

This list could use some work. Bokurano is basically “what if NGE was even more depressing”?


This list could use some work. Bokurano is basically “what if NGE was even more depressing”?


Yeah its hard to compete with Takopi
Second favorite for me would be Hell Girl or Boogiepop Phantom


deleted by creator


Hardware was definitely the issue. What got me to first install Linux was my wireless card just randomly stopped working. People were recommending that I do a full reinstall of Vista to get internet working again. I installed Ubuntu instead and never looked back.


I started with Ubuntu, switched to Mint and finally settled on Arch.


That 40% isn’t for Windows Server, is it?


XP was alright, but I’m mostly just nostalgic for the aesthetic of 95/98/2000
Vista was the reason I switched to Linux
I was the same until I discovered the dystopian Korean butt game NIKKE
I’ve been playing nothing else for weeks. Send help.
I think I’m gonna go with the entire Hellsing 2001 soundtrack
Hellsing Ultimate is the better adaption of the manga, but Yasushi Ishii made something that transcends even that with these songs
I like too much of Cowboy Bebop’s soundtrack to pick a favorite. It’s all incredible.
I’m feeling Space Lion right now.


uBlock Origin: 11 domains connected out of 42
Why is Fandom like this?
They find it and it immediately breaks into pieces. Now they need to collect them like they’re Dragon Balls.
Not surprising, considering One Piece first released before GTA1 came out
Breath Of Fire 3 also had a really good fishing minigame
desktop icons get in the way of my anime wallpapers
Medicine Man/Woman anime. Shows like Mushishi, Mononoke, Natsume Yuujinchou…
They’re typically episodic stories about a traveler who can see supernatural forces that no one else can (typically Yokai, but the Mushi in Mushishi are basically alien lifeforms) and uses their powers to help ordinary people in their struggles to live alongside or communicate with them.
I love these shows because they shine purely on their ability to create compelling drama without relying on ongoing plot lines or recurring characters. They’re just microcosms of humanity in its purest form. Mushishi is particularly impressive. Every episode feels like a short film, not a tv show.