Campster learns a valuable lesson about vocabulary.
3 Comments
The Fighting Doll
Wow, despite it being in the title of the episode, it took me 5 minutes to parse that Campster was saying étagère and not some kind of alien gadget name. Gotta work on those accents :p
Isn’t the room elephant that Rutskarn also didn’t know the word? 🐘
~
Also, the main utility of words is the communication of ideas via shared language. So, if Rutskarn and Campster (and Josh and Alex) don’t know a word, is it even a word?
~
Oh, sure, it’s mentioned on the internet, but I’m just gonna assume that no one is going to argue that “mentioned on the internet” should be the decisive standard for utility or truth or really anything really.
Always weird to see a different order to it. My playthrough went to night when I left the cave, which I feel is the intended time, but making the game open world means that won’t happen for everyone.
This game does reward and sometimes require a thorough playthrough. You won’t be able to understand much of what’s going on without exploring all the houses and reading documents and diaries.
Wow, despite it being in the title of the episode, it took me 5 minutes to parse that Campster was saying étagère and not some kind of alien gadget name. Gotta work on those accents :p
Isn’t the room elephant that Rutskarn also didn’t know the word? 🐘
~
Also, the main utility of words is the communication of ideas via shared language. So, if Rutskarn and Campster (and Josh and Alex) don’t know a word, is it even a word?
~
Oh, sure, it’s mentioned on the internet, but I’m just gonna assume that no one is going to argue that “mentioned on the internet” should be the decisive standard for utility or truth or really anything really.
Always weird to see a different order to it. My playthrough went to night when I left the cave, which I feel is the intended time, but making the game open world means that won’t happen for everyone.
This game does reward and sometimes require a thorough playthrough. You won’t be able to understand much of what’s going on without exploring all the houses and reading documents and diaries.