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Cake day: July 7th, 2023

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  • Best would have to be PlanetSide 2. It’s not the most hours I’ve put into a game, but it’s up there, and now importantly it’s the game that I most fondly remember my time playing. For a few years I ran ops with one of the oldest outfits in the game, and I still find myself remembering moments from those nights. It was a really cool community (maybe not as a whole, but certainly the people I was hanging out with) and we got up to a lot of really fun shit. I put maybe $100-200 into that game and got out experiences that genuinely changed me as a person.

    Least would be Squad. I’ve never been able to make that game click. It’s not like I don’t play similar games, I’ve really enjoyed my time with Hell Let Loose, and Insurgency would be a very strong contender for my most bang for buck. Squad just… Doesn’t work for me. And I don’t really know why.


  • The game is really good. Combat is a lot of fun, the skill tree is enormous, the magic is cool, I like the weird rat guy, and it’s neat to be playing a dwarf in a first person fantasy game. And yeah, the graphics are insane. I was constantly stopping to just stare at the view in awe.

    When I picked it up there were only a few hours worth of content. I uninstalled it knowing that I was very, very excited to play more, and resolved to leave it until it’s officially out of early access. It’s a little present to future me.

    This does make the question of whether it’s worth the price a weird one. Technically, the answer would be a no; if development stopped tomorrow and all you got was the game as it exists today, it wouldn’t be worth it.

    But if the finished product remotely delivers on the quality of what they’ve made so far, it will be a steal at $40 or even $50. I honestly think you’d be crazy not to throw the developers ten bucks now for the promise of a game this good. Unless something goes horribly wrong I think it’ll be a very safe bet.






  • Is it good someone stopped the Nazis from genocide? Yes.

    There we go. End of discussion.

    I’m not here to debate the idea that wars are bad, or that they happen for complex, often highly immoral reasons. I never staked out any of those positions. In fact I literally said previously “There is no such thing as a perfectly moral war.”

    But none of that changes the fact that, like it or not, militaries are necessary. They’re necessary because wars get started for immoral reasons. Because we can’t wish ourselves into a world where autocrats and fascists and nationalists and revanchists don’t exist. We can work to build that world, and we should. But it will take time, and we do not get the luxury of living without any means of stopping those people in the meantime.

    You can’t be a progressive nation if you’re not a nation at all.


  • Did armed resistance to the Nazis from state military start because of the genocide? No.

    OK. But that’s not what I asked, is it?

    The question is simple; would the world be better off if no one had engaged in armed resistance to the Nazis. Why they did it - the exact specifics of a complex sea of motivations - is beside the point.

    Arguing that we should just not have a military is arguing that the world should have just let the Nazis take over. It’s that simple. It’s not about good and bad, it’s about what’s necessary. Reality does not care about your moral purity.


  • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.worksto196@lemmy.blahaj.zonewar, war never rules
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    12 days ago

    This is just whataboutism. You’re not actually making a point, just deflecting.

    I would actually 100% support a UN peacekeeping mission in Gaza. I think that the people of Palestine should be defended from Isreal’s genocide, and if it takes tanks and guns to do that, I believe that’s what we should do.

    Doesn’t mean I like it. The world I want is one where Isreal isn’t engaged in a genocide in the first place. But that’s not the world we have. You’re not making anyone’s life better by sticking your head in the sand.

    In your other reply you suggested that I should just refuse to eat and simply die because I want capitalism to end. Who does that help? That’s a serious question, and I actually want you to answer it; if I kill myself rather than engage with capitalism, what have I done to bring about its end? Whose life have I improved?


  • I think it’s also important to note here that the previous poster is creating an unrealistic standard by insisting that genocide even be in the picture.

    Any war of aggression is a bad thing that people should be able to defend themselves from. And that means having a military. And defending other people from wars of aggression means having a military.

    We don’t have to be talking about genocide. Whether or not Russia is committing genocide in Ukraine (they are certainly engaged in ethnic cleansing, regardless of any other definitions) is actually irrelevant. The people of Ukraine should not have their future determined by the fact that Putin has men with guns and the willingness to use them. It’s as simple as that. And as long as people like Putin exist in the world, having a military will often be the only way to prevent stuff like that from happening.









  • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.worksto196@lemmy.blahaj.zonewar, war never rules
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    12 days ago

    You’re right, all war is bad. War sucks and it should never have to happen. Even wars fought for good reasons are still terrible and it would be a better world if they never had to be fought at all.

    The part you’re missing is that war is not the military. They’re different things. Militaries fight wars, that doesn’t mean that wars will magically stop happening to everyone who gets rid of their military. It would be wonderful to live in a world where militaries aren’t needed, but instead we live in a world where many countries live under the constant threat of invasion.

    The Canadian military maintains a constant presence in Latvia, because if we didn’t, Russia would walk in there tomorrow and take over. My wife just finished a tour. The Latvians don’t resent the presence of our military, they love us. Everywhere she went, barring some very specific exceptions, people were glad to see them. They felt happy, reassured by their visible presence. People from the other side of the world who had upended their lives to spend six months away from family and loved ones defending their tiny little country from the threat of brutal autocratic rule.

    No one wants these things to be necessary, but they are, whether we like it or not. We would not be living in a better world right now if, in 1939, the whole world had just rolled over and let the Nazis walk in without a fight, would we?