The article is very bullish and I mostly agree, but let us be honest that a lot of these new facilities are being built in politically uncertain regions. Geopolitical risk is real and it cuts both ways.
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The article is very bullish and I mostly agree, but let us be honest that a lot of these new facilities are being built in politically uncertain regions. Geopolitical risk is real and it cuts both ways.
The comparison to Hajime no Ippo is interesting but they are almost opposite stories. Ippo is about climbing toward the top through effort and heart. The Boxer is about what happens at the very top when effort is irrelevant.
Building the article-mentioned meta-capability aside, what really sells me on the long term story here is that Replit has deployment infrastructure baked in. Writing code is one thing. Shipping it somewhere real without fighting cloud configuration is where most projects go to die.
What strikes me most is the setting. A historic chapel. A designer honoring his predecessors. A guest with her own complicated relationship to legacy and history. The layers write themselves.
The character development over the seasons has been incredible to watch.
Still not convinced about King's take on polite society. Plenty of honest writers maintain social connections.
Love how they incorporate elements from the games without making it feel like fan service
Anyone else notice how vampire stories often deal with class issues? From Dracula to the Cullens, they're usually wealthy and powerful.
The parallel between NPCs and real-life societal control is pretty clever. It's not just about a video game character, it's about breaking free from systems that limit us
The contrast between growing and forcing things really struck me. I'm guilty of trying to force outcomes too often.
I'm just here waiting for Godzilla to wreck everything in glorious animation.
I actually find comfort in knowing others go through these same emotions.
The weekly release format drove me crazy at first, but looking back, it really added to the mystery and gave us time to develop theories.
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