I thought Google WAS the creep watching you?
You know, until you said this, I was only hitting the "I get that" rating because I knew about manga where the characters are anthropomorphized operating systems, search engines, etc.I thought Google WAS the creep watching you?
#25 sounds like the worst recipe for veggie soup EVAR.Boomers on Facebook : the album.
Needs more butter.#25 sounds like the worst recipe for veggie soup EVAR.
Some of these must be people faking stupid in an attempt to be funny, but damn if I know which ones they are.Boomers on Facebook : the album.
And fewer veggies.Needs more butter.
This a still frame from the more scientifically accurate Jurassic World 2, scene #1845: "R is for Raptor".
So why don't they underline the 6 on a D6?It's obvious. It's there so someone won't confuse it with a nine.
Yes, we all know that there's no "9" on a d8, but that doesn't mean someone in a hurry (or who has been up for 36 straight hours of gaming) won't still "see" a 9.
Everybody hasa d2 lying around. It's called a coinIt's obvious. It's there so someone won't confuse it with a nine.
Yes, we all know that there's no "9" on a d8, but that doesn't mean someone in a hurry (or who has been up for 36 straight hours of gaming) won't still "see" a 9. Alternatively, the manufacturer might have decided to simplify things and use the same stamp used to make the d10s.
If you really want to talk about silly faces, ask to see a d2 or d3. Your more clever shop owners will bust out a copy of a Blizzard game.
--Patrick
Because the faces are square. No chance of confusion. The faces of (traditional) d8 and d10 are both triangles and therefore easier to confuse with one another (unlike the d4, which is also a triangle, but much more obviously a d4).So why don't they underline the 6 on a D6?
... Are you saying that you can tell which side of a square - whose defining characteristic is that it is the same on all sides - is up??Because the faces are square. No chance of confusion.
No, I'm saying I can tell which face of a cube is up. There's a difference. Also I can immediately tell it's a cube. My point was that the faces of a d6 are all square, whereas the faces of an octahedron (d8) and the standard decahedron (d10) are a triangle and a kite, respectively. The latter two shapes are easily confused for one another, making it possible to mistake a d8 for a d10 at a glance, or vice versa. Nobody will accidentally think a d6 is a d8, for instance, because the faces' shapes are so distinctly different. Therefore, there is no need to underline the 6 on a d6 because it is obviously a d6, and interpreting the "6" face on a d6 as a "nine" requires a certain amount of willful disregard.... Are you saying that you can tell which side of a square - whose defining characteristic is that it is the same on all sides - is up??
Well, really, I was waiting for you to point out that only a fraction of a percentage of D6s use numerals, whereas the overwhelming majority use pipsNo, I'm saying I can tell which face of a cube is up. There's a difference. Also I can immediately tell it's a cube. My point was that the faces of a d6 are all square, whereas the faces of an octahedron (d8) and the standard decahedron (d10) are a triangle and a kite, respectively. The latter two shapes are easily confused for one another, making it possible to mistake a d8 for a d10 at a glance, or vice versa. Nobody will accidentally think a d6 is a d8, for instance, because the faces' shapes are so distinctly different. Therefore, there is no need to underline the 6 on a d6 because it is obviously a d6, and interpreting the "6" face on a d6 as a "nine" requires a certain amount of willful disregard.
--Patrick
I considered that, as well as mentioning that the "6" side of a pip die would read the same right-side up as well as upside-down, but the ones that come marked with pips are usually sold bundled only with other d6s that are marked with pips. To get a d6 marked with Arabic numerals usually means buying it as part of a set containing the aforementioned d8 and d10.Well, really, I was waiting for you to point out that only a fraction of a percentage of D6s use numerals, whereas the overwhelming majority use pips
Spoken like someone who never dug through the dice bin at a game store.I considered that, as well as mentioning that the "6" side of a pip die would read the same right-side up as well as upside-down, but the ones that come marked with pips are usually sold bundled only with other d6s that are marked with pips. To get a d6 marked with Arabic numerals usually means buying it as part of a set containing the aforementioned d8 and d10.
Shame on you for underestimating my level of pedantry. Shame, I say.
--Patrick
Nope! Bought one set (at a bookstore that's long out of business), been using that one set ever since.Spoken like someone who never dug through the dice bin at a game store.
You mean on a regular dice?So why don't they underline the 6 on a D6?
Those things with pips are simply a layman's dice. They aren't what we - true roleplayers - refer to as a d6.Well, really, I was waiting for you to point out that only a fraction of a percentage of D6s use numerals, whereas the overwhelming majority use pips
Yeah! They look like thisThose things with pips are simply a layman's dice. They aren't what we - true roleplayers - refer to as a d6.
He LARPs it.You roleplay bloodbowl?
Hardcore.