Well then, I'll choose one at random. *grabs hat and pulls a slip of paper out of it* Size 10. Oh, wait. *pulls out a second* You have to give up leaving your gmail account logged in on a public CONputer.
I know, and they didn't do my toenails either. Yeah, my bros got me to shoot some one time. It was enough for me to know I didn't enjoy it. We don't have a roof.
Double ew. Shame shame... Top of the frame gunner??
What, you don't normally take your shoes off in theaters? I feel none. We'll have to strap the person there, but sure.
I CON be. My family would attest to that. Yesh Teacher.
Everybody is a idiot sometime. I mean look at me Your one of those "lovable scamps with a heart of gold" types, aren't you? The type everyone cheers in the sitcom of life when they trick someone out of eating the last Hershey's bar so they can eat it themselves only to give it to some poor homeless kitten on the way home!!! *Runs around in jodhpurs, slapping riding crop against boot* shotgun lessons are in session kiddies.
I'm the weird homeschooler punk who likes keeping the peace at all costs. I'd eat the Hersheys, but I wouldn't have stolen it in the first place.
Everybody is a idiot sometime. I mean look at me Your one of those "lovable scamps with a heart of gold" types, aren't you? The type everyone cheers in the sitcom of life when they trick someone out of eating the last Hershey's bar so they can eat it themselves only to give it to some poor homeless kitten on the way home!!! *Runs around in jodhpurs, slapping riding crop against boot* shotgun lessons are in session kiddies.
I'm the weird homeschooler punk who likes keeping the peace at all costs. I'd eat the Hersheys, but I wouldn't have stolen it in the first place.
*salutes awkwardly* YES SIR!
*Tries not to laugh* I bin learned at home to. It's funny how many people I meet that are home schooled. Technically you didn't steal it. You convinced the other person that they didn't want it and that you needed it. So wait if you did do that would you be a CON artist???
*spins even more awkwardly on heeled boot* *collapses into a pile, but stands up, pretending I didn't fall* That's right, attention! *tries to think of something to instruct students on before they realize I don't know anything about anything*
Double ew. Shame shame... Top of the frame gunner??
What, you don't normally take your shoes off in theaters? I feel none. We'll have to strap the person there, but sure.
Nope, tennies are comfortable and theater floors tend to be gross. I do under the table at restaurants sometimes though if I'm wearing high heels. Each to their own. I see no problems with that. Who should we get!! >:3
I finished my part first before diving into the coding. I did a quick doodle of the part I explored and filed it away for Legoagentfigure. I was the last to come in, if that gives you any idea of how unwieldy my commands were for this mission.
First off pulled up an Olympic race, and studied the way they ran. I quickly pulled up my running move, made a combo for it that let me study it in fluid motion, and then realized it wasn’t fluid at all, and with a deep sigh I settled down to a very long session of coding.
It took me a while, but I finally duplicated the moves. The problem was, my guy seemed to be churning through water. He was doing the moves all right, but still not moving fast enough to match them.
So, now what? Was all this for nothing?
I wasn’t done yet.
Was there any way to determine how much of your speed was being used by a move? Kind of like a power meter, which as of yet I hadn’t discovered for attacks yet either.
I tried google. Of course, it gave me nothing.
I started scrolling through moves, then later options, desperately terms and CONditions, and finally an instruction manual I dug up online. That bugger was seven hundred and two pages long, and fifty six of them were exclusively related to chatter combat, which made me wonder just how people managed to miss how important this was.
But then again, I reflected upon glancing at the time, maybe it was too much work for most of them to bother. I was going to be a zombie tomorrow.
Oh well, I might as well make it an all-nighter. It wasn’t like those three extra hours were going to help that much, right?
I found what I was looking for on page 243. I almost missed it, my vision was blurring and quite frankly I reading without CONprehending at that point. But the percentage sign caught my attention.
I snapped back awake, and thoroughly read through the paragraph once, twice, six times.
And then with a wild look upon my face, I dove back into the game. I ran a test command along with my standard run move.
TheGreatCon: run (power search) – 80%
I gasped. I had found it. And that was revolting. The originally move was using only 80% of my actual speed. Since my new move was using the run as a basis I would still only be using a portion of my actual speed. I quickly switched back to the document, and found the command to increase or decrease speed.
TheGreatCon: dash (speed 100%)
I watched as my minifigure shot off like a bullet straight out the muzzle of a firearm. I grinned like a maniac, and then went in search of a Powerade or something to help keep me awake for the remaining twenty minutes till school.
-last edited on Jul 7, 2018 3:20:05 GMT by TheGreatCon
Post by TheGreatCon on Jul 7, 2018 3:13:47 GMT
Nobody is probably going to care in the least about this, but Con went nerdy again, and did some weird stats work. *collective groan* Anyways, I wanted to know who I had featured the most in my stories. I worked out a 5 point system, where 1 is a bare mention, and 5 is a major role. RP stands for somebody's Roleplay character being in the story.
I gotta say, though most of it was predictable, I was super surprised that Waffles had so many big roles.