An old house, a geek, a cute transvestite, a very tall lesbian, and at least one ghost–what could happen? – Adult situations and artistic nudity. Not suitable for children.
Man… I DO get the logic; low gravity, atrophied muscles, generation upon generation of stacked effect… but it’s still hard not to cringe at seeing these Orions who are almost skeletally thin. Little kids like these especially. It’s like a horror movie.
And speaking of that, who exactly is this tubby-looking fellow on the medical display to the left supposed to be? It’s rare enough to meet a Mesomorph body-type Orion, nevermind Endomorph. The great majority of them are Ectomorphs.
Pretty-sure that it’s just a generic human “template”, upon which a diagnostic overlay can pinpoint particular areas of interest as they’re found for each new patient. By stretching it out, you allow data to be less crowded, & therefore more read-able.
Man… I DO get the logic; low gravity, atrophied muscles, generation upon generation of stacked effect… but it’s still hard not to cringe at seeing these Orions who are almost skeletally thin. Little kids like these especially. It’s like a horror movie.
And speaking of that, who exactly is this tubby-looking fellow on the medical display to the left supposed to be? It’s rare enough to meet a Mesomorph body-type Orion, nevermind Endomorph. The great majority of them are Ectomorphs.
(Not familiar with these body-type classifications? No shade; they’re obscure terms that don’t come up very often. Here you go: https://cdn.britannica.com/50/135450-050-2D00F307/ectomorph-endomorph-somatotypes-body-types.jpg )
Pretty-sure that it’s just a generic human “template”, upon which a diagnostic overlay can pinpoint particular areas of interest as they’re found for each new patient. By stretching it out, you allow data to be less crowded, & therefore more read-able.
See, and here I was going with, “Andy is recycling this 3D set from somewhere, and did not/could not redecorate the screen panel.”