MU Peeves Thread
- 
 I’m also grateful that as a hobby we collectively kicked all the edgy racists and misogynists to the curb. It’s the best. 
- 
 @Juniper Since I’ve moved to doing YouTube content, that these people are always going to exist. And I’ve also learned that when they go low, I go to lower to hell. 
- 
 (In a non-PVP game) Combat stats are restricted but social stats can be maxed out no problem. 
- 
 @catzilla You’ve just gotta get better at looksmaxxing. This is apparently a real term. 
- 
 
- 
 @catzilla I’m going to ignore the anti-pvp rules and roll initiative if you pull that face at me. 
- 
 
- 
 Social Combat when? 
- 
 EM DASH FOR LYFE. AI SCREW OFF. 
- 
 @ten You can pry my em-dashes from my cold, dead hands. I’ve been (over)using them longer than LLMs have been in existence! 
- 
 YES. 
- 
 some of my poses might contain more em-dashes than actual sentences so this all feels like a personal attack 
- 
 @Pyrephox said in MU Peeves Thread: @ten You can pry my em-dashes from my cold, dead hands. I’ve been (over)using them longer than LLMs have been in existence! I’m in this picture; as a semi-colon user, I can empathize. (SEE HOW I DID THAT?) 
- 
 @ten You can tell my em dashes are legit because I always use them — incorrectly. 
- 
 My em-dashes, my semicolons, and my words of more than three syllables. Ain’t giving them up in order to write ‘less like AI’. LLMs are mimicking me, not the other way around. 
- 
 Wait, is this a thing? Oh, fuck AI. That’s how to give sentences flavor! Nuh uh. A million percent not changing.  
- 
 I’ve had to turn the auto-convert feature off in Word for when I do my – (that is two hyphens, often converted to a dash of some kind, be it en or em. I never learned the difference.) because it was getting pulled up by the anti-AI checker on my submitted work and it’s easier to just… not deal with that. 
- 
 @Pavel said in MU Peeves Thread: I’ve had to turn the auto-convert feature off in Word for when I do my – (that is two hyphens, often converted to a dash of some kind, be it en or em. I never learned the difference.) because it was getting pulled up by the anti-AI checker on my submitted work and it’s easier to just… not deal with that. Em Dash (—): Roughly the width of a capital letter M. It’s used to create a break in a sentence, similar to how you’d use parentheses or colons. En Dash (–): Roughly the width of a capital letter N. It’s used to connect two words or show a range of numbers. That’s literally it. 
- 
 @Aria said in MU Peeves Thread: @Pavel said in MU Peeves Thread: I’ve had to turn the auto-convert feature off in Word for when I do my – (that is two hyphens, often converted to a dash of some kind, be it en or em. I never learned the difference.) because it was getting pulled up by the anti-AI checker on my submitted work and it’s easier to just… not deal with that. Em Dash (—): Roughly the width of a capital letter M. It’s used to create a break in a sentence, similar to how you’d use parentheses or colons. En Dash (–): Roughly the width of a capital letter N. It’s used to connect two words or show a range of numbers. That’s literally it. oh my god i have literally never known why they were called Em and En, this is mind-blowing. and will ACTUALLY be helpful in remembering which is which 
- 
 @Aria said in MU Peeves Thread: @Pavel said in MU Peeves Thread: I’ve had to turn the auto-convert feature off in Word for when I do my – (that is two hyphens, often converted to a dash of some kind, be it en or em. I never learned the difference.) because it was getting pulled up by the anti-AI checker on my submitted work and it’s easier to just… not deal with that. Em Dash (—): Roughly the width of a capital letter M. It’s used to create a break in a sentence, similar to how you’d use parentheses or colons. En Dash (–): Roughly the width of a capital letter N. It’s used to connect two words or show a range of numbers. That’s literally it. Monospace fonts mean they are indistinguishable, wheeeee. 










