I mean what counts as a hoodie? Just anything with a hood on it because hooded formal wear used to be a thing. Also formal cloaks used to be a thing too. They could be brought back!
Tho, wouldn’t be surprised if Armani or whatever launched a line of ‘formal’ hoodies to charge one 300+ dollars even tho it’s no diff from your regular hoodie
You don’t even need to go as high brand as Armani, the number of random clothing stores online I’ve seen push triple digit prices on hoodies that looked worse in most qualities than your average Wally World hoodie is maddening.
Geneseepaws
Saw an advert from Sak’s, underwear for …$110.- USD
That’s right, one hundred ten dollars, USA Dollars. For one briefs.
Clif
And it probably didn’t have a picture of Monkey Master.
Yeesh these kids grew up with Playstation 3’s and Xbox 360’s! It does kind of make me wonder what generations that grew up with superior hardware think of the older game generations. Like Mario 64 probably isn’t even a big deal to Walky. He probably wonders why someone would even drop 60 bucks for the remake of a game that has less polygons than the first game he ever played on his cellphone.
Regalli
Speaking as a kid who started with the Gamecube but is also a tremendous gaming nerd, depends on the game and the kid. You can’t really get across how revolutionary these graphics were at the time to someone who’s grown up with better – hell, I still struggle to remember just how floored I was going from Pokemon Crystal to development screenshots of Ruby and Sapphire and how worldshaking the difference was to nine-year-old me – but if gameplay holds, it holds. Super Mario 64’s DEFINITELY holds up, but I wouldn’t be shocked if Walky’s baffled why you’d spend $60 on a version that doesn’t even have Yoshi and Wario. (The cast is probably a bit too young for 64 DS when it came out, but it was playable on a current system until the 3DS finally died and was a staple in used DS game cases at Gamestops everywhere.)
That said, Walky’s also not the member of the cast I’d expect to have my obsessive interest in gaming history and therefore have tracked down increasingly obscure games for a previous system because they’re cult hits with a recognition of how they were revolutionary for the time even if other games subsequently did these features better. (I was WAY too young to play Eternal Darkness: Sanity’s Requiem on release, but it is a treasured part of my collection.) That, I expect, would be Danny or Amber.
Though I could see Joyce getting into a previously-banned secular video game franchise and getting REALLY into, like, Kirby lore so she tracks down the Wii anniversary collection or something. Maybe Sonic the Hedgehog. One of those games with surprisingly in-depth storylines.
Regalli
The other thing you can’t get across, as I sort of implied with the Blockbuster comment, is the original culture around a game. Like, a new Kingdom Hearts fan by now is coming into the series having heard it’s convoluted and wondering what’s a Xehanort, they missed the mid-2000s fandom culture (thank god, I wish I could erase my embarassing adolescence there) but also the ‘oh this is a cool Disney game with characters from that Playstation series, that’s cool’ and slowly getting suckered into caring about both Final Fantasy characters and the expanding cast of traumatized, tragic children having existential crises. No one playing KHI expected they were someday going to cry about ice cream and cute fluffy Pokemon knockoffs.
Someone playing New Pokemon Snap, or even the original, isn’t going to get quite how big a deal the original was because it wasn’t just taking pictures of Pokemon, it was seeing them in the games in an environment more like the anime showed (along with Hey You Pikachu, a game I dearly wish was remakable because it was fun in its weirdness), and getting YOUR pictures printed out at Blockbuster – the 3DS games let you actively interact with your Pokemon, and the Switch games let them wander the overworld. The biggest equivalent in making Pokemon feel real and the resulting Pokemania, IMO, wouldn’t be New Snap, but Go at its original release. They can understand that it was a big deal, like I can understand objectively that Super Metroid is important to gaming history, but they won’t have the same emotional connection to the game that someone who played it when it was new will. They might still have an emotional connection – I’ve got a lot of affection for Metroid after reading about its history on Nintendo’s old page for Fusion and eventually playing decent chunks of Zero Mission and Fusion, and therefore LOST MY SHIT when Dread was announced – but it’s different from the affection someone who played the originals when they came out would.
Reltzik
The first video game console I played regularly on was a 4-switch Atari VCS.
… that’s a yellow card for making me feel old. ;p
Delicious Taffy
Sega Genesis kid, here. At least until Mom left it at a fuckin’ babysitter’s house for no goddamn reason and then blamed little pre-K Taffy for it. And then we just sorta had another one up til we got the PS1, so at least it was all Spyro, Crash Bandicoot and Resident Evil 2 from there.
Miri
Console, Sega Megadrive (in 91 or 92). First computer I played games on was a QL.
Delicious Taffy
I sometimes forget that “Genesis” is just what us Yanks call it. I’ve occasionally wondered if there’s not a weird religious element to that decision.
Needfuldoer
I went right from 6-switch Atari VCS to a PlayStation, with a lot of (unregistered) Mac shareware games on top of that.
Max
We had the original Nintendo Entertainment System. That was, and still is, amazing. Original Game Boy too. Then we moved up to Super Nintendo. Super Street Fighter II is my jam.
Keulen
Sega Genesis for me as well. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 was the first game I ever played, and still one of my top favorites to this day.
StClair
The Atari 2600/VCS was my second console, by a few years. The first was this. Came with a few bus-jumping modes and every kind of PONG known to man.
Roborat
My first was the original PONG, my dad brought it back from the U.S. way before it appeared in Canada. Ruined several T.V. screens. Then came the Intellivision.
Autogatos
It’s so weird, I remember seeing the first 3D Sonic and Mario games for the Dreamcast (or was it sonic blast for PC?) and N64 and thinking they looked AMAZING at the time.
And now I’m like “oh these graphics are terrible.” And I’m a professional artist whose been into art since the moment I could hold a pencil so it’s not like my understanding of visual aesthetics is a new thing.
powerpowerpow
Lemme answer this from the perspective of a kid who grew up on Flash games, his cousin’s PS2, and eventually, a Wii, shortly after the Wii U came out. (I don’t exactly live in a first world country, so from the 80s to the mid-2010s, we were always a little behind on tech and media)
Certain games I can absolutely see the charm in. StarFox 64 still holds up brilliantly, as does Mario Kart. I have yet to play a Zelda game that I’ve been disappointed with (With the exception of Link’s Awakening HD, but that’s neither here nor there). A lot of the N64 games I went back and played, I was impressed with and had a lot of fun with. With one exception…
In my opinion, Mario 64 is… Fine. Yeah, I get that it was revolutionary, yeah everyone who played it as a kid considers it a masterpiece, and from a technical perspective, maybe it is. But as someone who grew up playing Galaxy, it just feels… Okay. Like yeah, it’s fun, but it’s also in the mid-to-low end of my list of favorite Mario games. It’s a good game, but it’s way overhyped imo.
Eh, Goldeneye Source exists, though I suppose part of the fun was flailing against the terrible controls because we didn’t know better as kids.
He Who Abides
Unless someone picked Oddjob, at which point no fun was had.
*grumbles about wife insisting on playing Oddjob because “we’re both short and Asian!”*
Schpoonman
I remember being frustrated at first, and then I played a few rounds with my brothers and realized that a tap or two of the C buttons was enough to put the average character’s aim on Oddjob’s head so he was easy pickings for headshots.
If you picked him in License to Kill you were still an asshole, though.
khn0
I have only (moderate) fun with vidja games if I’m watching. If you talk me into playing, then you should be aware that I always take Oddjob, or the crowbar at counterstrike, or drive that car counterclockwise that’s a given. Also I will always win at PVP games where speed surpass technicity (unless I’m spraypainting with bullets or trying to make a specific dance move).
That may have to do with the fact I’m from the flipper/kickers generation.
Only consoles with games on them get remembered. What’s the 64 got, two Zeldas, a Mario or four, an indie game about robot animals, some weird furry-bait space opera, several acclaimed shooters, a Yooka-Laylee clone, half a dozen Pikachu vehicles, and a meme game about monkeys? Let’s face it, the thing was dead in the water, it’d never catch on with a library like that.
Playing caves level (as Sean Bean of course) with proximity mines…holing myself up in a booby trapped crevice and laughing gleefully as my little brother blew himself up trying to find me. He eventually made it a rule that the caves level and proximity mines were no longer allowed.
Also paintball mode, trying to draw and write on the walls with it. Memoriieeeees.
Autogatos
In retrospect I did the same thing in Mario Kart battle mode. Weird play Towers and I’d just park myself at the top of a tower, on one of the question mark boxes, repeatedly getting and launching the various power ups and turning the roads below into a chaotic danger zone. I’d place banana peels on all the ramps leading up to my tower too.
My brother and I had very different playstyles in pvp games (he preferred an aggressive approach and I a defensive, strategic, sit and wait approach) and it led to…many sibling conflicts.
I mean, the internet does exist. I may have questioned if kids these days play Rock Band, but given the weird title of ‘NEW Pokemon Snap’ prompting the natural question of ‘new compared to what?’ I would expect they’re vaguely aware at least of the original. If they had a Wii U (hahahaha but technically possible) or Wii (WAY more plausible) they may even have played the original on Virtual Console.
But they have no idea of the experience of getting your favorite pictures printed out at a Blockbuster, so even if they played it, they don’t truly Know it.
Well, a new Rock Band with 2700 songs came out last year so SOMEBODY must still be into it.
Regalli
Oh, there was? When I checked Wikipedia the most recent release was VR in 2017 (which was way more recent than I expected, there was a STARK dropoff from the oversaturation of the mid-360/Wii/PS3 era to the releases for PS4 and Xbone.)
Regalli
* Release LISTED, I mean.
BBCC
My bad, it’s new DLC apparently. And as of 2020 there’s 2700 songs. This is what I get for just skimming an article about a topic I’m not deeply invested in. Mea culpa. XD
Eh, I don’t remember much about the franchise as a kid — never played the games or watched the show or movies.
The only thing I remember about it is playing with the McDonalds happy meal toys, and pretending Ronald McDonald was beating them around and shoving them in his meat grinder or something. I dunno — I guess I loved their chicken nuggets alot, and I thought that’s what made them taste so good?
You’re forgetting about the parents. As long as the parents played, these kids are likely to experience it. I got roped into (and fell in love with) my parents’ music preferences. Billy Joel, Cat Stevens, John Denver, these weren’t for my generation, but I still got to hear them and enjoy them. More to the point, my dad had me playing older game systems like the NES (I’m 24 for reference). I played and got frustrated with Duck Hunt.
I’m a 90s kid who had 3 ataris and that’s it. My parents both had one and I got my own. I go to arcades to sate my addiction. Latest and greatest goes away if money, family time or issues with certain graphics weighs in. (I can sidescroll with the best but do not make me first person. It makes me physically ill trying to track).
I mean, they know about the N64 because that’d be like not knowing about VHS tapes or rotary phones. Even though they’re not used any more they’re still iconic and constantly referenced by media and older people. Cultural osmosis. Really wish people would stop thinking not growing up with a thing = has 0 knowledge thing ever existed
221 thoughts on “Snap”
Ana Chronistic
“I’ll put on my fanciest fancy pants!”
*holds up knock-off Pajama Jeans*
*…gets a little sad*
Schpoonman
Yeah, they probably remind him of Dorothy.
Rabid Rabbit
Or at least some of the stains on them do.
I am Nothing
Ewww.
RowenMorland
Presidential seal of approval.
Doctor_Who
A hoodie with tails, like an old style tuxedo jacket.
…Somebody crowdfund that.
Sirksome
I mean what counts as a hoodie? Just anything with a hood on it because hooded formal wear used to be a thing. Also formal cloaks used to be a thing too. They could be brought back!
Siva
What about those hoodies you wear backwards, so a cat can ride in the lowered hood and get petted?
Clif
We don’t know that the hoodie with the tie printed on doesn’t have tails as well.
Needfuldoer
Nah, that’s the formal hoodie. All he really needs is a business hoodie.
Wizard
I remember tuxedo t-shirts used to be a thing, so why not a tuxedo hoodie?
anon
https://www.walmart.com/ip/Formal-Tuxedo-Drawn-Hoodie-Men-s-GoatDeals-Designs/245188650 Maybe something drawn on like this lol
Tho, wouldn’t be surprised if Armani or whatever launched a line of ‘formal’ hoodies to charge one 300+ dollars even tho it’s no diff from your regular hoodie
Schpoonman
You don’t even need to go as high brand as Armani, the number of random clothing stores online I’ve seen push triple digit prices on hoodies that looked worse in most qualities than your average Wally World hoodie is maddening.
Geneseepaws
Saw an advert from Sak’s, underwear for …$110.- USD
That’s right, one hundred ten dollars, USA Dollars. For one briefs.
Clif
And it probably didn’t have a picture of Monkey Master.
BarerMender
A clawhammer hoodie.
Sirksome
It bums me out that these children probably don’t even know about the first Pokemon Snap or even what a Nintendo 64 is.
Mr D
FUN FACT: Due to the sliding timeline, all of them were born AFTER the year 2000! MUHAHAHAHA
Sirksome
Yeesh these kids grew up with Playstation 3’s and Xbox 360’s! It does kind of make me wonder what generations that grew up with superior hardware think of the older game generations. Like Mario 64 probably isn’t even a big deal to Walky. He probably wonders why someone would even drop 60 bucks for the remake of a game that has less polygons than the first game he ever played on his cellphone.
Regalli
Speaking as a kid who started with the Gamecube but is also a tremendous gaming nerd, depends on the game and the kid. You can’t really get across how revolutionary these graphics were at the time to someone who’s grown up with better – hell, I still struggle to remember just how floored I was going from Pokemon Crystal to development screenshots of Ruby and Sapphire and how worldshaking the difference was to nine-year-old me – but if gameplay holds, it holds. Super Mario 64’s DEFINITELY holds up, but I wouldn’t be shocked if Walky’s baffled why you’d spend $60 on a version that doesn’t even have Yoshi and Wario. (The cast is probably a bit too young for 64 DS when it came out, but it was playable on a current system until the 3DS finally died and was a staple in used DS game cases at Gamestops everywhere.)
That said, Walky’s also not the member of the cast I’d expect to have my obsessive interest in gaming history and therefore have tracked down increasingly obscure games for a previous system because they’re cult hits with a recognition of how they were revolutionary for the time even if other games subsequently did these features better. (I was WAY too young to play Eternal Darkness: Sanity’s Requiem on release, but it is a treasured part of my collection.) That, I expect, would be Danny or Amber.
Though I could see Joyce getting into a previously-banned secular video game franchise and getting REALLY into, like, Kirby lore so she tracks down the Wii anniversary collection or something. Maybe Sonic the Hedgehog. One of those games with surprisingly in-depth storylines.
Regalli
The other thing you can’t get across, as I sort of implied with the Blockbuster comment, is the original culture around a game. Like, a new Kingdom Hearts fan by now is coming into the series having heard it’s convoluted and wondering what’s a Xehanort, they missed the mid-2000s fandom culture (thank god, I wish I could erase my embarassing adolescence there) but also the ‘oh this is a cool Disney game with characters from that Playstation series, that’s cool’ and slowly getting suckered into caring about both Final Fantasy characters and the expanding cast of traumatized, tragic children having existential crises. No one playing KHI expected they were someday going to cry about ice cream and cute fluffy Pokemon knockoffs.
Someone playing New Pokemon Snap, or even the original, isn’t going to get quite how big a deal the original was because it wasn’t just taking pictures of Pokemon, it was seeing them in the games in an environment more like the anime showed (along with Hey You Pikachu, a game I dearly wish was remakable because it was fun in its weirdness), and getting YOUR pictures printed out at Blockbuster – the 3DS games let you actively interact with your Pokemon, and the Switch games let them wander the overworld. The biggest equivalent in making Pokemon feel real and the resulting Pokemania, IMO, wouldn’t be New Snap, but Go at its original release. They can understand that it was a big deal, like I can understand objectively that Super Metroid is important to gaming history, but they won’t have the same emotional connection to the game that someone who played it when it was new will. They might still have an emotional connection – I’ve got a lot of affection for Metroid after reading about its history on Nintendo’s old page for Fusion and eventually playing decent chunks of Zero Mission and Fusion, and therefore LOST MY SHIT when Dread was announced – but it’s different from the affection someone who played the originals when they came out would.
Reltzik
The first video game console I played regularly on was a 4-switch Atari VCS.
… that’s a yellow card for making me feel old. ;p
Delicious Taffy
Sega Genesis kid, here. At least until Mom left it at a fuckin’ babysitter’s house for no goddamn reason and then blamed little pre-K Taffy for it. And then we just sorta had another one up til we got the PS1, so at least it was all Spyro, Crash Bandicoot and Resident Evil 2 from there.
Miri
Console, Sega Megadrive (in 91 or 92). First computer I played games on was a QL.
Delicious Taffy
I sometimes forget that “Genesis” is just what us Yanks call it. I’ve occasionally wondered if there’s not a weird religious element to that decision.
Needfuldoer
I went right from 6-switch Atari VCS to a PlayStation, with a lot of (unregistered) Mac shareware games on top of that.
Max
We had the original Nintendo Entertainment System. That was, and still is, amazing. Original Game Boy too. Then we moved up to Super Nintendo. Super Street Fighter II is my jam.
Keulen
Sega Genesis for me as well. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 was the first game I ever played, and still one of my top favorites to this day.
StClair
The Atari 2600/VCS was my second console, by a few years. The first was this. Came with a few bus-jumping modes and every kind of PONG known to man.
Roborat
My first was the original PONG, my dad brought it back from the U.S. way before it appeared in Canada. Ruined several T.V. screens. Then came the Intellivision.
Autogatos
It’s so weird, I remember seeing the first 3D Sonic and Mario games for the Dreamcast (or was it sonic blast for PC?) and N64 and thinking they looked AMAZING at the time.
And now I’m like “oh these graphics are terrible.” And I’m a professional artist whose been into art since the moment I could hold a pencil so it’s not like my understanding of visual aesthetics is a new thing.
powerpowerpow
Lemme answer this from the perspective of a kid who grew up on Flash games, his cousin’s PS2, and eventually, a Wii, shortly after the Wii U came out. (I don’t exactly live in a first world country, so from the 80s to the mid-2010s, we were always a little behind on tech and media)
Certain games I can absolutely see the charm in. StarFox 64 still holds up brilliantly, as does Mario Kart. I have yet to play a Zelda game that I’ve been disappointed with (With the exception of Link’s Awakening HD, but that’s neither here nor there). A lot of the N64 games I went back and played, I was impressed with and had a lot of fun with. With one exception…
In my opinion, Mario 64 is… Fine. Yeah, I get that it was revolutionary, yeah everyone who played it as a kid considers it a masterpiece, and from a technical perspective, maybe it is. But as someone who grew up playing Galaxy, it just feels… Okay. Like yeah, it’s fun, but it’s also in the mid-to-low end of my list of favorite Mario games. It’s a good game, but it’s way overhyped imo.
King Daniel
Ruth’s 21, she was born in 2000
For the rest of this year, at least
RassilonTDavros
As of January 1, 2021, this Ruth was born after the original one died, on March 19, 1999.
a/snow/mous/e
ruthincarnation
silas
> what a Nintendo 64 is
so they’ll never have known the joy of Golden Eye 64. What Horror!
Schpoonman
Eh, Goldeneye Source exists, though I suppose part of the fun was flailing against the terrible controls because we didn’t know better as kids.
He Who Abides
Unless someone picked Oddjob, at which point no fun was had.
*grumbles about wife insisting on playing Oddjob because “we’re both short and Asian!”*
Schpoonman
I remember being frustrated at first, and then I played a few rounds with my brothers and realized that a tap or two of the C buttons was enough to put the average character’s aim on Oddjob’s head so he was easy pickings for headshots.
If you picked him in License to Kill you were still an asshole, though.
khn0
I have only (moderate) fun with vidja games if I’m watching. If you talk me into playing, then you should be aware that I always take Oddjob, or the crowbar at counterstrike, or drive that car counterclockwise that’s a given. Also I will always win at PVP games where speed surpass technicity (unless I’m spraypainting with bullets or trying to make a specific dance move).
That may have to do with the fact I’m from the flipper/kickers generation.
Delicious Taffy
Only consoles with games on them get remembered. What’s the 64 got, two Zeldas, a Mario or four, an indie game about robot animals, some weird furry-bait space opera, several acclaimed shooters, a Yooka-Laylee clone, half a dozen Pikachu vehicles, and a meme game about monkeys? Let’s face it, the thing was dead in the water, it’d never catch on with a library like that.
Autogatos
Playing caves level (as Sean Bean of course) with proximity mines…holing myself up in a booby trapped crevice and laughing gleefully as my little brother blew himself up trying to find me. He eventually made it a rule that the caves level and proximity mines were no longer allowed.
Also paintball mode, trying to draw and write on the walls with it. Memoriieeeees.
Autogatos
In retrospect I did the same thing in Mario Kart battle mode. Weird play Towers and I’d just park myself at the top of a tower, on one of the question mark boxes, repeatedly getting and launching the various power ups and turning the roads below into a chaotic danger zone. I’d place banana peels on all the ramps leading up to my tower too.
My brother and I had very different playstyles in pvp games (he preferred an aggressive approach and I a defensive, strategic, sit and wait approach) and it led to…many sibling conflicts.
Autogatos
We’d, not weird
Regalli
I mean, the internet does exist. I may have questioned if kids these days play Rock Band, but given the weird title of ‘NEW Pokemon Snap’ prompting the natural question of ‘new compared to what?’ I would expect they’re vaguely aware at least of the original. If they had a Wii U (hahahaha but technically possible) or Wii (WAY more plausible) they may even have played the original on Virtual Console.
But they have no idea of the experience of getting your favorite pictures printed out at a Blockbuster, so even if they played it, they don’t truly Know it.
BBCC
Well, a new Rock Band with 2700 songs came out last year so SOMEBODY must still be into it.
Regalli
Oh, there was? When I checked Wikipedia the most recent release was VR in 2017 (which was way more recent than I expected, there was a STARK dropoff from the oversaturation of the mid-360/Wii/PS3 era to the releases for PS4 and Xbone.)
Regalli
* Release LISTED, I mean.
BBCC
My bad, it’s new DLC apparently. And as of 2020 there’s 2700 songs. This is what I get for just skimming an article about a topic I’m not deeply invested in. Mea culpa. XD
Wagstaff
Eh, I don’t remember much about the franchise as a kid — never played the games or watched the show or movies.
The only thing I remember about it is playing with the McDonalds happy meal toys, and pretending Ronald McDonald was beating them around and shoving them in his meat grinder or something. I dunno — I guess I loved their chicken nuggets alot, and I thought that’s what made them taste so good?
I was a weird kid……
Clif
Us weird kids grew up to become weird adults. Who knew?
Skater Girl
I’m 36 and barely aware of what a Nintendo is.
BBCC
They know. They might not care much but many know about them.
Johan
Why do they need to?
Clif
There will be a test later.
Spencer
It’s a way to find the real Geeks and Gamers in the crowd.
Carla's #2 Fan
You’re forgetting about the parents. As long as the parents played, these kids are likely to experience it. I got roped into (and fell in love with) my parents’ music preferences. Billy Joel, Cat Stevens, John Denver, these weren’t for my generation, but I still got to hear them and enjoy them. More to the point, my dad had me playing older game systems like the NES (I’m 24 for reference). I played and got frustrated with Duck Hunt.
Seregiel
I’m a 90s kid who had 3 ataris and that’s it. My parents both had one and I got my own. I go to arcades to sate my addiction. Latest and greatest goes away if money, family time or issues with certain graphics weighs in. (I can sidescroll with the best but do not make me first person. It makes me physically ill trying to track).
Clif
You know what? Kids nowadays just don’t appreciate the miracle of Pong.
zee
I mean, they know about the N64 because that’d be like not knowing about VHS tapes or rotary phones. Even though they’re not used any more they’re still iconic and constantly referenced by media and older people. Cultural osmosis. Really wish people would stop thinking not growing up with a thing = has 0 knowledge thing ever existed
Thag Simmons
Man it’s gonna sting when Mary gets the comic strip job instead of Walky or Joyce
Stanistani
The new strip runs: “You’re all going to Hell, and I love it!”
Clif
Jennifer can save the situation by letting Walky know that all he has to do is have Lucy submit the comic while wearing an outfit with a chest window.
LiterallyJustSomeGuy
Most readers take it as a funny parody comic, especially given the cutesy anime art style
Wagstaff
Ooo! Fashion time!!!
*plays “Puttin’ On The Ritz” by Taco on Voxola PR-76*
Stephen Bierce
Now THIS I agree with, provided you’re using the extended play album cut and not the radio single version. 🙂
Wagstaff
Thanks. That means a lot coming from you.
Games can also have a lot of great music, if you just know where to look.
Speaking of which, can you please point me to some of your favorite Reggae hits? I think you’ve posted one here before. I LOVE that stuff!
RassilonTDavros
OH GOD THIS IS IT
We’re gonna find out who won!
Daisy’s prolly gonna give it to Joyce, on the sole condition that she write if as a Julia/Doris slow burn.
Thag Simmons
I think it’s like halfway there already.
Clif
Also Walky’s comic is too sophisticated for a collage paper.
Clif
I was going to type college paper, but what the heck, that works too.
Matthew E Davis