I'll start things off.
This is old shit, but if you remember when Gamergate was at its height, a lot of them complained about "walking simulators," games like Gone Home, Dear Esther, etc. with very little in the way of typical gameplay mechanics like challenges that have to be overcome through skill or failure states. Gamergate dipshits seized on a white-hot, psychopathic hatred of these games, spinning the lack of skill required into bizarre conspiracy theories about game journalists promoting these as a plot by non-gamers to pave the way for the infiltration of gaming by "anti-gamers." Also because a lot of these games are about minorities, who of course GG assholes considered by default to not be "real gamers."
The thing is, I don't like walking simulators either. I've only played a few, but the only one I even kind of enjoyed was The Beginner's Guide (and even then, I don't think I would've missed out on much if I'd watched a longplay instead). The medium is the message, as the old saying goes, and the ability to engage through interaction with the mechanics is what sets games apart from other media. Walking simulators (and visual novels, but that's a different gripe) don't take advantage of this in a way that gets me invested. To me, a walking simulator feels like the equivalent of a movie that consists solely of a guy sitting in a chair and reading a story out loud.
The difference between me and a GG dipshit, of course, is that my dislike of the genre doesn't hinge on ridiculous conspiracy theories or hatred of minorities, and also that rather than wage some crusade to kick walking sims out of the gaming club, I just don't play them. In any case, though, the association is strong enough that it's something I tend to avoid bringing up.
OK
I see what you did there, Dane. I cannot seem to find the emoticon for setting your flag on fire, so just pretend it's :here:.
:rat-salute: I mostly described as such since I had no idea what the english translation of this particular product name would be. It's ground pork liver, and pretty much every danish kid grew up eating it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver_p%C3%A2t%C3%A9
You don't find rubbing pork products in people's faces with a Viking logo to be just a teensy bit Islamophobic?
no lol, this is deffo a touch-grass moment
I mean, Denmark is wildly islamophobic, but for entirely different reasons than the products we consume. Pretty sure the viking shit has been used for a lot longer than we have had any significant number of muslims living here, since the viking-revival really began in 1870 after we got our shit shoved in for about hundred years at that point.
I don't know what to tell you sometimes people advertise pork products