Privacy advocate and aspiring gamedev that has literally nothing under my belt heehoo. He/Him

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Joined 7 个月前
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Cake day: 2025年5月4日

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  • How I manage to do it is by changing my own perspective. Instead of thinking “I’m looking at a cube”, I focus on parts of it. For instance, at the very center of the drawing, there is a small square with nothing else overlapping it. That small square has two triangles touching it’s top left and bottom right corners. By trying to perceive those 3 figures as the main part of it, I was able to stop seeing any depth.

    Another way is to turn the entire drawing around. The absolute top right 90° corner and the absolute bottom left 90° corners can be viewed as one aiming up and one aiming down, or as left and right. You essentially turn the drawing into a rhombus in your mind with extra details



  • I loved the view, plus you get the option to ride a quadbike up instead of walking it, and since it was my first time riding one, it was a massive plus.

    The very top was incredibly cold but I got to see snowed mountains and clouds literally around me. And when I said you lose your ability to breathe I also meant that literally, since facing the side from where the wind is blowing while standing at the peak makes it so you cannot breathe in, and instead you have to turn away.

    Other than that, however, there isn’t much to do there. I would prefer to go again after training so I can walk it instead, since that sounds more fun.










  • I’m aware most of my dreams are dreams during them, and my interference tends to be on whether or not I like the narrative being told (or if it makes sense). So, sometimes I end up repeating the same “plot points” over and over again until I find something satisfying (which you can argue means I’m dreaming about making a story instead), other times I’m just “sitting back” and enjoying the show of my own dreams where I’m also most of the time the protagonist.

    So, I guess all the time?