The ‘video game studio from hell’ is still battling the blaze
Workers at Dungeon Defenders developer Chromatic Games detail the studio’s culture over the past few years
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A WOMAN says she gets trolled online for being “fat” and married to a muscular man – some people even say that he’ll cheat on her.
TikToker Alicia McCarvell demanded that people stop leaving mean comments on her page because she is happy just the way she is and says everyone else is jealous.
A woman slammed the questions she gets after she married a ‘fit’ man[/caption]
In a video, Alicia revealed the most annoying questions she’s asked most about dating a man who is “fitter” than her.
“Questions I get asked as a fat woman dating a muscular man,” she began.
She claimed she gets quizzed over whether she’s worried that he will cheat on her due to their different weights, to which she replied not “even a little bit.”
Alicia also claims she’s asked if she’s her husband’s “sugar mama”, to which she said they make their own money.
A sugar mama is a term used for an older woman who financially supports a much younger lover.
She added that strangers ask her if her man “makes” her go to the gym, to which she responded: “He doesn’t ‘make’ me do anything.”
Alicia then sneered at people to worry about their own relationship, rather than put her down because she was happy with her husband.
Alicia has gone viral on TikTok as she films body-positivity videos, intimate moments between her and her husband, and their gym sessions.
She continuously tells people that she doesn’t work out because he tells her to, but because she wants to feel good about herself.
Meanwhile, a size 16 woman says trolls expect her to hide her body away but she says she won’t stop wearing crop tops.
Also, a mid-size woman tried all the jeans that Old Navy and the Gap has to offer so you don’t have to – here are the ones she loved.
She claimed she gets asked if she’s his sugar mama or if she’s worried that he’ll cheat[/caption]
She also says he doesn’t make her work out[/caption]
^Stay tuned after the ads for some smooth PC footage and review impressions.
The extremely weird, disturbingly fleshy, unsettlingly phallic, HR Giger-inspired survival horror thingy Scorn finally comes to Gamepass. But, beyond the Promethean aesthetic, what on earth is it all about?
Well… egg redistribution, and poking things in holes. And it might just be one of the most interesting experiences to hit Next Gen to date: something that so heavily and unequivocally leans into its aesthetic, no matter how unsettling things might get, that you have to admire it for its vision alone. There hasn’t been a mainstream release that goes all-in on grossing out the audience like this since Kane & Lynch 2: Dog Days, and if anything, Scorn is even more sickening.
Another day, another person getting Doom running on something it was never intended to – this time, Notepad!
If I had a nickel for every weird place you’re able to play Doom, I’d probably have quite a few nickels, because people just seem incredibly determined to get it to run on anything they can get their hands on. Today, this particular nickel of mine comes from developer Samperson, who got Doom running on the note taking software Notepad (slight flashing warning in the example video seen below).
While it’s definitely one of the more unreadable versions of Doom, you have to admit when watching the video, this is in fact Doom. The game itself is obviously made up of a bunch of various characters lined up to resemble the visuals of Doom. It even sounds like Samperson got the audio and soundtrack working and synced up, which could not be anything but witchcraft.
The proliferation of delivery services give customers many options, but means chaos for busy restaurants that need to manage orders across multiple apps and channels. Many kitchens handle this by juggling several devices at a time, one for each app. Klikit wants to save Southeast Asian food businesses from “tablet hell” by aggregating order information […]
SaaS platform klikit saves restaurant kitchens from “tablet hell” by Catherine Shu originally published on TechCrunch