Just realised from your statement that these people will probably kill you if you fuck up in any way
I went with Morgan. He clearly can fix anything.
Sophia Washington, cuz if the interactions in Sgail are to be true, she’d actually be fun to treasure hunt with, trying to outsmart the likes of Blake Nathaniel. Blasting and raiding through temples, rob long-lost relics, leaving with trunks full of gold and precious heirlooms, and make a bunch of money out of it…
I’m sure she and Zoe are in need of a uber-talented hacker that could hide their traces, steal precious data from rivals, keep an eye on such rivals and crack enigmas and codes thought impossible to solve. Yeah, I know how to do all that, I can Google it.
It’s a win-win for everyone!
Morgan, Knox, Novikov… definitely solid business choices. But I feel working for the Washingtons, particularly Sophia, and the Raiders, could prove to be insanely fun.
Well except for the people who rightfully own the stuff you steal.
Except the bullet wound in his head…
Just for fun while I decide if getting the haircut or a wig, would you rock at full confidence the haircut of the guy in the middle?
- Sure. Looks cool!
- If I did, I’m never going back to that stylist salon, or the streets…
0 voters
I have the same haircut since i was 14 years old and I don’t think i will ever change it…but if i had to, i wouldn’t get a haircut like in the pic above
Not sure how that hair would look like IRL on a real person but it’s your choice
I’ve been doing something similar for years now
I ain’t the Anime (the worlds most broadest term there! ) type of assassin!
Are you gonna colour your hair too? Or just rock it with your natural colour?
Natural. Not willing to tint my hair just yet. Xd
- Asking the right question, regardless of the answer
- Getting the right answer, regardless of the question
0 voters
i think i need an example to work with.
I don’t really have an example, but let me elaborate:
Do you prefer asking the question that you know perfectly encapsulates the issue at hand, the one you know that the person answering can’t avoid and can’t just give whatever bs response they want, and even if the answer is something you don’t like, knowing that you asked the perfect question to get that answer was it’s own minor victory, because you know you were smart enough to ask what really needed to be asked?
Or, do you prefer to get the correct answer to a question, knowing that it’s right, knowing that you’re right, even if the question asked was something stupid, or even something disturbing, is the eureka moment of getting the correct answer to the question it’s own victory no matter what was asked?
Now that I think of it, I do have an example: having come up with the question asked in this poll, is more satisfying to me that whatever answers I get. That I get any answers simply from having asked the question is reward in itself, regardless of which answers I get. Which isn’t to say I don’t enjoy getting the answers I get, such as @Nazareth’s below, but that’s a secondary satisfaction.
I like asking the right question because it can cause people to re-evaluate a situation, but I rather have the right answer because it’s always actionable information or can bring closure IMO.
right… i dunno then. depends on the conversation? can i have both quality questions and quality answers?
I could ask a seemingly unrelated question to what I’m wanting to know, then they could answer and that could tell me everything I need to know about the bigger picture or question.
But, in that… One should be careful they’re not affirming some preconceived confirmation bias. There might be more nuance to the thing you’re wondering about that your mere ‘simple question’ might not shed sufficient light upon.
But I can see where the “best question” could be used… Just make sure it’s not a loaded question. Or it could be… The person asking should know what they’re after.
Right?
I think the context of @Heisenberg’s poll works better in regards to fiction then in real life. There aren’t really real life examples to point to so it doesn’t entirely make sense. But here’s a quick example: Anybody seen the movie I, Robot?
By asking “the right question” causes him to see things in a new light. It’s kind of a recurring theme for his character in the movie. I think it’s in scenarios like these that Heisenberg’s poll was relating to.
I’m looking at it from a more serious stand point which is way I rather have the answer. For example what’s answer to curing Covid or Cancer? What’s the answer to stop world hunger? What happen to the people who are missing, ect, ect. Hope that helps make this a little clearer.
There are real life examples in politics. Many times politicians will get asked “soft ball” questions where the answer is always some variation of “I’m glad you asked that, because it’s such a critical topic right now” and then proceed to just give a speech for the next minute without ever answering the question.
On the other hand, when politicians are asked pointed, direct questions, and then held to the subject, they flounder and flub their answers and we all read about it in the news the next day.
Soft ball questions are just “getting the right answer”. Hard ball questions are “asking the right question”.
I hadn’t even thought of that, so I’m pretty sure @schatenjager gets it even better than I do.