I mod a worryingly growing list of communities. Ask away if you have any questions or issues with any of the communities.
I also run the hobby and nerd interest website scratch-that.org.
- 2.75K Posts
- 2.97K Comments
Yes, he’s very famous for exaggerated fantasy art.
SSTF@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What should we be doing, individually, to increase Lemmy's userbase?
4·2 days agoThis is true that crossposting is messy, but I think it is the best current solution. Crossposting means it is more likely to show up on the feed of somebody only subscribed to one of the communities, which might remind them that the community exists. Crossposting also means that when somebody stumbles upon a community it at least has the appearance of a pulse.
SSTF@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What should we be doing, individually, to increase Lemmy's userbase?
11·2 days agoThere are certainly plenty of communities that aren’t dedicated to doomscrolling. They do need more activity though, plain and simple. I can’t single handedly solve the issue of the All feed having so much of that, but I do try to regularly contribute to communities that are more varied, and I suggest to you and other users to do the same. Lemmy is a much smaller userbase and can’t rely on the same proportion of users to contribute content like reddit.
Here are just a few communities I like to visit regularly, and contribute to any time I have a good contribution that aren’t full of doomscrolling content.
!imaginarywarhammer@lemmy.world
SSTF@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What should we be doing, individually, to increase Lemmy's userbase?
8·2 days agoThis is true. During the big migration wave to Lemmy about 3 years ago, a lot of people came over and started niche within niche communities with the idea of making straight up 1 for 1 copies of very niche subreddits. I’ve even inherited moderation on some of them.
I think the best way forward is to try and backfill by posting a majority of content to some of the more main communities, and then crossposting to the more niche ones. This makes the more general and I think more important foundational communities active, and it gives a trickle of content to the already existing niches. Not being afraid of crossposting and then in general posting more is a good answer.
SSTF@lemmy.worldOPMto
Traditional Art@lemmy.world•Saint George and the Dragon by Bernat Martorell. 1434-1435. Tempera on panelEnglish
7·2 days agoThe text is from the display for the piece at the Art Institute of Chicago.
The strap is part of the reins, being held in George’s left hand.
Stargate SG1 - It’s like Star Trek with machineguns.
FarScape - It’s like Star Trek but the main cast are fugitives, there’s lots of muppets, and watching it makes you feel like you’re on drugs.
The Righteous Gemstones - Danny McBride made comedy farce about a horrible, vain, and stupid megachurch family.
Batman Beyond - Cyberpunk batman with an unparalleled intro sequence.
Jericho - Post apocalyptic show with a conspiracy mystery bent and heavy GWB GWOT flavor.
Kings - A sort of adaption of the story of King David in a modern setting.
SSTF@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What do you wish you'd have known before you started your hobby(s)?
1·4 days agoOPR skirmish is the easiest to talk people into since it uses GW minis they probably already own. All it needs is people reading the free rules and making a list. It feels like a proper skirmish game instead of the strange hero battle game modern Kill Team is. This is doable if a store has a Discord or something to do barebones meetup planning even with strangers.
A little more difficult, but doable if you’ve eased people into alternate ideas is getting people to agree to an older 40k edition. It requires buying or, uh, finding the rules and codexes, but it sidesteps the problem of constant rules changes. My preference is 3e (I have very little personal interest in Primaris marines) which is much less bloated than modern armies of the same points value.
I am no longer asking for your oats.
SSTF@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What do you wish you'd have known before you started your hobby(s)?
2·4 days agoMeanwhile in Gamma World.

SSTF@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What do you wish you'd have known before you started your hobby(s)?
3·4 days agoYes, tabletop gaming is so much bigger and more varied than GW’s games. I love 40k and Warhammer fantasy, but just as one part of the hobby.
The high pricing and FOMO churning is pretty perfected by GW. It is easy to fall into just thinking and buying GW products at MSRP. There are many ways to avoid it and play for much cheaper, but it means breaking out of the GW exclusive ecosystem. (I have many specific suggestions how to do this btw.)
I can’t stand the modern tournament culture which has this sort of e-sports stink on it.
As a mild piece of good news OnePageRules seems to have decent traction and isn’t too difficult to find groups who play in stores. It has its shortcomings, but at least the rules aren’t subject to the constant market driven churning updates.
SSTF@lemmy.worldto
pics@lemmy.world•In all my forty plus years of processed foods, I've never seen a mistake so glorious. [OC]
7·4 days agoRare Pepes? In this meme economy?!
SSTF@lemmy.worldMto
Fallout@lemmy.world•Bethesda announces a new Fallout... reality showEnglish
5·4 days agoTactics has that old school cred as long as you aren’t too fixated on lore precision. It’s a good game with an overall interesting premise made by a totally different team that gives it some outside perspective.
SSTF@lemmy.worldMto
Fallout@lemmy.world•Bethesda announces a new Fallout... reality showEnglish
9·4 days ago
Made for the thread.

SSTF@lemmy.worldOPto
FoodPorn@lemmy.world•Half sweet and half spicy plate of pierogisEnglish
3·9 days agoThe cream for the sweet pierogis isn’t exactly whipped cream. I can’t quite identify it, but I think it is some kind of sweetened sour cream (this is something I’ve have before) that’s been whipped to bee less dense than normal sour cream.



















When I was in elementary school one of my classrooms had Stratego among the board games meant for bad weather days or waiting after school.
I had previously played Stratego and liked it, but every single other kid in this classroom read that the ‘Spy’ piece could kill the ‘General’ (the most powerful) piece and concluded that the ‘Spy’ could therefore kill any piece on the board. I was shouted down by everyone for pointing out the actual wording of the rules and that a ‘Spy’ is called that because it’s obviously supposed to be a sneaky piece.
Nobody agreed and just played the game with the ‘Spy’ as a rampaging super piece killing everything. That was pretty miserable.