

You don’t scare me.
AOL never was available in my country.
Check books? I’ve never even seen someone actually using one, I think.
I will never get to 20, yay!


You don’t scare me.
AOL never was available in my country.
Check books? I’ve never even seen someone actually using one, I think.
I will never get to 20, yay!
I, I wanna be in
The room where it happens
The room where it happens
I wanna be in
The room where it happens
The room where it happens
You roll it, it drops off the table and stops 15 yards meters away–if you’re lucky.
Or the cat thinks you finally have time for them and playfully pushes the ball die under the couch.
I think my d30 is good enough.
Some great mind took hours to break this password. Hours!
Spoiler: the pony survived!
Applying real world logic to game rules never works out.
Also, you forget to take into account the weapon’s mass, form, structural integrity, the commoner’s reaction time, probability to fumble, the force of the wind, and probably a few dozen other factors that have an effect in the real world.
Just don’t. It’s a game.


You mean I, II, III, IV, IX, V, VI, VII, VIII, X, XI, XII


Not exactly what you asked, but close I think: a (paid) full gamified typing course for kids, in several languages including English: https://www.typetopia.com/


If you look up the definition for an Object, it specifies that it is “a nonliving, distinct thing” — such as a corpse.
However, the definition of Creature does not say it must be living. So, a corpse is both a creature and an object.
There are even creatures that have never been living — such as constructs — and thus are also objects.
Psst, are you sleeping?
Lies. Cats don’t ask questions, they assert their rightful place.
Stop doing whatever you do, adore me!