Lewis Carroll - Alice in Wonderland |Kate DiCamillo - The Miraculous Adventure of Edward Tulane | @/fishofthewoods - to be a wild rabbit | Aesop's Fables - Tortoise and the Hare | Matthew Scully - Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy | A. A. Milne - Winnie the Pooh | Joseph Jastrow | Haruki Murakami - Kafka on the Shore
Toady One, from the Dwarf Fortress Development Log:
Continuing along with adventure mode stuff. We posted a roadmap over on Steam - I can't replicate the picture layout in this log, so here's a link: Roadmap. We're still stubbornly not updating our dev pages here since we're looking forward to being done with the UI updates and getting back to core development ha ha.
But until then, the work progresses! I got some zoomed travel map site art in and have been setting up the raw format and generation of portraits. It seems like it'll work about like the current layer sets we're using to create regular dwarf/etc. graphics with some minor changes. We're also adding palette support there that can be linked to items or body appearance as it stacks the layers. We have new default body and equipment sets paired with new palettes for the regular creature graphics so those pictures will get a nice update as well at some point in this process.
We have a preliminary layout for the adventure mode interface as well, though this is likely to change. No matter how it evolves, we're hoping to keep the giant tortoise person for the perform action ha ha.
Conundrums of Consciousness: Navigating the Mind-Bending World of Philosophical Paradoxes
Philosophical paradoxes, challenging perceptions and pushing intellectual boundaries. Explore conundrums such as the Ship of Theseus and Schrödinger's Cat, revealing the complexities of existence and prompting reflection on uncertainty.
Welcome, curious minds and intellectual adventurers, to our exploration of the most intriguing puzzles known to human thought—philosophical paradoxes. These are not just your average brain teasers; they are the mental gymnastics that philosophers, scholars, and the perpetually puzzled have wrestled with for centuries. Imagine trying to solve a Rubik’s Cube in pitch darkness, where each twist…
like maybe a yr or 2 ago my family found an abandoned tortoise in our front yard (we live in the valley? howd it even get there) so we took it in for a lil while. kinda miss it tho, it always followed me around and let me handfeed it. anyways, look at the lil guy eat!