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#minigame
polish-art-tournament · 5 months
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minigame I
this is all very confusing so minigames are getting their own roman numerals this time
THE TIME HAS COME
WE ARE GOING TO DECIDE THE WORST / BEST / FUNNIEST / MOST ICONIC JP2 STATUE
as all my fellow poles living in poland know, this country's obsession with the late Wielki Polak who among his other vices joined the war on AIDS on the side of AIDS led to the construction of many many MANY excellently awful statues. some of them have been mapped here. choosing the worst / most iconic ones was difficult and i'm sure i overlooked some of your favourites, so feel free to add some in the reblogs . our contestants for today - some of them from outside Poland:
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have fun, #2137
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one-time-i-dreamt · 4 months
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There was a popular Minecraft minigame called Drag. This lead to out of context compilations of Minecraft YouTubers saying that they’re “really good at drag.” And fanart.
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the-ideal-iplier · 13 days
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Out now~ 🍸
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doriana-gray-games · 8 months
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Sexy Watson baking minigame 🥰🍰✨
The public release of a patreon thingy I did:
This is a short interactive story based on a prompt I got: "Sherlock licks cream off of Watson's finger".
Setting:
You are romantically interested in Watson, and they are in you. There has been flirting and advances, but nothing has quite stuck—yet. All progress seemed to reset when one of you doubted the other's intentions, and so, in romantic limbo, you remained. The romance level is further in than the game is currently.
Disclaimer:
The MC is the type to be able to flirt (boldly or shyly) and to be able to realise flirting is being directed towards them—at least when these flirts are quite… overt.
Not all MCs from the original game are necessarily catered to here. (Examples being: very oblivious, explicitly tsundere, very cold or reserved, etc. It simply didn't work with the limited scene.)
The story is technically SFW, but it does linger on the edge.
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oldschoolfrp · 5 months
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TSR's Mini Games were their answer to the microgame movement, pocket-sized board games with folded paper maps and a small sheet of counters (ad from back cover of White Dwarf 30, GW, April/May 1982)
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I continue to sin against humanity
(text under cut) (click for better image quality)
Evan: “It’s so empty now. Where did they go?”
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traff1csstuff · 5 days
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Emrys' mini game!!! A little rhythm game sounds fun :3
[Eyestrain & poorly made horror underneath]
Similar to Sam and Jades maybe one of the notes has a raw meat sort of texture and if you click it you get a gazillion notes and a low quality scene like this
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shepherds-of-haven · 7 months
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Screenshot the game to get your results! Feel free to reblog and share what you got! 😉
(The titles should be fairly self-explanatory, but here's a key if you want:
Mission partner = who you prefer to have your back on missions
Bunkmate = who you're always bunking down with/sharing a room or a tent with while out in the field
Fake couple = who you'd pose as a fake couple with (typically for undercover reasons)
Always disagrees with you = thought it was more descriptive than 'rival')
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PRESIDENTS MINIGAME!
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„Prezydenci RP nie mają szczęścia, ponieważ jednego zastrzelono jak psa, drugiego wypędzono jak psa, trzeci słucha jak pies”
('Presidents of Poland are unlucky, as one of them was shot like a dog, another shooed away like a dog, the third obeys like a dog')
Narutowicz:
socialist sympathiser, engineer, professor, actively engaged in social work since youth
agreed with Piłsudski's vision for a post-ww1 Poland
won the election thanks to PSL and ethnic minorities; this resulted in a massive right-wing backlash, culminating in his assassination
Wojciechowski:
socialist, activist, agitator, professor
a politically active president, he sought balance and compromise and kept the sejm active without a break throughout his term
an on-and-off ally of Piłsudski; in youth they cooperated as socialists, but later clashed on matters of government. Piłsudski eventually ousted him in a coup d'état
Mościcki:
inventor, scientist, professor, entrepreneur, capitalist fever dream of a man, had 911 godchildren (not a joke), installed a golden bathtub for himself at Wawel
a puppet-president, he was mostly a ceremonial, largely apolitical figure, entirely loyal to Piłsudski even after the latter's death
on friendly terms with Hermann Göring
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totic · 9 months
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decided to learn how to code yesterday, so here's my first game.
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try and beat my score! (193)
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bee-bee-cee · 6 months
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DAY 29 ∴ AQUATIC / WATER
"Sploosh... Kaboom!"
Salvatore's Squid-Hunt game, which is very similar to the classic game "Battleship". I heard that "sploosh" sound too many times before I finally got to see his victory poster ✨
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polish-art-tournament · 5 months
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minigame III
at last, welcome to the folk costumes minigame (my own choice, again, with only the ones i judged to be most distinctive and recognizable)
welcome to the world of lace, stripes, layered skirts and funky hats!
1. strój biłgorajski:
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2. strój cieszyński:
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3. strój krakowski:
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4. strój łowicki:
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5. strój górali podhalańskich:
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6. strój żywiecki:
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aspvera · 4 months
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Made something for Help Wanted 2 ! 
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cero-sleep · 4 months
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Made a small computer game with Trece for an assignment, Dreams & Nightmares!
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ssksscrapboard · 1 day
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My favorite mini-game ever
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Adventure: A Wager Among the Waves
Never try to cheat a dragon, not only are they sore losers, whatever game you’re playing you’re playing it by their rules.
Hooks
Having traveled to Port Sweldin in order to catch a ship, the party get to enjoy a few days enjoying the picturesque beachtown while waiting for a vessel known to be traveling to their destination. Sweldin boasts of lively boardwalk amusements, charming market streets, and a thriving artist community that caters to both tourists and wealthy folk summering
All seems to be going well until early on the morning of their fourth day when the party assembles to see their ship come in only to watch as it suddenly begins to sink out in the harbor. Rescue boats are dispatched ( which the party may be pressganged into) but the effort is interrupted when a grey scaled dragon launches from the waters below and delivers an ultimatum to those gathered to watch the chaos:  His name is Xemplaris, and he is there to claim their shore by right of challenge as the town once challenged him long ago. Before he leaves, he claims that he will sink any ship he sees out on the water, throwing Sweldin into chaos and preventing the party from reaching their long sought destination. 
No one has any idea how the port managed to anger a dragon, but when the party investigates a few miles up the shore they find that the chalenge they’re expected to meet him in is not combat, but an elaborate game. Xemplaris has smoothed out the beach and drawn in a grid, arranging his side of it with large stones and giant shells. Apparently he expects the party to source their own pieces before he tells them the rules, which will require them to go savaging above and below the tideline to find the assortment of oversized tokens needed to compete. The dragon will take great amusement in this, and may engage them in conversation as they thrash about in the surf. during which they may be able to piece together why the beast is doing all this beyond just draconic greed.
Setup: Several hundred years ago,  Beryl Sweldin was a dwarven huckster entrepreneur in search of his next con venture, after being chased out to the coast after his most recent scam enterprise went belly up. Born the son of an imperial scout and surveyor, Sweldin knew a good patch of land when he saw it, and stumbled across a stretch of shore that with a little dredging and other sorts of management would make a fine deepwater port. The only problem was that this stretch of land was inhabitted by a young dragon, who’d grown up alone among the dunes, lairing in the shell of some massive sea-beast that’d long ago died on the beach. Already large enough to pose a threat, Sweldin cozied up to the young Xemplaris, offering him shiny trinkets  to earn his trust and persuading the innocent creature that he was a friend. After that, the draogn was just another mark, and Sweldin was going to fleece him of everything he had.  Sweldin devised a game and taught it to the dragon, wagering coins and baubles along each match and instilling the young wyrm with an undersanding that games like these were binding and one must always abide by their outcome. Naturally Sweldin was cheating, adding more rules and complications to the game each time that the dragon could get caught up in.  After half a year of this grift, Seldin eventually tricked Xemplaris into wagering the entire beach and the giant shell which served as his home, and when the little dragon lost he went away weeping.
After that it was easy for Sweldin to bilk a few inverters into his new project, as deepwater ports were sure to be big business. His grand house still sits on a hill overlooking what he made, its floors and couryard tiled with fragments from a great leviathan’s shell hauled up from the shore.
The Shore game is played in an 8x8 grid, with players taking turns to deploy their pieces anywhere across the first three rows infront of them. The game is often played in sand, and while the grid should be as straight as possible the topography does not need to be even.
Pieces are as follows:
8 roundish stones, all the same color: the main playing piece of the game, these pieces can only be moved two squares at a time. They can also be “flicked” at another piece to remove it from play. If the stone lands its hit, the struck piece is removed and the stone stays in, taking the removed piece’s postion ,were as if flies off the board without making contact it is considered out. Xemplaris requires stones for his game to be large enough for HIM to flick, meaning that for the average humanoid they are improvised weapons with a range increment of 5/15
4 tall shells: These pieces serve as the primary goals of the game, with a player losing once all 4 of their shells have been knocked down. These Shells cannot be moved once placed, and after they fall, no piece can be placed on the spaces into 2 spaces into which they have fallen.  Xemplaris uses the figureheads of different ships he’s salvaged as his point counters, and is very proud of them.
2 Flat shells: These shells move like chess knights, leaping over other pieces. If they land on an enemy piece (including a tall shell) that piece is out, but if they land on a friendly stone, that stone is protected and cannot be taken if struck ( the flat shell needs to be struck first to remove it). Xemplaris uses giant chunks of coral for these pieces.
1 Stick: The stick is three grid spaces long can be placed wherever the owner wants it provided there is not another piece in the way, including digging it into the sand at an angle. The stick is not removed when it is struck by stones, and stones cannot be placed into spaces  the stick occupies ( though the flat shell can still remove it). Xemplaris uses an entire driftwood trunk as his stick. 
2 Shiny tokens:  Not placed on the board, these tokens amount to an attempted “do over” allowing you to retake a shot or force an opponent to retake one of theirs. If the do-over is successful, the one who called for the do-over has to give the other player one of their tokens. Regardless of the outcome of the game, whoever’s holding the tokens keeps them after the game is over. Xemplaris’s tokens are a pair of shimmering gems, and expects the party to ante something equally valuable which may require them to haggle with a jewler back in port. The dragon will also allow one of the challengers to ante their eyes in place of tokens, taking vindictive pleasure in making them wager something precious to them.
The players take turns moving two of their pieces at a time, though only the roundish stones can be used twice in the same round ( first moving, then flicking). Play ends when one player has all their pointy shells knocked over, or when both players are out of stones to toss, in which case the player with the most pointy shells standing wins. in the event of a tie, the player with the most tokens wins, after which the game is a draw.
Further Adventures: 
The world was not kind to Xemplaris after he was evicted, and for centuries the dragon has nursed a shameful sorrow that slowly transmuted into hate when he matured and realized the dwarf had cheated him. Deeply hurt and fixated on winning his home back, the dragon has spent years codifying Sweldin’s nonsense game into something he considers fair, subconsciously convinced that if he could beat the long dead huckster he could undo the hurt he suffered after losing his home and fending for himself in the wider world.  His wager is simple: if he loses, he won’t destroy the port in an act of draconic wrath. If he wins: The port is his, and everyone else needs to leave or risk being burned alive. Xemplaris sees this as justice for the exile he was forced to endure, nevermind how unbalanced the scales might be. 
With his new found fortune, Sweldin married into the prosperous Stouthull clan, and used their combined influences over the newly forming town to invest heavily in shipping.  The vessel the party were set to sail on belonged to the Stouthulls, which gives Sweldin’s decendants a perfect excuse to aim the party at Xemplaris in order to buy time to rally their defences and secure their assets.  They knew the dragon was coming after all, Sweldin had told his children about the centuries long graceperiod he’d gotten the dragon to agree on before their next “rematch” and it was kept as family secret while they prepared various countermeasures.  The Stouthulls promise the party a fortune to just kill the dragon if they can, or delay long enough for them to ready wyrmkilling construct and enchanted balista they’d had prepared for just such an occasion.
If Xemplaris loses his game, he’ll fly into a rage, a half millennia of regret pouring through him and spurring him to rampage through town, tearing apart buildings desperate to find the shell that was once his only shelter. If the party can’t talk him down, they or the Stouthulls will have to kill him, being hailed for heroes in their part but always being haunted by the wyrm’s last words: “ It’s not fair, I just wanted my home back, It’s not fair, It’s not fair”
If the party do manage to talk Xemplaris down ( what port city wouldn’t want to have a draconic protector on the naval payroll?) and eventually return to Port Sweldin, they’ll find that the populace has gone a bit mad for the Shore Game, playing a table-sized version on the boardwalk and at the biweekly tournament hosted outside the dragon’s new beachside lair.   The heroes will of course have made an enemy of the Southull clan but honestly,   who’d pick a pack of greedy, murderous merchants over having a boardgame playing dragon friend?
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