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The instructions I read and watched acted a bit like they knew more than the developers. So instead of following their methods of almost exclusively training the FP in moves FP AI is understood to be best at, I pretty much just fought it like the way I usually do but with the sliders thing in mind (probably roughly what Nintendo had in mind). Some of the clips I saw showed FPs acting rather unintelligent, as if they avoided certain moves entirely; I didn't want my FP to behave like that.
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So my Sheik figure player did fairly well. I had done research on how to train FPs and learned about Ultimate's (theoretical, anyway) mechanics for training FPs.
Supposedly, when you KO your FP with a move it has, or it gets KO'd with that move, that move's "slider" goes up (meaning that your FP uses it more). And when it gets dealt damage with a move it has, or it deals damage with a move it has, the slider goes up a little.
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The Fediverse has its own Twitch-style livestreaming platform called OwnCast:

➡️ owncast.online
➡️ @owncast

Because they're both on the Fediverse, you can follow OwnCast accounts from Mastodon, and they will post in your home timeline when they go live.

For example @rstv is an OwnCast account that shows weird old films and television 24/7. You can watch the stream right now at live.retrostrange.com

There are more OwnCast accounts featured at directory.owncast.online

@awai I'm so glad to see so much Linux-on-smartphone effort working out 🙂

Going to try doing an tourney tomorrow. The one amiibo I own (thanks to my sister for that!) is the one, which I recently found out is one of the worst ones... but eh that's fine 🤷‍♂️

@servant I suppose sort of both. In some cases it can effectively be a suggestion (i.e. it could get ignored), even if it is supposed to be a rule.

Paying attention in class lecture is quite helpful, even with things I don't take notes on. I find that things 'just come back to me' that I didn't realize class taught me.

@robertroybritt Well, in order to live forever, not only must you not die of body/internal causes but you logically must have an exactly 0% chance of dying by external causes as well.

U.S. border officials copy the contents of up to 10,000 phones and computers every year and save them to a big database for 15 years, as we first reported in September: washingtonpost.com/technology/

Following pressure from Sen. Wyden, the agency, CBP, now says it's considering shrinking that 15-year save time and plans to give people more details about what they're doing: washingtonpost.com/politics/20

@servant That's neat. I've never been far outside of the US. Didn't know that existed

@Big_Diggity @Cain@theres.life I wish they had ESV....
I don't know if they legally can

I think I've spend hours looking into this. I did some WHOIS queries and there are abuse email addresses you can send reports to, I suppose to get the domain registrars to remove the entries. I really got to get on my college homework though; I've done enough

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