(Part 2) Top products from r/RimWorld

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We found 8 product mentions on r/RimWorld. We ranked the 26 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/RimWorld:

u/ZorbaTHut · 5 pointsr/RimWorld

I started very young - like, 4 or 5 - mostly by tinkering with computers and by looking through instruction manuals. I didn't really understand what I was reading, but I kept reading it. This was back in the days of BASIC - we had this book and I remember spending hours typing in programs by hand, again, without any real understanding of what it meant.

From there it was mostly practice. I took a class or two, but frankly I was already past them. Once the Internet showed up I used it to help, and helped people on it (which is incredibly valuable), and I just kinda . . . kept going.

After you've done something for 30 years, you get pretty good at it.

If you want to learn how to code, good news; it's so much easier now than it was when I did it. Start at /r/learnprogramming, then never stop. It will be difficult and you will be confused at times, but keep plowing through it.

u/Hypatiaxelto · 2 pointsr/RimWorld

Yeah. When they went... they went fast. I got started on naval stuff and kinda stayed there for a while when I was young.

Jutland was the last big naval shootout really. WWII had the Bismark chase and some skirmishes, but no real fleet to fleet (just planes to fleet).

https://www.amazon.com/Fleet-Encounters-Tsushima-Jutland-Philippine/dp/1854090127

That was the book :D

Few good WWII ones you may/may not have read all of are Pursuit & Menace you probably know from WWII about Bismark & Tirpitz by Ludovic Kennedy. And Baron Burkard von Mullenheim-Rechberg's Battleship Bismark which is a really interesting account from the highest ranked survivor.

u/SkyNTP · 13 pointsr/RimWorld

I don't see why this should be strange. Psyochapathy is a condition that inhibits feelings of empathy. It doesn't mean those afflicted cannot experience joy, or have fun at a party. Something like 1 in 30 people are diagnosed with mild or moderate psychopathic behaviour. The serial killers that are portrayed in the media are a tiny, tiny fraction of this population. The destructive behaviour of most of these psyochapaths is much more subtle, usualy in the form of emotional abuse. Psyochapaths are usually master manipulators and have really good social skills.

I'd recommend this book to read more about it: https://www.amazon.ca/Without-Conscience-Disturbing-World-Psychopaths/dp/1572304510