#and it gets to the point where i get a headache from shit being laggy
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
thewardenisonthecase · 9 days ago
Text
i ended up uninstalling veilguard bc like, as much as i do like the game, this shit is SO LAGGY on my computer that whenever I do pick it up to play, I loose the will to because of it running poorly. two runs with the same character are enough
6 notes · View notes
youngster-monster · 3 years ago
Text
The City v. Ahamkara
Prologue - Bloody and Raw
The way back is a blur. Cayde can’t tell if he’s moving through a dream or reality, if he’s moving or sitting still with the world flowing around him. It comes to him in disjointed snapshots, brief bursts of movement before everything freezes again like an old laggy monitor. Fire from the wreckage of the Prison; a gunshot; Petra’s voice, concerned, and his own, distant to his own ears, pantomiming humor even though he has no idea what words are leaving his mouth.
Through all of it the only tangible constant is a hand wrapped around his wrist. Razel, his brain supplies, insistent even as a part of him argues back, not quite. He thinks he can feel claws scratch lightly against the painted surface of his arm. It’s false, of course. He can’t feel input that sensitive usually and certainly not now, with half of his receptors shot to hell. Maybe his processor is making up for lost feedback with imagined ones. Not reality as much as what he expects reality to be like — new, and absurd, and scratchy like a bird perched on his arm and poking its tiny little bird-claws into the joint of his wrist to keep its balance.
Perhaps the pinprick of not-quite-pain is impossible but what isn’t, today?
He’s walking on his own two feet, although there’s a great deal more stumbling than walking involved: that’s one. He won’t call it a miracle but it’s a struggle to find a word that fits the impossible-made-possible just as well.
Sundance is dead. He forces himself to think the whole sentence, even though it hurts like a bitch in a deep part of himself he’d rather not look at. Better to have it hurt now than fester in the dark and poison him. He’s seen what that kind of grief does to guardians. There’s a good reason so few of them survive the initial loss of their Ghost. He never thought he would, himself: anything good enough to kill Sundance would surely get him, too.
But it didn’t. That’s another for the Impossible tally he’s keeping for himself.
Razel’s grip tightens slightly, protectively, as if he caught the tail-end of that thought. Here it is. The last item on the Impossible list, the one Cayde is even less keen to linger on. Sundance’s death is not an immediate, pressing matter. It’s done; there’s nothing else he can do but withstand it now. Whatever’s up with Razel is an ongoing issue and there’s nothing he wants more than to avoid thinking about it.
He’s unlikely to get any luck with that but a man can hope, yeah?
It takes an eternity to reach their ship, falling forward rather than walking until they’re in reach of a transmat and then wincing his way through the touch of an unfamiliar-familiar Ghost as Cubix transports them to the Queen of Hearts. The impact of his feet on the metal flooring makes a heavy, echoing sound. Razel doesn’t make one at all. He’s like a ghost himself, suddenly, taking twice as much space as usual with none of the flailing that should come with it.
That’s when it catches up to him in earnest — no more of that shell shocked avoidance shit. It must be something in the air, he muses, that settles too heavily on his mind until he buckles under it. Something about the quiet of his own ship, the distant sound of howling and crashing and chaos replaced with the gentle hum of an idle engine; something about the stars blinking cold and distant through the cockpit; something about the persistent rattling in his chest, where the universe twisted itself to fulfill Razel’s desire and still didn’t manage to fix the minutiae of his internal machinery. As if water-cooling is a concept beyond even paracausal miracles.
It’s all, suddenly, too much.
Cayde collapses into the pilot’s seat, clunking and creaking, all the air wheezing out of him like a sorry bagpipe. He feels his entire weight suddenly, every pound of metal and wires, in a way he can’t blame on the difference between the Coast and the artificial gravity aboard the ship. He feels his entire age, each and every single endless year of it, remembered or not. Fuck, but he’s too old for this.
And Razel still won’t stop touching him. Hasn’t ever since— ever since. Even now he has a hand on Cayde’s shoulder, fingertips tucked under the collar of his cloak to lay on the bare metal of his neck underneath.
It’s a comfort. It’s a threat. It makes Cayde’s skin crawl. He wants to jerk away from it. He wants to lean into it. He doesn’t know what he wants, or what he feels beyond confusion, exhaustion, and a bitter kind of relief — the exhausting feeling of having held a snake in your hands and trading the fear of being bitten for the venom.
He’s not used to feeling like that near Razel — one of his closest friends, someone he trusts.
“You okay?”
Stupidly, he expected Razel’s voice to sound different. It’s the same as always: a little higher-pitched than you’d expect, with that slight Awoken flanging to it. At least he’s always pinned the sound of it on Razel being an Awoken and, as such, a little bit weird, as is expected. Now he’s not so sure.
“I’m alive,” Cayde replies grimly. “Sundance is dead and my best friend—” he stumbles there, but what good is a Hunter who balks at a challenge? “Is a wish-granting space dragon in disguise, but I’m alive. Silver lining, right?”
Razel curls into himself, looking small and hurt. It’s hard to see the monster in him just then — even harder than before. He just looks like Razel, and Cayde hates seeing Razel like that — like he just got hit over the head and doesn’t know what to do about it.
“I’m sorry,” he says, voice winding into a white at the end.
All the fight goes out of Cayde at once. It’s not guilt; not quite. He’s too drained for guilt. But it’s a little bit close to it.
He lifts a hand and lets it fall heavily on Razel’s head, ruffling his hair. “You did what you could, buddy.”
The frown he gets in return is fierce, but no fiercer than seems normal for Razel. He’s quick to anger and even quicker to forget about it, and as dramatic as his moods may be they’re rarely destructive. At least not for the right people. Cabal are all out of luck on that front. Still there’s something in his eyes — a wild, unnatural sharpness to the familiar orange-gold glow that makes a previously unknown animal instinct in Cayde raise its hackles. Whatever happened in the Prison, whatever bolt broke open to release the creature hidden under his features, there’s no locking it back up.
It suits him, though. Perhaps it’s always been there, lurking under the surface, showing glimpses of itself through Razel’s weirdest habits. Perhaps Razel isn’t that different now from a day ago; there’s comfort in that.
After all, he broke open reality to save Cayde. That must mean something, right?
“I didn’t,” Razel says mulishly. “There has to be something more I could have done. I mean—”
He never finishes that sentence. Not that Cayde needs him to. He’s seen what Razel did do. There’s still blood flaking on his fingertips from when he wiped it off Razel’s face; there’s still a dent in his chest where a hit that crumpled his chest like a soda can should have killed him and didn’t. What else might an Ahamkara do if given the chance?
There, he said it. The damning word. It’s not as if there’s a point pussy-footing around it anymore.
“You did what you could,” Cayde repeats, giving Razel another headache-inducing pat from his half-numb arm. “And a damn sight better than what anybody else could have done for me in that situation, lemme tell you. You’re not a miracle worker.”
“Aren’t I?”
“Well— okay, maybe you are. But you’re about as qualified as I am to grant wishes, so no one’s about to blame you for botching it somewhat.”
It’s the wrong thing to say, and he catches Razel’s wince in the corner of his eyes, but that goes ignored as another matter occurs to Cayde.
They might not blame Razel for the botched resurrection — knowing what they do of the limit of Ahamkara abilities, and that’s very little, it’s hard to tell whether or not he could have done more. But they will blame him for everything else. Not the near death experience, no. But being an Ahamkara? Hiding it from the City, the Vanguard, even unknowingly? It would be a crime, if any of them had known it was possible enough to make a law punishing it. It will be a crime once they catch wind of it.
And Cayde is thoroughly weirded out by the whole thing, but he’s not about to let his best friend get locked up for having saved his life.
“I have a few questions,” he says, although he’s not sure he truly wants them answered. Unfortunately there won’t be another time for it. “But once we’re home— not a word of it. Capische?”
Razel nods hard enough to dislocate a vertebrae.
Satisfied, Cayde punches in the code for manual piloting and sets the ship on course for the City. They’ve got this.
-
It occurs to Cayde that they have not got this when Ikora comes knocking at their door two days later at five a.m.
At any other hour it would be nothing out of the usual. He likes to think they’re friends, the two of them, and although it’s usually Vanguard business that brings her to their front step she’s always welcome to drop by unnanounced. He’s been expecting her, anyway.
When Razel and him crawled back to the Tower, dirty and exhausted and shell shocked, she was there to greet them. She was the first one to see Cayde’s sorry state, to ask — in a reassuringly familiar kind but straight to the point manner — what had happened. She’s the one who told him to take a leave, before Zavala even got there to order him the same. It was only a matter of days before she came by to see how he’s doing and kick him out of any self-pitying hole he might have dug for himself in the meantime.
But that’s a visit one makes during the day, or in the evening when she manages to claw back some free time from her mercilessly tight schedule. Nothing good ever comes from a five a.m visit.
Cayde opens the door in his pjs, bare feet against the cold floorboard, to Ikora and a Guardian in full armor he doesn’t recognize. They’re holding a rifle against their chest, in that kind of parade rest that Titans naturally adopt when they’ve been told they won’t have to use it and they don’t entirely believe it.
He fell asleep not two hours ago, but any bleariness remaining from his dramatically shortened night disappears at that sight.
“Mornin’,” he says, hand clenching around the door. He could slam it in their face, but the grim set of Ikora’s mouth tells him they’re far beyond that point. He shouldn’t even have opened it.
Her voice, when she speaks up, is that of the Warlock Vanguard — all business.
“Holliday sent me your records.”
Blinking, Cayde tries to connect that information to the current situation. Holliday, the shipwright. Holliday who’s been working on fixing the Queen of Hearts with a fervor that suggests it’s the only thing she knows how to fix in this damned situation. Holliday—
Who would have had to access the ship’s records to know exactly what to fix. The kind of records that include any and all audio captured aboard in the last few days.
“Fuck,” he says plainly.
She gives him a compassionate look that only makes him feel bad, until it darts up — towards the rest of the apartment — and then he feels worse. The Titan’s grip tightens on their rifle. The faint creaking of their gloves is the only sound for a good long while.
Slowly so as to not startle them into action, Cayde turns his head to look behind his shoulder. Razel has frozen in place next to the couch, holding Admiral in his arms. The cat jumps out of his grasp and pads towards Cayde, rubbing against his legs. Razel just stands there, licking his lips as if wondering if he still has time to bolt back inside their room.
“Is everything okay?” He asks eventually. He looks directly at Ikora when he says it — always does, when he’s not sure what’s going on. She’s his Vanguard; his lighthouse.
“Razel,” she says. It’s not a greeting. It’s the beginning of a longer sentence — of something worse. “You stand accused of treason, perjury, and crimes against the City at large. You will be put into Vanguard custody and judged in a court of law. You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can be used against you in court—”
The rest turns into senseless muttering as electrical buzzing overtakes Cayde’s ears — the sound of some Light-forsaken processor going into overdrive in an effort to keep him from hyperventilating. The Titan shoulders their way past him, marches to a still immobile Razel and snaps a set of handcuffs around his wrists. There’s a burst of light as they close; Cubix materializes next to him, the first Cayde has seen of him since they left the Shattered Coast. He’s been keeping his distance to make it easier on him, Cayde thinks dumbly, that small, idiotic kindness the only thing he can focus on at the moment.
Cubix’s voice has gone shrill with worry. “You can’t do this! Ikora—”
She shakes her head, her face set in a stern expression to cover any deeper feeling she may harbor. She’s a professional; Cayde doesn’t have it in himself to admire that, right now. “I’m sorry,” she says. “Cubix, I’ll have to ask you to come with me. Alone.”
Reluctantly, he does, flying up to her. The Titan pulls Razel aside as he floats past, and they put themselves between him and Cayde when they march him past. As if they’re afraid allowing him to touch either of them would make him explode out of his restraints somehow. As it is, he remains meek as anything as he shuffles after them. It’s an incredible sight: Razel with his hair down and messy like a bird’s nest from an uneasy sleep, dressed in nothing more than a shirt — Cayde’s — his underwear — pink — and a single sock — it has a hole at the big toe — being led away in handcuffs by a Titan twice as large as he is who keeps a tight grip on his arm as if he’s liable to eat them.
But he doesn’t, and the door closes on them with a soft click and one last apologetic look from Ikora. Cayde is left behind, in a dark apartment, empty save for himself and the loud meowing of his cat in the kitchen and the gnawing impression that none of this would have happened if he wasn’t such a gigantic idiot.
Somewhere, the sun rises.
He doesn’t see it.
[Read ch. 2 on AO3]
2 notes · View notes
julystorms · 8 years ago
Text
writing meme
Is there a snack you like to eat while writing?
for some reason i just can’t eat when i’m in a Writing Mood™. i find it distracting and irritating. at most if i’m dying of starvation to the point i’m in pain or dizzy i’ll go shove some pepperoni or grapes down the hatch but otherwise i’m not going to peel myself out of my chair. i always have a drink on my desk, though. gimme those useless sweet empty calories i don’t need.
What time of day do you usually write?
i write best in the morning or mid-afternoon, but by about 4pm i’m done for the day. i guess part of my brain views writing like a job so i tend to function best during regular “work” hours. sadly that means after work i never get any writing done.
Where do you write?
at my desk. someday i’d love to have like a personal study/craft/art/sewing room... that’d be the coolest shit ever.
How often do you write a new fic?
lately there has been no rhyme or reason to when or how much i write. years ago i’d write like 100 new stories every year. it’s halfway through may and i wrote two ‘fics this year and rewrote two more. yikes. i didn’t write even one thing in april. (I FIND IT VERY UPSETTING but i just don’t have the time or energy to write anymore, it seems. been slowly outlining a longfic buuuut you know how that goes. :/)
Do you listen to music while you write?
as a general rule: no, absolutely not. i struggle so hard to concentrate that any noise at all can fling me clean out of writing mode. i know some people like busy noise in the background but it just gives me a terrible headache and forces my concentration to split badly.
Paper or laptop?
my arms are basically ruined so typing is the only way i can write without being in massive pain. i use a desktop. i used to have a laptop that i used *just* for writing and i wish i could get into that zone again because it was really nice to sit down at a laptop that i only used to write because it automatically put me in a writing mood. but the last laptop i bought to write on is too laggy (cheap!) to use for that purpose so i have it with me just to take out of state when i visit my folks.
Do you have a special pre-writing ritual?
i like to get some breakfast and a fancy coffee or make some hot tea and sit down at my desk.
What do you do to get into the writing?
i engage in maladaptive daydreaming for hours on the regular and usually while laying around with my eyes closed. sometimes i put my head down on my desk. it’s a little weird, i guess, but i find it so much easier to concentrate on thoughts if i can’t see anything lmao.
Do you have a reward system for word counts?
my bitch ass isn’t allowed to do anything until i get finished what i sat down to write so getting to do what i want is my reward system. not ideal but i’ve had some success with it simply because i write best when i have long periods of time to write and i can just work until a goal is complete. i do poorly when i make tiny goals for myself like “write for 10 minutes” or whatever.
Is there anything else about your writing process your readers don’t know?
i rewrite and edit a lot as i go. i can’t move forward if i can’t think of a word or if i need a question answered. i just can’t. i also have to be able to read my work aloud to myself while i’m working on it because if not i can’t get it to sound right. this means i pretty much have to have the house to myself, which rarely happens at the same time as actually having energy and time to write. for example, i’m alone right now! until noon tomorrow! but i worked two hours of overtime and i’m tired. i have to clean the house. clean a new cat tree we bought from someone on craigslist. do the dishes. do laundry. and i could do a lot of that tonight so that i could wake up tomorrow at like 7am and start writing but i’m tired right now and i won’t. it sucks but there’s just nothing i can do about it, especially when it doesn’t feel worth powering through lmao.
tagged by: @bossard (thanks pal :D)
tagging: @arthoure, @poolsidescientist, @everbrilliantheartbreaker, @chidorinnnnn, @markoftheasphodel, @goodguyjean, @kippielovesyou, @lindowyn, @americannoteven.
9 notes · View notes