systlin:

ek-vitki:

ek-vitki:

Viking traveler’s amulet, based on the Lillbjärs picture stone. The back reads: “Unharmed Go Forth, Unharmed Return, Unharmed Back Home”, Frigga’s blessing to Odin, possibly from Vafþrúðnismál.

I’m going to take the amount of notes and new followers this got me in a day as a sign that it works and it’s image will bless your blog with Frigga’s blessing to Odin. Thank you tiny rune talisman.

This is dope. 

Bethesda embraces anti-Nazi stance: That’s ‘what Wolfenstein represents’

real-live-dragon:

lord-kitschener:

littlemisscancer:

trenchcoats-anonymous:

screamingelf:

socialist-anxiety:

“This is what our game is about. It’s what this franchise has always
been about. We aren’t afraid to embrace what BJ stands for and what
Wolfenstein represents,” Hines said. “When it comes to Nazis, you can
put us down in the ‘against’ column.”

todd howard redemption arc

“For this game our idea was catharsis”

“So we think at the end of this game, you’ll be ready to go out and start a revolution”

whyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy

just release the fuckin gaaammeeeeeeee

dont make it into a political stunt for the modern daaayyyy

just let it be wolfensteiiiinnnnn

let us have our gaaammeeee

stopppppp

thiiissss

pleeaessee

What’s the matter little fellas?

Offended by video games?

“just let it be wolfenstein” my friend have you ever played wolfenstein

Bethesda embraces anti-Nazi stance: That’s ‘what Wolfenstein represents’

alesha:

legere-librum:

I can never understand how Snape apologetics can stand up for him when he CANONICALLY does this shit.

I can maybe, maybe, understand those who haven’t read the books standing up for him, because honestly the movies don’t cover all the horrible stuff he does. But those who have read the books and still stick up for him baffle me.

I mean, you don’t see anyone sticking up for the Dursley’s or Umbridge, when they do the same stuff to Harry as Snape. How is Snape any different?

@elletry food for thought?

n7-paleontologist:

buggirl:

Fossilized tracks made my spider feets!

Haha. I know that specimen!

A fun story about this set of tracks. It was discovered by Dr. Raymond M. Alf on a trip to Arizona in 1968. He had no idea what made them so he started experimenting by dipping animal feet in ink and letting them walk on paper. He one day found a tarantula around the grounds of the Alf Museum (they are still common today, trust me) and decided to test it out. As the tarantula walked across the paper, it made nearly the same kind of track! Dr. Alf repeated the experiment at different inclines and eventually came to the conclusion that the fossil tracks were made by some early arachnid across a sand dune at an incline!

Specimens on display at the Hall of Life at the Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology in Claremont, California.