No, don't tax them. Take away everything they own, deny them basic comforts, see how they like it.
Moonguide
Haven't ever been under 0, so while I am partial to cold weather, I cannot offer an answer beyond a guess, that I might be more comfortable still at -13 than at 40, considering I'd just need to put a couple more layers on.
I can layer up if its cold, windy, and rainy. Walking helps move blood around and warm up. You can't escape heat unless you got AC on, or continuously splash water around your body and sit in front of a fan. Even then, if its hot and moist, that won't help (wet bulb).
I live in a spot where temps range between 19-39 degrees in the daytime, swinging from dry to humid every now and again.
I'll take 1-9 C all day, every day. Despite living here my entire life, temps above 25 are uncomfortable for me. I've discovered that temps between 5 and 14 degrees for me are ideal.
Illustration. It isn't a thing where I'm at, and settled for graphic design (which is still barely a thing here). After graduation I applied for scholarships abroad, and got accepted on a full ride in a private university in Hamburg for illustration.
Weeks before I was supposed to leave I got cold feet and looked up all the info I could about the university. Turns out it's a scam, the degree's worth fuck all, and the university seemed to have this MO of recruiting aspiring legal migrants from third world countries (like myself) into its curriculum, voiding their scholarship, offering shit education, and charging exorbitant rates until they leave or graduate.
I was despondent for months since this seemed to be my big break after a pretty tough few months. Then AI image generation took off.
I'm okay at illustrating characters, but it's immediately obvious I've learnt by myself and have done very little diligent study on the topic. My inexperience, how prevalent AI images are, and the uphill battle that gaining clients is, are keeping me away from trying again.
Yeah. The devs did say that the next update isn't just going to be the deep north, hopefully they learn something from the most popular mods (same as rimworld is doing, integrating some of them into the base game).
And pretty easy to mod to boot, with a ton of mods ranging from extending what's available in the game already (like adding all weapon types and magic from the meadows biome and above) to game changing systems like classes, abilities, and perks.
It feels like the middle point between Minecraft and Terraria, with a smooth progression curve with clear checkpoints to guide the player through the tech stages while offering some homesteading and down time activities.
It pretty much entirely replaced Minecraft and Terraria for me due to those reasons. Plus, building in Valheim is pretty satisfying. Much prefer having material limitations as opposed to the other two's gravity defying builds.
Only wish it was a bit more optimized, because my builds tend to be tall and dense and the game really doesn't like it. And modding could be handled better I guess, Zomboid took a page off of Rimworld's approach to the workshop and Valheim could do that as well.
Zgrok is a good alternative to Tailscale. I used tailscale to run a one-shot through Foundry and everything worked perfectly, however, on the follow-up session tailscale refused to connect. Wasn't sure if it was on my end so I tried talking w people online and found no solution.
Tried some other services (tunnelmole was one of em) and the only one that worked exactly as I wanted was Zgrok.
Not arrested, dealt with. There's others like him but there'd be one fewer.
Well this sucks
ADHD, GAD, SzPD, and depression. ADHD kicks my ass the most, since the medication most people take is illegal here. Depression and ADHD combined make it really hard to start projects, and GAD makes it really hard to keep one going.
The only war is class war
Or Rimworld. Tried it once while working at a mind numbingly boring internship after a month of putting it off.
I have 6k hours now.