Gundark
Explorer
TheAuldGrump said:An entire phrase: "My hat of d02"...
No way man. I love that phrase still

TheAuldGrump said:An entire phrase: "My hat of d02"...
pogre said:meh... - I think a word used to show casual disdain, but not something I have heard anyone ever utter.
Pbartender said:I've actually heard people say this. Not as any sort of reactionary exclamation, but in a purposeful effort to show casual apathy in a way that they think sounds as cool as they think it looks on the 'net.
Internet 133+ speak simply doesn't work outside of a written medium, people.
TheAuldGrump said:But I like pulp - its ubiquitous nature adds verisimilitude to any session.
*Ducks*
The Auld Grump, yes, it was atroll, but only a very small one, almost a goblin, really...
Samuel Leming said:I've heard 'feh' and 'bah' spoken before Internet usage was common. Isn't 'meh' just another way of saying 'feh'?
Samuel Leming said:Really the problem with many of these terms is lack of a common definition. Good examples are fluff & munchkin. When a poster calls somebody a 'munchkin' is he talking about a cheater, immature player, min-maxer, or just somebody he doesn't like?
Truly, this word would embiggen any person who deemed to use it.One word I'd like to see used more in 2005 is nemmerlesque.
Sejs said:So you're surrounded by illiterate people who've read and crow about Harry Potter all the time? Man, life on Bizarro World sounds rough.![]()
Sejs said:Anyway, that aside - Heinlein, Asimov, Bradbury, Tolkien you say. All good authors, granted, but they all speak to a comparably narrow audience, whereas the HP books are widely recieved. You can't deny that more people reading is a good thing, even if you don't care for, or are sick of, what it is they read.
Sejs said:Besides, someone who enjoys reading Harry Potter now is that much more likely to be interested in picking up something by one of those other authors you mention later on, than someone who never got into reading in the first place.