Definitely agree on the slower bit. I would love to play a much slower version of this at least to learn the controls better and also think through some strategy.
If it sped up over the course of the game that would be great.
In response to Leibniz's ontological query "Why is there something rather than nothing?" Morgenbesser answered "If there were nothing you'd still be complaining!" — Sidney Morgenbesser
In response to Leibniz's ontological query "Why is there something rather than nothing?" Morgenbesser answered "If there were nothing you'd still be complaining!"
Dr. Eric Berg has a great Youtube channel where he explains his take on how a ketogenic diet and also intermittent fasting (and the two together) can help to reduce insulin resistance (and type 2 diabetes) and improve metabolism. I personally find his explanations very helpful:
Sure! They've actually varied a lot and I've liked them for different reasons, but across all categories I can say I don't like science fair style, really appreciate non-pizza food, and won't wear low-quality t-shirts more than once.
Competitive: Salesforce, Capital One, and AngelHack events are fun because there's a clearly defined goal and some concrete metrics. I really enjoy seeing the pitches at the end and thinking about how we all interpreted the challenge and responded.
Creative: YC Hacks, GitHub Music Hack Day, Yo Hackathon, and Brainihack all elicited some pretty fun stuff. I missed the Brainihack this year though, too bad! Techendo was pretty cool too, albeit small.
Cooperative: Some hackathons had lots of small prizes or none at all. Paypal Battlehack was really fun, a Change.org hackathon was stress-free and friendly, and I learned a lot at a Swift "hackathon" where even the smallest accomplishments were celebrated.
I haven't been to any college hackathons yet, but I'm looking forward to Hacking EDU in October!