A list of puns related to "Ballyraine Linear Park"
Walked my dogs and saw two bobcats next to some tall grass this morning around 10:30am. They were right next to the two large boulders on the trail. Seemed like a mom and cub.
Just a heads up for anyone else going to Silver Creek Linear park today to be careful
I like the Halloween / Christmas fusion vibe!
The kid from the theme park meets a lady who survived Auschwitz and something about a guy who kills himself by putting an elastic band around his neck and posting it online. Typing it out like this has made me realise its a lot darker than I remembered but it was one of the first books I read that I just couldn't put down! Thank you in advance
Solved: Street Sk8er 2
I vaguely remember playing a skateboarding game on either PS1 or PS2 as a kid, where it had a sort of story mode with linear-ish maps, it also let you create your own indoors skate parts I believe... Any ideas?
Has anyone stayed in the Ballyraine Campus apartments in Letterkenny for college? Would you recommend them for first years?
In many strategy games like Civilization, Europa Universalis, etc. technology is linear and progressive: once the tech for e.g. chariots is invented, it stays available.
I'm often wondering if this approach to technology in games is fundamentally right or wrong. Certainly, often it does seem to fit historic reality well, e.g., writing was invented and pretty much stayed.
Other times it doesn't seem to fit at all, e.g., aqueducts in ancient Rome.
I guess my question comes down to the permanence of ideas. Is it a valid abstraction to assume that once an idea has been established , it stays? E.g., get some "researcher points" and invent "chariots".
Or is it much more historically accurate to abstract to a maintenance model, e.g., we need to produce at least 5 "research points" to keep "chariots" after inventing it or else we'll lose it after X rounds/years?
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