The Frog for Whom the Bell Tolls
24 points
5 hours ago
| 4 comments
| sethmlarson.dev
| HN
graemep
4 hours ago
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Thea article says the title is a reference to Hemingway, but Hemingway's use of it was a reference to John Donne. The latter is far more familiar to me. Its no more relevant to the game though.
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jaccola
32 minutes ago
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Indeed, the same meditation that originated the phrase ‘no man is an island’.

Though, of course, the better version is “Ask not for whom the timer ticks. It ticks for thee”

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Oarch
2 hours ago
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From the title I'd assumed this was a mixed metaphor between boiling the frog and facing impending doom.

Maybe I need to stop AI doomscrolling for a bit.

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bryanrasmussen
1 hour ago
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I just thought it was going to be a funny mashup of For Whom The Bell Tolls (Hemingway) with Michigan T. Frog (Looney Tunes)
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nitefood
2 hours ago
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What amazes me is I thought the exact same thing, verbatim. And I hadn't thought about that boiling frog in years. I guess it scarred you and me both when we saw it.
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CM30
2 hours ago
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Oh hey, it's the game I remember from the cameos in Link's Awakening and the Wario Land series. Honestly, I don't think anyone associates Mad Scienstein with this game anymore, given his appearances in Wario Land 3, 4 and Dr Mario 64.
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ginko
3 hours ago
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It's a really fun little game with lots of character. I played the translation and picked up an original copy on my last trip to Japan.
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