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yetAnotherUser, to 196 in rule ∞

Yup, someone else commented it in this thread.

sh.itjust.works/comment/3777415

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in who will win rule

Ah, sadly it’s a singleplayer game. There are multiplayer mods (I think?) but I haven’t tried any of them and I’m not sure how great of a first experience they are. It’s a solid singleplayer game though with an extremely high skill ceiling.

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in rule ∞

No worries, I made the comment mostly for people with somewhat advanced knowledge in math. A year ago I wouldn’t have understood any of it either.

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in who will win rule

Alright, imma just shill it to you.

Ultrakill is a video game which could be summarized to: Doom but fast. For some reason, its community is very queer and very horny.
An artist drawing porn of Gabriel was hired by the developers to create textures.
Another developer released an official Buttplug.io Mod for rumble support
Although only tangentially related, the voice actor for Gabriel, Gianni Matragano, has branched out. Into a FNAF furry porn game.

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in rule ∞

There are infinitely many natural numbers, right? 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, …, ∞ are all natural numbers.

We can now multiply all natural numbers with (-1) to get another sequence of infinite numbers: -1, -2, -3, -4, -5, -6, …, -∞

So how many whole numbers are there? The whole numbers are those: -∞, …, -6, -5, -4, -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, …, ∞
Looking at what we previously defined, would you say there are 2 * ∞ whole numbers? After all, it’s the amount of natural numbers [∞] + the amount of natural numbers multiplied by (-1) [∞], which is the result of ∞ + ∞, isn’t it?

But wait a second, are there really exactly infinite natural numbers? We could split the natural numbers into all even (2, 4, 6, 8, 10,…) and all uneven (1, 3, 5, 7, 9,…) numbers. But there are infinitely many even and infinitely many uneven numbers as well. So are there actually 2 * ∞ many natural numbers?`

BUT WAIT, what if we split the even numbers up even further? How about all numbers divisible by four (4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24,…) and all numbers not divisible by four (6, 10, 14, 18, 22,…). Well, there are again infinitely many whole numbers divisible by four and infinitely many numbers not divisible by four. So are there 2 * ∞ many even numbers and therefore 3 * ∞ many natural numbers (2 * ∞ from even, 1 * ∞ from uneven)?

As you can see, we can divide one infinity into infinitely many infinities. Multiples of ∞ aren’t really any meaningful - they are just ∞ again!

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in who will win rule

While Blåhaj is certainly the more popular of the two, have you considered this?

https://feddit.de/pictrs/image/cd10bc0a-7c8e-4b9b-8675-95913761baf3.png

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in Bhutan x Wales rule (34)
yetAnotherUser, to 196 in who will win rule
yetAnotherUser, to 196 in rule ∞

Not quite. It’s somewhat annoying to work with infinities, since they’re not numbers. Technically speaking, ∞ + ∞ is asking the question: What is the result of adding any two infinite (real) sequences, both of which approaching infinity? My “proof” has shown: the result is greater than any one of the sequences by themselves -> therefore adding both sequences produces a new sequence, which also diverges to infinity. For example:

The series a_n = n diverges to infinity. a_1 = 1, a_2 = 2, a_1000 = 1000.

Therefore, lim(n -> a_n) = ∞

But a_n = 0.5n + 0.5n.

And lim(n -> ∞) 0.5n = ∞

So is lim(n -> ∞) a_n = 2 • lim(n -> ∞) 0.5n = 2 • ∞?

It doesn’t make sense to treat this differently than ∞, does it?

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in rule ∞

In case you aren’t joking, ‘□’ is used to indicate the end of a mathematical proof. It’s equivalent to q.e.d

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in rule ∞

What is ∞ + ∞?

Let x_n be an infinite, real sequence with lim(n -> ∞) x_n = ∞.

Let y_n be another infinite, real sequence with lim(n -> ∞) y_n = ∞.

Let c_n be an infinite sequence, with c_n = 0 for all n ∈ ℕ.

Since y_n diverges towards infinity, there must exist an n_0 ∈ ℕ such that for all n ≥ n_0 : y_n ≥ c_n. (If it didn’t exist, y_n wouldn’t diverge to infinity since we could find an infinite subsequence of y_n which contains only values less than zero.)

Therefore:

lim(n -> ∞) x_n + y_n ≥ lim (n -> ∞) x_n + c_n = lim(n -> ∞) x_n + 0 = ∞

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in Bhutan x Wales rule (34)

As you can see, my brain works well at 2am.

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in Bhutan x Wales rule (34)

Definition NSFW Wikipedia:

The marked content may contain graphic violence, pornography, profanity, nudity, slurs or other potentially disturbing subject matter.

Clearly, two dragons kissing each other doesn’t fit any of these, does it? Not their fault you think they’re sexy.

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in Bhutan x Wales rule (34)

More shipping those two? More shipping.

Bhutan grabbing some balls 😳

https://feddit.de/pictrs/image/c4194f40-c5e2-4520-b088-2d9788edd9a2.jpeg

Bhutan and Wales HOLDING HANDS 😳😳😳 (NSFW)

https://feddit.de/pictrs/image/445df696-ee95-4d7d-b58a-77e4530e274a.jpeg

yetAnotherUser, to 196 in Bhutan x Wales rule (34)
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