trying to live like elon in animal crossing

My avatar and his satellite

That little guy with the pirate beard is my avatar on Animal Crossing. I’ve been playing since mid-2020 when my oldest daughter and her husband gave me a Switch Lite as a gift. It’s one of a very few games I’ve downloaded and owned as a pure digital asset. I usually prefer to have the physical cart I can plug into the Switch.

Over the many hours I’ve played the game I’ve amassed many in-game Chotchkies and in-game valuables such as bells (I have over 11 million). One of the valuables are do-it-yourself (DIY) recipes for many items. One of those DIY recipes enables the creation of the satellite you see hovering in the photo above (and yes, you do have a camera to take in-game photos which are selfies of your avatar and their immediate environment). I even have rockets, but they aren’t Falcon 9s, and I can’t send my satellites into an orbit over my island. The bigger issue is that while the satellite will hover, you can’t walk underneath it. That makes putting up many of these over my island a non-starter. I know that you can put items that hover and that your avatar can walk under, as I ‘bought’ a number of Mario blocks that did just that. To make the satellite behave like a Mario block would require a software change, which I doubt we’ll ever see.

The game is still fun, and every once in a while the opportunity presents itself to capture a bit of silly fun. As in this direct screen capture off the Switch while in this particular cut screen. The emotion on my avatar’s face says it all.

I go through spurts of game play on Animal Crossing. The last started back at the last major update in November. I’ve seen enough of the new work, so it’s time to put it aside and put those few daily hours I spend on this to better use.

further pi-hole experiences

My Pi-Hole installation has been up and operational for a continuous eight days. In that time it’s picked up an extra 10,000 or so domains on its blocklist. I’ve not had any problems, except when I use Google or other Google-based search engines that use Google, such as Startpage. When I click on one of the clearly marked ad results, I get a page that says “googleadservices … refused to connect,” with an ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED. That’s Pi-Hole at work. It’s also why I use DuckDuckGo as my search engine. No ads at the top of the search results.

It looks like anything that is being supplied by one of the domains on the blocklist will fail to load or properly execute. CNN for example has a smattering videos that won’t play behind the Pi-Hole. I know it must be Pi-Hole because if I turn off WiFi on my iPhone and just use cellular, then everything plays just fine. Turn on WiFi again to my home network, and the CNN videos that wouldn’t play before, won’t play again.

iOS games from the App Store are also another interesting casualty. Quite a few games are free to play because they show ads either in-game or stop and show an ad intermittently. With Pi-Hole blocking ad domains, none of that occurs. I don’t know if the apps are broken in some way if they can’t find the ad server, but it doesn’t matter. I’ll play such games for about 10 minutes, 15 tops, and then decide to delete them. With ads running in the apps I usually have them deleted with 5 minutes of downloading to try out.

I have yet to find anything on the internet I would turn off the Pi-Hole for. If the feature or service is so entangled in an ad domain that it won’t properly operate, then I bid that feature and service adieu and move on. Life with Pi-Hole is good.