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Post by frogge on Aug 3, 2017 15:48:54 GMT -8
hey I am frog(ge), froghemoth, etc. they/them. eclectic practitioner of uhhhh maybe ten or so years now. background in hermetic/western mystery stuff, but very much disillusioned with mainstream occultism. had a chaos magic period but not really happy with that either. just initiated as a bard in the OBOD a couple days ago. located in the PNW, meatspace friends with founders etc.
feels like there's a big new wave in occultism, magic, etc, like there hasn't really been since the early internet explosion of occultism and witchcraft on usenet and IRC, and I think this is gonna be a good staging ground for a lot of those developments, so I gotta be here, you know? want to be in the Loop.
as far as focuses/specialties/interests--for a long time I focused on defensive magic and countermagic, but I'm branching out now. I'm happy to dabble in nearly anything. if you see a big dark gray cube with truncated corners flying around on the astral, esp if someone's standing on top waving their arms around, that's probably me.
nonmagical interests: ttrpgs, worldbuilding+conlanging, scifi and fantasy, folk music, other music, getting into amateur smithing, probably a dozen things I'm forgetting.
edit: yes, my avatar image is a toad (an oak toad, specifically). I just like my username.
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Post by doublecrowley on Aug 3, 2017 15:56:33 GMT -8
3/4 woohoo (welcome)
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Post by ghost on Aug 3, 2017 20:31:46 GMT -8
haha yikes i thought that 3/4 was a rating. i was like..... damn.... GG frogge......
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Post by lena01 on Sept 6, 2017 0:01:45 GMT -8
Frogger is a 1981 arcade game developed by Konami. It was licensed for North American distribution by Sega-Gremlin and worldwide by Sega itself. It is regarded as a classic from the golden age of video arcade games, noted for its novel gameplay and theme. The object of the game is to direct frogs to their homes one by one by crossing a busy road and navigating a river full of hazards. The Frogger arcade version is an early example of a game with more than one CPU, as it used two Z80 processors. By 2005, Frogger in its various home video game incarnations had sold 20 million copies worldwide, including 5 million in the United States.
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