Anonymous
9/8/2025, 2:57:54 PM
No.12010664
[Report]
Gaming Laptop Died
I fried the motherboard of my gaming laptop and can't play my FGs or my RTS's at the moment. I have a Chromebook from 2016.
I want to emulate some old SNES or Genisis games that are underappreciated.
Games That I have already tried
FE4, 6, 7, I like them but I am burned out on FE now
DKC, Love the music and visuals but the gameplay kinda bores me
Chrono Trigger, I have zoomer brainrot and can't enjoy a slower rpg
Metroid was kinda fun
Streets of Rage was fun as a kid
Idk I want a nice game with nice visuals and addicting but high skill ceiling gameplay. I don't really want platformers bc the skill comes from memorizing levels and speed running which is gay.
I am in my mid 20s and this takes me back to being a broke student at 17. I couldn't afford a real game console so I just modded my Wii and emulated on my laptop.
Now adays I am boring. I play Soulcalibur VI competitively and Tekken, SF, and GB casually as well as Starcraft II. I like the high skill ceiling and the relatively low time investment required.
Anonymous
8/27/2025, 1:06:50 AM
No.23178860
[Report]
>>23178638
isn't there literally a Greek myth warning us of this shit. King Minos of Crete or something?
>Minos asks God for sign of divine favor for political strength
>God gives him a bull, and as a sign of submission to divine order king Minos is supposed to sacrifice the bull back to god
>Minos pulls a classic Jew move and swaps out the bull
>As divine punishment, Poseidon makes his wife grow lustful to the bull
>The Queen orders the kingdoms best craftsman to make a female bull statue she can climb in. A symbol of man's attempt to circumvent divine order with cleverness
>A monster is born
>King commissions the same craftsman to construct a massive labyrinth to keep the minotaur hidden. Further symbolism man trying to subvert nature/God with his cleverness.
>Maidens and Children are sacrificed to the labyrinth, symbolism of societal decay due to apathy. There is a price to be paid for ignoring sin.
>Thesus, the hero, goes into the labyrinth and slays the beast. Channeling the heroic archetypal energies of courage and duty to root out hedonism.