Funko Pops, to me.

I understand that some of them are fairly overpriced, but I also really like them as is. It doesn’t work on all characters, but it sometimes work on a lot and there’s so much representation and variety that it’s good to have a few.

If people want to talk about waste of plastic and vinyl, they should bark at the companies who make teeny tiny figurines that serve no purpose and have so little detail that spending any money on them is a waste.

  • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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    Starfield. The game isn’t bad, it just isn’t as good and the game design was especially outdated for its release window. It’s legitimately a better RPG than most Bethesda games.

    I’m fairly confident modders will actually be able to salvage it despite its flaws.

    • SanguineBrah@lemmy.sdf.org
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      I enjoyed the basic formula of past Bethesda games and Starfield delivered more of the same plus some cool extras like being able to disable and board/capture spaceships. I don’t understand the sentiment that’s it’s outdated. Modern AAA games are not dramatically different in design to games from 10 years ago in my experience.

    • do_not_pm_me@thelemmy.club
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      I had fun with it. I don’t pay attention to the story anyway. Skyrim and oblivion didn’t have great stories imho either.

    • hightrix@lemmy.world
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      Seconded. I actually enjoyed the game for what it was, almost Skyrim in space. Almost, don’t shoot me for saying that.

      I had fun with the various factions, with constellation, and the story was reasonably unique but maybe not extremely enthralling.

      That said, my expectations were basically zero. I purposefully ignore all prerelease hype about video games as it tends to ruin the actual experience of playing the game for the first time.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      I’d be less annoyed with it if it were bad. It’s just the most boring thing. There’s nothing interesting going on. If it were bad there’d be a reason to care about it.

      It’s just really annoying because Bethesda used to care about doing something interesting with their games. It’s just increasingly gotten more generic though, and Starfield is the worst of it.

    • finderscult@lemmy.ml
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      I remember being underwhelmed when elite dangerous released an expansion that let you explore some planets on foot. And then starfield released.

  • Funko Pops

    I… I don’t think of these at all, I just ignore their existence.

    Personally, hating on people who post things on social media that are slightly offensive to others get more hate than they should. We should reach out and try to explain the issue in a civil matter instead of just loosing it because that doesn’t make us any better. And if the person doesn’t want to understand or care, just ignore them and move on.

    Hating on products because either are bad, or underwhelming is ok as these companies know this and clearly don’t care because they are already making money off it. However this is only recent due to all the Enshittrification we are getting force fed by these same companies.

  • M137@lemmy.world
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    That title isn’t getting as much hate as it deserves.

    It’s either “What do you think got way too much hate?” or “What do you think got way more hate than it should’ve?”. You somehow combined those sentences into a grammatically broken mess.

    And it’s fucked up that this hasn’t been pointed out and isn’t one of the top comments.

    • _lunar@lemmy.ml
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      It hasn’t been pointed out and isn’t one of the top comments because nobody fucking cares.

      You are the epitome of 🤓

      Edit for people getting mad about this: The content of OP’s post is perfectly coherent, so it’s not like they’re daft and don’t know better. The title was a mistake, we’re human, we make them. Even if OP didn’t know better, one could just as easily assume that they aren’t a native speaker and politely correct it without being a complete dick about it like the comment above.

      But ultimately, who the fuck really cares? The notion that it’s ‘fucked up’ that people aren’t dogpiling on someone for making a grammatical error on Lemmy is fucking stupid.

  • Random Dent@lemmy.ml
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    Men wearing wigs.

    For whatever reason, we’ve decided as a society that women wearing wigs/weaves/extensions to make themselves feel attractive and nice is perfectly normal, but if a man does it it’s laughable and pathetic. I say, wigs for anyone who wants them!

    Also before the accusations start, I’m not a bald dude lol.

    • Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works
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      Real talk - as a balding dude, there was a time when I was part of a bonus structure program, and I half-jokingly started looking at hair systems. Not because I’m balding and ashamed of it, whatever, but I missed being able to style my hair in a way that looked good. That, and I loved the idea of showing up to work with a whole head of hair, refusing to acknowledge it aside from saying I got a haircut. 'Cause that shit would’ve been hilarious.

      Ultimately decided against it, too much $ for vanity and a joke versus sensible balding guy haircuts/the occasional clear cut.

      • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Get one and (after you tire of that excellent joke) swap it on/off and hide it when people have their back turned like Igor’s hump switching in Young Frankenstein.

  • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    Cyberpunk 2077 - it was overhyped as fuck but as someone who ignores the bullshit grind mill of video game journalism it was a decent game on release that became pretty fucking awesome after patches and the expansion.

      • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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        23 minutes ago

        It honestly is. Pre-release hype is just marketing and we tend to enjoy things more if we don’t have high expectations coming in.

    • seth@lemmy.world
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      I thought it was great on release. Bugs were mostly easy to work around or beneficial and didn’t stop me from completing the game. I stumbled onto a bug that was basically infinite money and unlocked all the cars and motorcycles before it was quickly patched. Also a way to terrain glitch the psychos and beat them when I should’ve have been strong enough. Cruising through content when you feel like you’re breaking the world like Neo dropped into a William Gibson novel is exactly what I wanted from a cyberpunk game.

      • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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        For me it just crashed often enough that it was frustrating to keep redoing things and one side quest got stuck because an enemy was half dead in the floor and I couldn’t finish them.

        I let the game rest and played it a year later, it was great then. Half a year later I played it a second time, with different gender, weapons focus, and starting background. It was great again :-)

    • Random Dent@lemmy.ml
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      Yeah I think once games reach a certain level of hype there’s almost no way to release them without getting a big backlash. People (IE gamers) tend to build these things up way too much in their minds and go in with really unrealistic expectations.

    • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      Same with anything. I didn’t see the Barbie hype, went in an watched it and thought it was good. Same with the Wakanda film. Didn’t see any of the hype and had a great time.

    • Nicht BurningTurtle@feddit.org
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      It was a buggy mess on release and deserved the hate for that. Now 2.0 fixed that and redeemed it. It doesn’t deserve new hate.

      • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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        Most of the release bugs were pretty minor and cosmetic - like cars exploding without warning.

        It absolutely wasn’t amazing on release but the gameplay and world were fun and engaging.

        • herrvogel@lemmy.world
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          Absolutely not lmao. They made an open world game that’s set in the criminal underground of a busy city, but the police was literally unable to drive until a patch several weeks after launch. Which A LOT of people didn’t get to experience because for weeks the game wasn’t stable enough to playable for them anyway.

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    Microwaving food. Too many people think that it’s radiating the food. Its just making the water molecules in the food wiggle and heat up to warm the food through internal collisions.

      • overload@sopuli.xyz
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        That is true lol.

        The heating effect is more due to standing waves rotating the (polar) water molecules in the food.

        There aren’t hot radiation particles moving into and staying in the food like a number of people believe.

        Microwaves (and 5G) have much less energy than visible light, but its a scary sound word. People don’t like to think that they are exposed to radiation 100% of the time.

        • gens@programming.dev
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          Microwaves are ~2.4GHz, same as wifi. That is the resonant freq of water. They don’t go deep, not even close to a milimeter. And it all converts to heat.

          The sun is more damageing then microwaves of same power. And ionizing radiation is the really harmful one.

    • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      I don’t like it, but that’s because it’s usually the faster but inferior quality option, bread/bun gets hard, sometimes uneven heating, some things get slimy, etc. I opt for toaster oven or range/pot/pan over microwave 9/10 times just because I have the extra 10-20min and prefer the quality. Radiation (for me) has nothing to do with it.

      • overload@sopuli.xyz
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        That’s a fair call and I’m the same, its not optimal for a lot reheating. I’ve met a fair few people who refuse to own or use a microwave because the don’t want their food “irradiated” or think that it is somehow unhealthy.

    • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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      they often called it nuking. took a good 15 years before mass acceptance. early ones had warnings about standing near with pacemakers could kill you.

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    Funko Pops

    Imo they aren’t getting nearly enough of hate they deserve. I’m not against figure collecting in general but FP are the ugliest motherfucking thing i ever seen in this department, for the same amount of resources, labour and energy they could produce something much better. In fact, a consistent long serie of figures faithful to the original (not ultra-deformed) across so many franchises would been great, but alas only thing there is are those unholy abominations.

      • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml
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        Yes, but english language call “art” literally everything made with even a slightest hint of intention, which those things had to be because there is no other purpose (except lining the pockets of publishing mafia).

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      I also take issue with buying something that does nothing. “Oh I’m going to put this on that shelf and never touch it again”. It screams cash grab. They’re made of brittle plastic so you can’t play with them. And as you say, they’re ugly.

      • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml
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        I would argue that collecting things having purely aesthetical value is also legit, though there is an issue about manufactured demand and role of merchandise in popculture, but fair enough.

        • Pulptastic@midwest.social
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          I see benefits of displaying art made by a person, but I take issue with collecting. It feels like a form of hoarding.

          • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            21 hours ago

            I collect comics, which are (printed, yes, but) art made by people. Sometimes I’ll sell off a run, some I’ll keep forever because they’re fantastic. Different strokes ig.

          • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml
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            It definitely can be, for example art is very often hoarded as form of investment, and this can be a much lower-price form of the same, but not necessarily. I would say the more those things price is, the more chance for hoarding.

            That is, economically. If you mean hoarding as in psychology probably it’s more depending on person, a lot of people i know including me were collecting more or less useless things but nobody i know went into true hoarding problem and most of those people at some point got bored and got rid of their collections. Other than above personal experience, idk.

      • NeoToasty@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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        You must hate furniture then. Because, I’d want my bookshelves, nightstands and even my bed to do SOMETHING.

        • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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          Bookshelves hold books, nightstands hold plenty of shit, and beds hold my sleepy self.

          What were you trying to say?

          BTW, if you want to criticize throw pillows I’m happy to join in but I don’t understand your choice of furnishings to criticize.

        • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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          I’m a woodworker, youtube often recommends me woodtube content. Tool reviews, project builds, shit like that. And occasionally “How I made $15k making these” with a thumbnail of a guy holding a simple pine triangle.

          Turns out he miter saws triangles out of pine, stains them, paints the tip of them white, and now it’s a mountain, which he sells on Etsy for damn near $30 for three. They are functionless and do nothing. And there’s apparently a demand for them.

          I refuse to sell trinkets like that. If I make anything, it will have some function. Maybe I will take some off-cuts and band saw out some apple-shaped coasters or something because keeping the condensation from your drink from puddling on your nice new table is a thing and it might as well be a fun shape, but I will always be that one step away from “pieces of wood to clutter your house with.”

          • weeeeum@lemmy.world
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            21 hours ago

            Also a woodworker and primarily a tool maker for this reason. I want to make something USEFUL.

            • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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              20 hours ago

              On my own projects (some of which you can find in !woodworking@lemmy.ca) I end up having narrow off-cuts, often from ripping boards to width. I save these up and when I’m sick of having them around I glue them up into panels, cut them into squares and make coasters out of them. They don’t really match anything other than they’re made of the same species I tend to work with.

    • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      Yep. Especially on right-wing instances like Lemmy.world in particular, but it’s far worse IRL in the West.

    • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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      my opinion is that people who push for it havent lived in it. everything is lowest common denominator, if you can even get it. no incentive to invent, no reward for innovation.

      • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        Can you explain what you mean by “lowest common denominator” as well as the bits on “no incentives or rewards for innovation?” The USSR was one of the mosy scientifically advanced countries in the 20th century.

      • MarxMadness@lemmygrad.ml
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        22 hours ago

        Most people who oppose socialism haven’t lived in a socialist country. Meanwhile I’ve lived my whole life under capitalism and can see it doesn’t work for the vast majority of the population, or for the planet as a whole.

        Most of the world is capitalist, and most of the world is poor.

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        You live in a fantasy invented by your own propaganda. I don’t even know how you’d measure what you’re saying at a mass scale, much less notice it while living in a country.

        “Oh man, if we were in a capitalist country, Jim would have invented a new form of sliced bread, but alas we are unmotivated by our available housing and food.”

    • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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      Yeah. I feel like they get so much hate because they are the closest symbol for “maybe things aren’t as clear cut as you thought”, and it freaks people out.

      • Random Dent@lemmy.ml
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        I think also some people who feel like they can’t be as openly homophobic as they used to be in the 80s/90s/2000s have just transferred their bigotry onto trans people instead because they think they can get away with it.

    • Mossy Feathers (She/They)@pawb.social
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      <3

      Edit: it’s… sadly very easy to forget that you don’t deserve the hate, which is why I didn’t put this in my post. It’s something I’ve been trying to work through lately.

    • kipo@lemm.ee
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      My first thought was this, and when I opened the thread your reply was the first response listed as well.

    • NeoToasty@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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      The reason they’re being hated is entirely for religious reasons. Just like any other individual from the LGBTQ umbrella are scorned similarly.

      But I have to play devil’s advocate now that I’m thinking of it, but one thing I don’t like about trans people, isn’t just who they are. It’s the spotlight is primarily on them, by a community that had once stressed about caring about all individuals of all backgrounds. Yet, Trans people got all the attention almost and what that has caused is levels of infighting and people giving cold shoulders. They’re from people who’re gay or bisexual (which these days, bisexual people feel shunned the most).

      That’s not what should happen but unfortunately, it is and I don’t like that people just suddenly decide who gets more priority over others. That’s not equality.

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        23 hours ago

        But I have to play devil’s advocate

        That’s not being a devils advocate, it’s just plain transphobia. As if trans people somehow have the power social power to choose the worlds attention.

        You say hate is for religious reasons, and then blame the victims of that hate for the attention they’re getting from their oppressors, the very people you yourself just said are responsible for it.

        And honest opinion or not, you chose to spend your energy undermining a trans person talking about our oppression, when you could simply have chosen to not do that. And that shit is creating the very problem you just blamed trans people for

        • NeoToasty@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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          Do you even know what a ‘devil’s advocate’ is? No, so you just jump to a baseless assumption instead which clues me in, into how intellectually inefficient you are. A devil’s advocate is “a person who expresses a contentious opinion in order to provoke debate or test the strength of the opposing arguments.”

          You continue to entangle and twist the context of my comments to squeeze into your narrative. And you want to talk about undermining? You are truly insufferable. Maybe you ought to take a look into the mirror and understand that your attitude partly contributes to some of the more legitimate problems people have against trans people such as you. And why your kind is being used as a platform to base trans people off as which is trigger-happy, oversensitive, broken people.

          Congratulations for proving me right. And this is coming from a non-binary bisexual individual by the way.

  • BoxOfFeet@lemmy.world
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    The Pontiac Aztek. It had awesome features I’d love to have in my car today. Tailgate with molded seats and cup holders. Speakers facing out of the back. A cooler. Foldable and removable rear seating. MP3 cd player from the factory.

    Also, Funko Pops deserve more hate than they get. But I don’t like figures of any kind, I collect staplers.

  • dantheclamman@lemmy.world
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    Buying music as CDs. Sure they were expensive at their peak, but they came in high quality, I could rip and do with them as I wished, while still having an offline copy. I have a lot of my old ones from childhood

  • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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    I think generative AI is a great recent example. It’s a neat toy, it has some practical applications. The problems that people ascribe to it aren’t inherent in the technology, but are simply symptoms of underlying social problems in a capitalist society.

    For example, people complain that it takes jobs away, but the whole idea that we have to work for the sake of work is idiotic to begin with. Technology that frees up people from work should create more free time for people to enjoy. The reason that’s not happening is because capitalism is not a rational economic system.

    Another common argument is that it’s very resource intensive and wastes energy. This is true, but there’s no reason to believe this won’t be optimized. In fact, we’ve already seen a lot of optimizations happen in just a few years that now make it possible to run models that used to require a data centre to run on a laptop.

    However, more fundamentally, wasting energy is once again an aspect of the capitalist system itself. Before AI we saw stuff like crypto, NFTs, and so on. Much of the technology that’s developed under capitalism ends up being frivolous or even actively harmful. So, it’s not generative AI that’s the problem, but the social system that guides allocation of labour and resources.

    • Dr. Quadragon ❌@mastodon.ml
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      1 day ago

      @yogthos This. Crypto as well.

      Having some Internet-wide independent currency is, in my books, a genuinely good idea. It allows people like me to survive under the unfair governments. Yes, plural. I work internationally, you see.

      What’s happening around this tech with all this scams and market gambling and the fact that everybody jumped on the literally first implementation which is very much underdeveloped (frankly, fucking raw) - well… that sucks, and that creates a blind backlash.

      @NeoToasty