User:Oportet

Ello! I'm Kyle. I'm a newbie right now, but I have some stuff I'm working on that'll change that soon. I've been practicing Wiki formatting with some occasional edits; I've been going through the Wiki's recent changes and sprucing up recent work that interests me, so if you're here because you saw me edit your creation, well, that's why.

Foreshadowing!

While you're here, I've got some game design philosophy below. Once I organize myself some more, I'll have a nice fat list of my contributions. Until then, just assume that I personally did everything you like on this Wiki, and that all the bad stuff was written by my evil twin, Steve. That way, you'll like me, and we can be friends! Yay, friendship!

Also, I'm not a cop.

Writing and Philosophy

I'm heavily involved in the theoreticals of games and storytelling. When I see something interesting, I tend to write it down and analyze it as part of the thought digestion process. This leaves me with a collection of D&D-related essays on my hard drive, and since I'm already here, I figured I might as well share them. Take your pick:

Oh, and if you do read through these, feel free to put comments on each's talk page.

Notable Contributions

This list doesn't include all of my contributions, but I put ones here are the worth your time checking out.

Equipment

Races

Creatures

  • Mr. Stake (Collaboration with anonymous IP. MUUUUUUURSTAKE!)




TODO:

  • Snag a cool picture for this page
  • Finish secret things
  • Take out the trash
  • Do the dishes
  • Feed the dog
  • Feed the dog to the dragon
  • Feed the dragon to the tarrasque
  • Discover the meaning of life
  • Not die
gollark: The important thing is probably... quantitative data about the amounts and change of each?
gollark: Regardless of what's actually happening with news, you can probably dredge up a decent amount of examples of people complaining about being too censored *and* the other way round.
gollark: With the butterfly-weather-control example that's derived from, you can't actually track every butterfly and simulate the air movements resulting from this (yet, with current technology and algorithms), but you can just assume some amount of random noise (from that and other sources) which make predictions about the weather unreliable over large time intervals.
gollark: That seems nitpicky, the small stuff is still *mostly* irrelevant because you can lump it together or treat it as noise.
gollark: Why are you invoking the butterfly effect here?
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