Yeah, StS really ruined me for other deckbuilders, and I'm still chasing that high. Some pretty good ones have been Power Chord and Banners of Ruin. They're both team-based games where cards are tied to certain characters, and I think that particular mechanic adds enough that it took me a while to crack the code on them.
They're not technically a non-profit, but there is a co-op doing exactly this named, very creatively, The Drivers Cooperative. They're only in Colorado and New York (and I think specifically NYC) right now, but it's exciting to see that happening.
I was actively taught in high school that "unions were nice, but not necessary any more, they get in the way of all our very cool free trade!"
Obviously, my thinking on that has changed a whole lot, but both my partner and I got fed that kind of rhetoric straight out of text books.
Oh, definitely. It's also worth noting that he definitely wasn't a geologist, despite having an interest in it. I was mostly just mentioning it because there were theories trying to explain the similarities across landmasses before plate tectonics. We may not always be right about why, but we're really good at noticing stuff like that (even when it doesn't mean anything).
Darwin believed one of the more popular explanations of his time: expanding Earth theory. Basically, the planet was like an expanding dough ball. It decently explained why things looked like they fit together. Darwin even went out to Patagonia to investigate some cliffs, and basically "confirmed" the theory.
I did some reverse image searching and found this: https://www.comics.org/issue/222265/
I also found it for sale in eBay, so I'm bumping it up to 95%.
Because I was exhausted, I did a dumb and forgot to say the actual name of the place. We're Zymos Brewing in Littleton. Thanks to Spiralvortexisalie for being a sleuth and getting to it before me!
I think I accidentally pulled a kind of corollary to Cunningham's law: the best way to get engagement is to post with not quite enough information. 😆 But, yeah, that's us!
Pretty much every job. I think the paradigms in most modern languages are similar enough that the actual language doesn't matter as much as how you think about structuring code.
Woomy's a hell of a drug.
My spouse: I was promised flying cars, and I don't even get a conversation pit!