I managed to glinch the game into equipping 5 amulets of talos so my shouts had zero cool-down timer, but funny thing was when I entered my apperal to see the results I had the amulet of Mara equipped aswell. Now my conversation of marriage is a constant thu’uming my bride off a cliff
It honestly wouldn't be the worst thing if we just wore a bunch of amulets and if someone else was wearing the same you knew they were down to fuck, marry or start a business.
The funniest part for me from a lore nerd POV is that the Dragonborn probably IS canonically 26 at the start of the game, since it’s been about 27 years since Dominion’s defeat of the empire and the banning of Talos worship, so if you buy theories that the Dragonborn is a reincarnation of Talos and/or Lorcan/Shor who’s returned to bring stability to the world, then…about 26 like Dennis’ fake age lol
There is no such theory tho, only about Aspect of Talos, since there is no reincarnation in TES. And Aspect can be any age, since it was never born. It's just appears.
@@effishcent317 Ive always liked the idea that the parentage of your character never matters in these games. Of course you can always imagine it in your head (especially in a game where the backstory isn’t plainly laid it out for you) but I’ve always liked the idea of just being a full blown Mary Sue in these games.
In general "reflection" or "mirroring" plays a huge role in social situations and usually increases perceived friendliness, likeability. Everyone enjoys looking in the mirror. I often use it to make my arguments land harder by reflecting the syntax and argument structure of my opponent.
The first part is obvious. She's a parody (or perhaps accurate representation of) radical feminists. She believes that there is such a thing as racial- and gender-driven power dynamics, in which the white cis male is at the top of the food chain, using their privilege to oppress everybody else. So when she says that dennis has all the power, dennis, in his distorted psychopathic worldview, sees this as a cue from her to actually display dominant behavior towards her. To him "having power" is a literal concept, not something to twist words about. So her declaring that "he has all the power" at the table, just means "you can do what you want to me", for Dennis. Hence his confusion. Then her rant becomes a bit weird, but it seems to indicate the neccesity for a vaguely defined "revolution" to change this dynamic. As with most radical feminists, the actual "discussion" here is simply a monologue that uses vague buzzwords to get words across without actually meaning much beyond "white man bad, woman good, let's revolt".
Just typical liberal babble. The whole joke was that Dennis realized these types of people aren't interested in a conversation, just in hearing their own opinions come out of other peoples mouths.
@@CCtheRapperman let's be fair, I'm pretty sure both of these characters are simply jokes based on some aspects of reality, both have some points to make and both deserve to be mocked a little bit.
Take away the meme for a second, this video finally explained to me why I attract liberal women. When they spew their outlandish (and ironically racist/sexist) theories, I usually just nod and provide common courtesy. They must interpret that as seeing their own opinions through me, when it can't be farther from the truth. They are always surprised when I directly tell them I don't support what they support.