It's quite a common misunderstanding of the word "Malay", but no biggie. In Malaysia, "Malay" specifically refers to the ethnic group. I think you meant to ask about Malaysian food instead, which comprises Malay, Chinese, Indian, various other ethnicities, and even combinations of ethnicities.
If you do specifically want Malay food, I think nasi lemak is a must try.
Then again, different states have different niches. The state I'm from is famous for Peranakan (Chinese+Malay) food, and I would highly recommend that.
Slay the spire (again), trying to climb to A20 with Watcher now. Was never a huge fan of her deck, since most of my winning runs can be distilled into Rushdown and Mental Fortress. Maybe someone can tell me about other possible builds for Watcher
Your post was very helpful and insightful, thanks for that. I struggle with the feeling of wanting to help and not knowing what to do (other than helping larger orgs). Ignore the other person.
I firmly believe that proper RNG-manipulation should be a mainstay in RNG-dependent games. Once late game hits and you're praying to draft the exact type of rooms you need in the exact orientation, frustration will absolutely dominate.
And yes I know that some RNG manipulation is available in blue prince, but imo it's not enough.
Recently booted up DE as well! My first few playthroughs were save-scummy and involved glossing over huge walls of text (especially when encyclopedia speaks). Taking my time now to read and immerse myself in Revachol has been a wonderful experience.
But I'm always save-scumming to get Kim on the dance floor no matter what
Valid. I remember being very frustrated with ggplot's documentation, only to realize they HARD CODED a plot parameter that could not be accessed. Matplotlib + Seaborn works fantastic, and I can do whatever I want without being babied by ggplot
While all this is going on, I'd also like to point out that grants are being flagged for being "woke" by this anti-DEI nonsense. Grants that have to do with cancer, physics, eclipses, and so on.
It's quite a common misunderstanding of the word "Malay", but no biggie. In Malaysia, "Malay" specifically refers to the ethnic group. I think you meant to ask about Malaysian food instead, which comprises Malay, Chinese, Indian, various other ethnicities, and even combinations of ethnicities.
If you do specifically want Malay food, I think nasi lemak is a must try.
Then again, different states have different niches. The state I'm from is famous for Peranakan (Chinese+Malay) food, and I would highly recommend that.