John: Have you played Powerwash Simulator?
Jim: No, not yet, should I?
John Yes! It single-handedly saved my marriage!
Jim: No, not yet, should I?
John Yes! It single-handedly saved my marriage!
by ParzivaLore September 27, 2023
Get the powerwash simulator mug.by Coolman274 January 30, 2024
Get the Goat Simulator 3 mug.Related Words
Simuliu
• Simuli
• Simulingus
• simulist
• simulisten
• Simulization
• Simplicate
• Simpling
• simulator
• simplicity
by babayagarocks November 13, 2023
Get the Unordinary Simulator mug.by ilovefactorials March 16, 2024
Get the Tree Simulator mug.A pervasive cognitive bias and metabias, especially rampant in social media comments and replies, where complex, multi-dimensional issues—spanning technology, science, politics, history, and society—are aggressively reduced to simplistic logical formulas that sound reasonable but actually function as conversation-stoppers. The sufferer deploys phrases like "that's not logical," "it's too easy to make conspiracy theories," or "it's hard to build" as universal solvent, dissolving any claim that exceeds their narrow frame of reference without engaging its substance. This bias typically couples with Truth Bias (assuming one's own perception captures the whole truth) and Objectivity Bias (treating one's culturally-conditioned reasoning as universal reason itself).
The logical simplifier doesn't argue against specifics—they argue against complexity itself. Presented with speculation about advanced technology, they respond with generic difficulty assertions. Confronted with political possibility, they invoke governmental messiness as if chaos precluded capability. Faced with any claim outside consensus, they deploy the "conspiracy theory" label as automatic disqualifier. The bias lies in treating these logical-sounding simplifications as sufficient responses, when they actually bypass the difficult work of engaging evidence, possibility, and the vast territory between "proven fact" and "obvious nonsense."
The logical simplifier doesn't argue against specifics—they argue against complexity itself. Presented with speculation about advanced technology, they respond with generic difficulty assertions. Confronted with political possibility, they invoke governmental messiness as if chaos precluded capability. Faced with any claim outside consensus, they deploy the "conspiracy theory" label as automatic disqualifier. The bias lies in treating these logical-sounding simplifications as sufficient responses, when they actually bypass the difficult work of engaging evidence, possibility, and the vast territory between "proven fact" and "obvious nonsense."
Example: "When someone suggested the government might have energy weapons, he didn't discuss the physics or history—his Logical Simplification Bias fired instantly: 'it's hard to build, government is messy, so not logical, it's easy to make conspiracy theories.' He'd reduced decades of classified research, unknown technological progress, and genuine historical secrecy to a sound bite that made him feel rational while learning nothing."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
Get the Logical Simplification Bias mug.A game from Roblox, where you just hatch pets and get rarest one's, you can also buy stuff like potions, pets and such more. It is commonly played by kids.
by officalh4mm3r December 8, 2024
Get the Pet Simulator 99 mug.Bogugegu is a sentence that is used by sigmas. to do the bogugegu sign you have to make a fist and put it on your head and scream bogugegu. you can put the sentence simelihim behind it and form the final form of bogugegu. Variants are petergegu beelersimelihim oder röbugegu. Kambersimelihim. You should never say bogugegu simelihim at 3 am infront of a töffli otherwise terrifier will appear and use his naguschärli to kill you
Bogugegu simelihim!
by Bogugegu sigma December 13, 2024
Get the Bogugegu simelihim mug.