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Looking for fictional books
  • I'll make sure to get back to you when I get to S3, then. Gotta admit to being disappointed that Christina just disappeared, but the fact you remember her name suggests she'll be back. Woo! Before that, to the other points:

    Leveling systems are generally terrible writing, agreed, but they can serve as excellent antagonists (something you'll see attempted often in RoyalRoad entries). I think they're a trend from Korea that stuck around because they appeal to gamers. I've never really looked into the topic, but the first I remember hearing of was called The Gamer and it released in... 2013. Hoo boy. Yeah, I'm almost 30 lol. It wasn't that long ago, but apparently long enough for nostalgia to set in. At the time it was super popular and spawned literally tens of thousands of spinoffs.

    That's not as many as it sounds like, though. Eastern novels/writing seems to be iterative, with stories slightly mutated over and over in vast quantities until something is new enough and good enough to gain popularity and shift the genre again. There's less focus on brevity, novelty is central but narrow, and the novelty is often entirely described within the title. Western web fiction is similar in some ways, but much less homogeneous.

    I do have an ebook reader. My main suggestion would be, if you've got one in mind, looking for problems with it online, like "<ebook name> stopped working" or "froze" or "won't turn on." A lot of them break in suspiciously predictable ways and are completely unrepairable. Second suggestion is to get one that isn't bound to a store, which you can freely upload epubs/pdfs to, preferably via USB cable. Everything else is pretty much subject to your use-case. Small size, backlighting, water/rain resistance and low weight are requirements for me personally.

    My reader is a tablet style thing which I can use for work. However that leaves it too large to actually read much on while in bed or on the go, and I've ended up mostly using my (very small) phone to read epubs.

    Sorry for the wall of text, but hopefully it's useful to you! As to web fiction: I do still suggest searching. There is no one website, it really is best to spread out. I often use TopWebFiction and RoyalRoad, but so many good stories are hidden in some weird forum or blog somewhere that I usually just look at story request threads for new stuff.

  • Looking for fictional books
  • Alright I'm reading Skeleton Soldier. I like it. It is a little silly, a little shallow, but it's fun and varied and damn if it doesn't pull off some emotional whiplash. Like when the female knight in the tournament tripped while everybody was booing her? My stomach dropped through the floor.

  • Looking for fictional books
  • Yoo, Skeleton Soldier is just time loop LitRPG in manga form. Absolutely cringe and I am absolutely here for it. That used to be one of my favorite genres/tropes to read! Yeah, those types of stories are rarely finished, and usually pretty shallow. Kinda like fast food for reading. I'll give it the manga a shot. Thank you!

    I really wonder wth happened with your school lol. I hated mandatory reading too, but it wasn't nearly that bad, just tedious.

    Sorry to heap more suggestions on to you, but if you're into stories like skeleton soldier you could take a look at RoyalRoad or similar web novel sites. There's literally tens of thousands of such stories uploaded for free by the authors. The vast majority of them are bad or worse, but with how many there are there's more than enough high quality stuff, some of which is novel or experimental in a way one doesn't find in published work. Just be ready to drop a story if it feels like it's going nowhere or is not fun to read.

  • Looking for fictional books
  • Hello, thank you for the update!

    Oh boy I didn’t even notice the pregnancy plot hole you pointed out. I read the second book once as a kid and never again.

    I’m really sorry to have put you through that D=

    The third and fourth books are indeed completely different, but I hesitate to suggest reading them because of your experience so far. My personal ranking is 4 > 1 > 3 > 2. I do think they go interesting places as they have more traditional fantasy scope and characters, so the world is fleshed out a lot. But it is still more of the same…

    Anyway, thank you so much for the time taken to review them. I liked your analysis. Do you have a favorite book to recommend?

  • Like honestly get over it.
  • I’ve heard the creative limitation argument a few times now. Maybe some of the incredulity people show at the thought of not eating meat is due to a lack of artistry, either in them or in their meals. Food is an art form we practice daily, and the people I’ve known to most violently protest trying a vegan dish (not veganism itself!) seem to overlap with the worst dinners I’ve seen.

    If so that would give an easy avenue to lower meat consumption.

  • Selective rage
  • The state of the rail system the most reliable measure of how civilized a country really is
  • Through a postcolonialist lens this is pretty clever. Use of civilized as a term to excuse the racist and expansionist actions of one’s own country, expansion which happens to have coincided with railways being central to industrial power. Now the colonized are civilized, are we the barbarians?

    Unironically thinking like that is the real ape-brained behavior.

  • Looking for fictional books
  • Hey, thank you so much for the wall of text!

    Yes, most of what you mentioned is what I was vaguely including with the term “YA.” I’ve read a lot of it so I’m very inured to the silly tropes and unlikely and dramatic deus ex machinas. It’s great to hear your negatives because I’m seeing my own blind spots!

    I think your criticism is valid. I don’t think it’d be correct to call any impression-based criticism invalid. Doesn’t mean one can’t also learn from it. Additionally, the negatives might make sense in context of it being YA, but that doesn’t make them weightless imo.

    I liked the second book the least by far, but maybe it’ll be different for you. I’m sorry the BBEG wasn’t up to snuff, I was absolutely convinced. Maybe books 3/4 will do it but it’s mostly in the same vein. I’m glad you still enjoyed it!

    I’m not familiar with Hollow Knight, but if you say there’s similarity maybe I should be…

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  • Like, for example, we could assume that it should be a space with discrete topology of some relevant cardinality. [...] Not sure what you mean by that, as each vote xi is generally not a function or a similar structure

    Yeah that was badly written, sorry. I was taking the xi's as well-defined preference-based utility functions, so "i is xi important". That's not even continuous unless one could say "how much of our resources will be spent on i," which is a simplification itself. Maybe instead of issues having functions ki describing all possible choices regarding an issue? By limit I meant someone saying "i is infinitely important."

    Anyway, I think it's possible to build a reasonable, continuous, preference model, depending on what the set of topics/issues looks like. Whether the properties required of the set of issues would be reasonable... I think not. I think one would end up with something maybe not discrete but certainly not continuous. Hence the second paragraph in my previous comment.

    Arrow’s theorem

    I've never heard of this. Just off the first sentence on Wikipedia, I'd question the existence of independent alternatives. It looks like non-dictatorship is defined to be ordering invariant?

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  • I feel like the preference space assumption was reasonable? Effectively asking "how important is x_i" for every issue i and then normalizing the result. Works at the limits, too, if something is considered infinitely important.

    It does depend on how one asks about the preferences. Given a different question one might get a non-complete or non-transitive preference function. Also I think that if there were dependent preferences (e.g. more roads, but only if work-from-home isn't available) then that wouldn't be continuous? Cause the preference for one would jump with the sign change of the other. Continuity might even be harmful.

    Honestly I just hate it because it's a rather unmathematical approach to say "voting is the problem" and not "our definition of fair voting is flawed."

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)L3
    L3dpen @lemmy.ml
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