craftrabbit
There's an RSS feed as well, oh joy!
TSCHÜSSI FRÄ BÜSI 👋
Hi Bad, please never stop stirring up the userbase :))
What I think this rule is trying to accomplish is making it impossible for someone to see a post where the punchline is missing because it's in the next strip or something like that.
With that interpretation, posting a Love and Hex strip, for example, would be fine, since, while it has a pretty defined overarching story, each strip contains a joke with a punchline on its own as well without having prior context. But, suppose Love and Hex comics were posted only two panels at a time and someone posted one of those two-panel strips here. The post wouldn't make sense to anyone without additional context.
To me, it seems like this is what the rule is trying to accomplish and that seems like a sensible thing to have. If that is the case, the rule should probably be rewritten to something like "Comics should be enjoyable as they are posted and not require additional context" for clarity.
Oh, a diinki. The only one I've ever seen, in fact.
Well, you did learn something.
Yeah, I know, I'm talking about the way it's written. This name and its description really give off US-military/CIA operation vibes to me.
It obviously exists elsewhere as well, but the name psyop can only come from the USA.
Psychological operations (PSYOPs) are military operations to convey selected information and indicators to audiences to influence their motives and objective reasoning, and ultimately the behavior of governments, organizations, groups, and large foreign powers. (From Wikipedia)
So basically propaganda I guess. Gotta be one of the most Murican things I've read in a long time...
Oh wow, seems like what he's doing is not as bad as this post makes it out to be, although I'm sure he's doing it with bad intentions anyways.
Thanks for the sources, kind stranger!
This is one of the most 'controversial' posts of all time on Lemmy
Hi SpaceNoodle. I think you should watch a blender tutorial made by a native English speaker and pay attention to what they call the singular intersection of multiple edges. I think you'd enjoy that a lot.