KQVI is probably the most open-ended and forgiving of the King's Quest games outside of a maze where you have to savescum. Seconding these for KQVI and Sam and Max Hit the Road. Most puzzles are based on pretty abstract alien tech mechanisms, which tend to arbitrarily appear either totally obvious or stupidly obscure to different people.Īnonymous Fri Mar 20 15:33:04 2015 No. The Dig works pretty well for collaborative efforts. Maybe KQVI, but I wouldn't risk it with the rest.Īnonymous Fri Mar 20 15:29:35 2015 No.
You'll hate each other and life itself by the end of it. I haven't touched the genre too much though so I'm not sure where to start.Ĭan you recommend some good ones? King's Quest looks promising. Something where we can solve the puzzles together and what not. So my girlfriend and I want to play an adventure game together. Or at least that's how it should be, I can't speak for the lazy and the incompetent who just prescribe whatever and expect people to take stuff without discussing or explaining any of it.ĭon't mix things up, big pharma is shit, lazy doctors are shit, but that doesn't mean medical treatment isn't effective when done properly.Anonymous Fri Mar 20 15:17:56 2015 No. >and they usually don't even get say in it.Īlso wrong, unless a person is completely psychotic and doing shit like threatening to hurt themselves or someone else, or the person is fucked to the point they don't even understand what's going on anymore, all medication prescribed is discussed with the patient. For instance, people who don't treat depression or schizophrenia properly, when compared to people who do, years after the disease starts, score lower on cognitive tests and have more brain atrophy both in imaging studies and autopsies. The most famous example is metamizole, a drug so safe you can treat babies and small animals using it, but which is illegal in the US for extremely bullshit reasons.įactually wrong. My experience is the opposite, big pharma frequently tries to block meds produced by competing companies and different countries to maintain their monopoly, so a ton of useful, safe drugs end up being illegal. This doesn't change the fact that there are people who benefit from medication and need them.Ĭan you name a single one? This looks like talking out of your ass to me. Obviously meds are over prescribed, a lot of lazy doctors just sedate trouble patients so they stop bothering them and their families, and yes, most problems could be solved with therapy alone.
I spend more time trying to lower dosages and take drugs away from people than prescribing them, don't be retarded. There are also genetic tests being developed nowadays to pinpoint which meds will produce the best possible results but it's not widespread and are still very expensive. There are specific techniques for introducing and swapping meds but I won't get into that here. If the person gets better it's working, if not, it's not.