People used to driving in big cities tend to drive very differently than those who are not, which can be a terrifying experience for the latter.
Trust me, in Italy it's the big cities where you're afraid for your life. Or at least afraid for the lives of the people on scooters you see around you.
"That's life in the big city," as they say. For twenty years I have been hearing people in Austin talk about how scary it is to drive in Houston, but that is understandable: Just driving all the way around the OLD loop (which has been well inside the city limits since I was a kid) takes 2-3 hours, so folks in Houston are used to driving 80+ mph to reach their distant destinations as quickly as possible. Any oblivious Austinite blissfully unaware of the rest of the world is likely be abruptly and forcefully reacquainted with it if he gets in the way. I would have thought you used to that kind of thing though; the entire country is (and several neighboring ones) is a big city where you are, right?
How goes the Baldur's Gate, incidentally? It has me in full nostalgia overload now; Durlags Tower was not nearly as challenging as I remembered it from a decade ago, but still a lot of fun (I used walkthroughs for the main game because the exploratory interest was no longer there, but redid Durlags on my own since it is all about puzzles and traps.) I just re-started SoA, but am unsure how much time I will spend on it since I have become a part time student again.
I'm glad you're enjoying it so much, but frankly, lacking the nostalgia, I don't think I've actually even opened the game since around the time (or possibly even before) I started talking about it with you. The game I've been playing instead these past weeks is closely related though: Neverwinter Nights (player-made modules, many of which are much better than the original game).
I can certainly see that, but if it is just the player made stuff drawing you I again suggest the apparently extensive BG modding community. Just a couple days ago I saw a Silmarillion mod that I will probably be forced to check out when I have time (not sure when that will be.) I might get around to trying NWN one of these days, but am told it uses 3rd ed. AD&D rules, and that kills a lot of the attraction for me. Not only am I far less familiar with those rules, but what I do know of them consists of things I did not want removed from AD&D 2nd ed. and things I resent WotC for shamelessly stealing from GURPS (a vastly better system than any of the many AD&D employed over the years.)
What continues to amaze me is the enduring legacy of the games I spent so many hours enjoying during and just after HS, how many of the most popular games are still little more than variations of those classics with improved graphics and functionality. Wolfenstein 3D spawned Doom, which spawned Quake, Civilization is still alive and well, BG led to NWN and even Star Control still has a large global following of people pounding away at each other in Super Melee like I was doing 15 years ago. In many cases, online modding communities have given some truly ancient games a lifespan their developers could never have anticipated (with the possible exception of Doom, whose developers seem to have intended modding from the outset, and ultimately even collected and published many of the results.) PC gaming is not only no longer a nerd niche, it has reached the point that not only gaming but individual games have a deep, rich and ongoing history. It is a strange to realize that after growing up in a world where 90% of people had never heard of Hack.
Honorbound and honored to be Bonded to Mahtaliel Sedai
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!
LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.
Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!
LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
America's Quirks noticed by Non-Americans
07/11/2011 06:55:22 PM
- 2292 Views
Wait, in Europe they leave soap on dishes to dry?
07/11/2011 08:25:33 PM
- 1354 Views
It's very regional. They always do that in that other country where they are insane. Like denmark. *NM*
07/11/2011 09:18:26 PM
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I had to ask one of the Brits I worked with about that one
08/11/2011 04:48:11 PM
- 1250 Views
I can't even imagine not rinsing them. Like you, I didn't realize anyone did that? *NM*
08/11/2011 04:55:33 PM
- 636 Views
Depends on how much washing-up liquid you put in the water.
09/11/2011 08:13:51 AM
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I don't think it's different.
09/11/2011 04:30:58 PM
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It isn't. I was going to say exactly the same thing about the laziness and "soap."
09/11/2011 05:42:44 PM
- 1169 Views
We are talking about washing dishes by hand, right?
09/11/2011 06:50:09 PM
- 1025 Views
Yes. And here's the difference between what you do and what I do:
09/11/2011 07:08:06 PM
- 1034 Views
EWIE!!! I can't imagine eating soap with every meal... That can't be good for you. *NM*
10/11/2011 01:48:16 AM
- 665 Views
Who are these weirdos who say Americans write checks to pay for things?
07/11/2011 08:27:24 PM
- 1273 Views
The problem with these things is that you always get the entire US answering them
07/11/2011 09:32:07 PM
- 1115 Views
I'm guessing everybody who's been to the US outside NYC, then.
07/11/2011 09:42:10 PM
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No pretty much everywhere in the US people use plastic 99% of the time *NM*
08/11/2011 12:31:49 AM
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This totally depends where you are.
08/11/2011 12:57:11 AM
- 1253 Views
Once again, that isn't what they were talking about
08/11/2011 01:29:19 PM
- 1183 Views
You know I worked in a store, right?
08/11/2011 01:49:36 PM
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I repeat: I have NEVER seen someone pay by check in a store since 1989. *NM*
08/11/2011 01:56:59 PM
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I know you travel quite frequently, but I'll refer you to Paul's comment above re: New York. *NM*
08/11/2011 02:10:36 PM
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I spent 1990-1999 in the South, you know. *NM*
08/11/2011 02:46:19 PM
- 589 Views
I knew you'd gotten around.
08/11/2011 03:06:20 PM
- 1190 Views
I would call one to two checks a week pretty rare
08/11/2011 06:28:59 PM
- 1054 Views
Which is still more often than places that never use them.
08/11/2011 06:58:30 PM
- 1193 Views
Oops. This is Jen. Don't start attacking! Eep. *NM*
08/11/2011 06:59:09 PM
- 651 Views
Always good to see couples know each other's passwords
08/11/2011 07:19:18 PM
- 1149 Views
I think I know it, but I actually was accidentally in his account. He put the computer down.
08/11/2011 08:08:45 PM
- 1086 Views
*I* at least was mostly thinking about rent checks. But yes, I've seen it in stores too.
08/11/2011 09:47:58 PM
- 1131 Views
so paper checks are history in ???
08/11/2011 10:51:01 PM
- 1050 Views
Belgium. *NM*
08/11/2011 11:13:22 PM
- 579 Views
Rent checks. Utility checks. *NM*
07/11/2011 10:47:58 PM
- 834 Views
Exactly - instead of automated bank transfers. *NM*
07/11/2011 10:50:39 PM
- 661 Views
They still do this in Britain too.
08/11/2011 01:13:52 AM
- 1132 Views
What's weirdest about British rent...
08/11/2011 09:48:43 PM
- 1277 Views
Re: Who are these weirdos who say Americans write checks to pay for things?
08/11/2011 05:52:19 PM
- 1074 Views
I pay the chiropractor with a check. He doesn't have a card reader and I never have cash.
08/11/2011 10:56:47 PM
- 1000 Views
Can you buy alcohol in the US at any time?
07/11/2011 08:41:41 PM
- 1141 Views
In most countries of Europe you can too, to my knowledge... as long as the store is open.
07/11/2011 09:43:47 PM
- 1121 Views
I t varies ste to state or even county to county and city to city
08/11/2011 12:35:27 AM
- 1152 Views
We can turn right on a red light too
07/11/2011 09:48:38 PM
- 1286 Views
Really? I thought that was unique to the US.
08/11/2011 12:34:14 PM
- 1396 Views
The French can do it too.
08/11/2011 03:34:39 PM
- 1057 Views
The French are shameless; first they stole our national colors, now this.
09/11/2011 01:19:47 PM
- 1082 Views
That's mostly Italy, France is not so bad.
09/11/2011 08:02:51 PM
- 951 Views
That makes sense, but I have heard horrible tales about French farmers in trucks.
09/11/2011 10:24:01 PM
- 935 Views
Hm. Never noticed that.
09/11/2011 10:31:23 PM
- 1045 Views
Sounds like you did, actually.
11/11/2011 01:23:16 PM
- 1337 Views
Cops
08/11/2011 06:31:08 PM
- 1086 Views
It is important to distinguish between cautious and combative attitudes.
09/11/2011 02:24:43 PM
- 1270 Views
If there's a green right-turn filter light, then you aren't turning right on a red at all . *NM*
08/11/2011 03:33:36 PM
- 611 Views
It's not a light. It's a sign of a green arrow
08/11/2011 03:47:22 PM
- 1051 Views
But it's a light that goes on and off.
08/11/2011 06:02:48 PM
- 1008 Views
Yes, a permanent sign.
08/11/2011 06:18:26 PM
- 1015 Views
Ah, I see. We don't have those, so I thought you meant something different.
08/11/2011 06:47:23 PM
- 972 Views
For me, the strangest thing is the phrase "could care less"
07/11/2011 10:43:54 PM
- 1218 Views
In fairness...
07/11/2011 10:50:13 PM
- 1230 Views
I think that's just a case of it being said too quickly and slurred too much
08/11/2011 02:14:14 AM
- 1014 Views
"you have another thing coming" and "it all goes well" grrrrrrrrrrr
08/11/2011 10:19:27 AM
- 1222 Views
Your last question, and a variation of it, was my recurrent thought while reading the list.
08/11/2011 12:38:53 PM
- 1114 Views
that is really what stood out to you the most going from Australia to the US?
08/11/2011 04:45:21 PM
- 1061 Views
It's "couldn't care less" in America, or at least it is in the part where I live. *NM*
08/11/2011 06:01:50 PM
- 569 Views
It's couldn't care less everywhere- some people just say it incorrectly. *NM*
08/11/2011 06:09:08 PM
- 606 Views
Interesting about the flag.
08/11/2011 04:16:12 AM
- 1139 Views
I wonder how much of that is American and how much is European culture.
08/11/2011 12:53:15 PM
- 1091 Views
More like "we tend to equate respecting a flag with liking a country"
08/11/2011 01:57:26 PM
- 1189 Views
Part of it is, as Joel notes, a general European trauma that isn't shared by some.
08/11/2011 09:56:22 PM
- 1203 Views
Because my husband lived in England and has family there, I knew some of these. BUT...
08/11/2011 12:42:07 PM
- 1189 Views
It varies here, it's certainly not unusual to have a space between.
08/11/2011 10:00:38 PM
- 1194 Views
Huh. Only ever saw those holes in the ground in Belgium. and had to pay to use them.
09/11/2011 03:28:35 PM
- 1131 Views
I've never seen them in Belgium - nor in France outside highway parkings, to be fair.
09/11/2011 08:05:09 PM
- 1115 Views
When I was in England we saw way more flags than we typically see in the US.
08/11/2011 01:32:47 PM
- 1187 Views
So many fat people.
09/11/2011 01:19:24 AM
- 1256 Views
We do have high calorie intake and low inclination to exercise. *NM*
09/11/2011 01:26:40 AM
- 641 Views
That's half-true
09/11/2011 02:09:48 AM
- 1094 Views
I think there was a Family Guy episode about this.
09/11/2011 02:27:07 PM
- 1155 Views
Re: I think there was a Family Guy episode about this.
09/11/2011 02:33:18 PM
- 1151 Views
Ah, that makes a difference.
09/11/2011 03:05:44 PM
- 1075 Views