The video: https://youtu.be/4-G3j00RQ1U
The Reddit thread: https://www.reddit.com/r/diablo4/comments/15p5v8j/devs_play_the_game/
Fat, purple-haired butch lesbian with insane vocal fry is playing Diablo 4 co-op alongside clueless younger colleague. Highlights include:
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spamming basic attacks almost the whole time while resource bar is full
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dying on the easiest difficulty level
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talking about how both women are products of university game design mills
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they are both dungeon designers (dungeons are possibly the worst designed aspect of the entire game)
It’s a complete dumpster fire of a video. Tons of people are taking it as total confirmation that diversity hiring practices are what ruined Diablo 4. There are a few detractors in the comments, but they are mostly getting roasted.
Huge mistake by Blizzard. The interviews with various diversity hire devs were bad enough, but there was some plausible deniability there. This is two clear diversity hires, with rubber-stamped credentials, struggling to competently play their own video game. They’re showing off the terrible dungeon design while boasting that their sole contribution to the game was dungeon design. It’s like every anti-woke turbo hitler’s dream come true.
Ah. So basically what you want is... The Homer. :)
But seriously I see your point. I've always thought along the lines of what u/WoonStruck said that the cars don't have to be aerodynamic. In fact they'd been making cars curvy since the 40s, but then there was this weird period in the 70's and 80's where manufacturers realized you could make them like boats or spaceships. Having a boxy car was kind of like making a statement that the owner is well off enough that he doesn't even care about fuel efficiency. "Yeah I'm driving a giant fucking box on wheels, what are you going to do about it? Get the hell out of my way."
Then that became passé and they all went back to the old curves. Probably something to do with the fuel crisis and inflation.
I imagine a lot has to do with having slight arcs in every plane for the structural integrity of carbon fibers/plastic/glass, since most aren't metal anymore, IIRC.
Most recent car I've really looked at is the 2014 I'm driving.