![]() Graphic Depictions Of Violence, Rape/Non-Con.Gianfranco898 Fandoms: Mass Effect Trilogy, Diablo (Video Games), Darksiders (Video Games) Language: English Words: 341,408 Chapters: 72/? Comments: 198 Kudos: 57 Bookmarks: 14 Hits: 2,819 Crusader Johanna has seemingly gone mad, and she isn’t the only danger out there. But Inarius inexplicably turns into a strange baby angel and now it is up to Lyndon and the allies he makes along the way to keep him safe as he flees from his former friends. Kenyizsu Fandoms: Diablo III, Diablo (Video Game)ĭuring a raid on the Realm of Hatred, a futureless Lyndon accidentally finds and tries to save the captive Inarius. ![]() With no where to turn to, it is in those he hates most he must take solace and strength in order to set right the wrongs and let go of the past before it consumes everything. ![]()
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![]() ![]() The idea is to match cards up in a ongoing chain, mirroring the flow of a natural, happy chat. As you travel further, however, you’ll pick up fatigue cards that can’t be matched with any symbol. You play cards in turn, and each card has a coloured shape on either side. That involves travelling and talking to various characters, playing cards in a quest to make a connection. Your home town is at risk of losing relevance, so you’re tasked with collecting more goods to make it a more trade-friendly destination. Unlike Slay the Spire or other modern deckbuilders, Signs of the Sojourner is more story-driven. Signs of the Sojourner Image: SteamĪ clever deckbuilder where the goal isn’t necessarily to overpower your opponents with the best cards, but to play the right cards to work through various conversations. This post has been updated since its original publication, with new games added and old ones removed. Unfortunately, my limited understanding of the do's and don'ts of data analysis keeps me from going beyond such vague doubts, so my conservative response is to basically disregard such findings. Of course, there's usually some "validation" thrown in the final report/paper to show that the statistical analysis is on the up-and-up, but the blatant publish-at-all-cost attitude behind it all leaves me doubtful. Here's the typical scenario: costly experiment gets carried out (without much thought given to the subsequent analysis), the original researchers cannot readily discern a "story" in the gathered data, someone gets brought in to apply some "statistical wizardry", and who, after slicing and dicing the data every which way, finally manages to extract some publishable "story" from it. In my line of work I often come across what looks to me like rampant "data snooping", or perhaps it would be better described as "data torture", though those doing it seem to see the same activity as entirely reasonable and unproblematic "exploration". On the other hand, "exploratory data analysis" seems to be a perfectly respectable procedure in statistics, at least judging by the fact that a book with that title is still reverentially cited as a classic. ![]() ![]() Many times I have come across informal warnings against "data snooping" (here's one amusing example), and I think I have an intuitive idea of roughly what that means, and why it may be a problem. |
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