was basically a storybook about a fantasy kingdom plagued with problems that could only be solved by differential and integral calculus. It's quite fun.
That said, I want to do the fanfic one now. The relationship between a graph and its Aut() group is yuri.
I would like to direct you to this paper, which is about fractal geometry and is written as a story about a dwarven map maker.



