Finally got around to playing Ena Dream BBQ. Damn, this game sure has charm! Playing it in short sessions because it's very tiring to play (too hyperactive).
I am on Blahaj Zone tho ;)
What I mean is that, when you make your post local-only on e.g. blahaj, you also prevent good people at Beehaw and other safe instances from participating. I DO support moving to Blahaj though, I think it will improve the situation a little. But the struggle will continue nonetheless.
A nice small (and cute!) backpack that I always take with me when I go outside, plus a water bottle that I have near me at all times.
They perform rituals in the woods instead
The closest Lemmy can do is making your posts visible only to users from your instance. But there isn't one single women-friendly instance so IMHO it isn't a great solution.
"I can't believe I slept with you!" is very good, despite its stupid premise.
All of them, basically
Some additional features:
You can follow other users. Also you can get notifications from a post, a user, or a community, without subscribing to them.
"Feeds" can also be made public and shared with others. Here's my feed for local Lemmy Blahaj communities: https://piefed.blahaj.zone/f/blahajlocal, as an example.
Keyword filters are a built-in feature. I'm not sure yet but if it's bound to your account and not the client then your filters will be synced between different devices. Even if it's not true it's still better implemented than in most Lemmy clients.
Some more transparency on votes (e.g. users have "attitude" stat which is a percentage of posts/comments they upvoted against the stuff they downvoted).
User flairs are also available! You can specify some info for a specific community without changing your display name.
Searching is nicer than on Lemmy. You can go to a community and search there too.
Just the stuff I noticed from my first look btw, there's probably more!
In music, Justin Broadrick from Godflesh (among his numerous other projects). His music resonates with me the way that not many other albums do, and it helped me go through some tough shit in the past. Godflesh is weirdly calming for me.
In game development, I adore Akuma Kira's stuff. They're most famous for Spooky's Jump Scare Mansion but they also has more serious horror games like Lost in Vivo and Corpse Ocean, and of course their (relatively) recent Lunacid. The thing about their games is, the games weirdly possess both horror and cute, comfy or goofy elements. There's no notion that horror must be scary from start to finish - some moments are cute/comfy, some are genuinely scary, and some moments are both at the same time.