I recently shared a bunch of old projects of mine, those being projects I put a decent amount of effort into but just stopped working on. I really just found them all on my computer and felt I needed them to see the light of day. I imagine I have worked on hundreds of different projects, but a large percentage of them just never get polished or completed or even halfway through their development cycles. I looked at all 56 (now 57) shared projects on this account, and only a QUARTER of them are actually finished projects. Even so, I imagine the ratio of projects to shared projects is like 2:1 or even 3:1. The amount of unfinished work I work on is horrific. Going forward, I will literally actually post projects. Right now, I'm working on something for @thisisaacountihave, which will help him out a lot, as well as a potential third Afton's project I will produce. Afterwards, I'm planning on reviving a few games and actually getting a few ideas done. I really do love Scratch, and programming is just intuitive for me. I don't know if I can ever truly leave, as I've done Scratch and relied on Scratch for a large part of my life now, and I've always enjoyed it and learned from my mistakes. I know my taste and quality of projects have definitely changed over time, and currently, I am more into the sort of theory and simulation projects, but I will always have a piece of me making games. There are Scratchers that I have talked to, interacted with, seen, and so on, that even to this day, likely want to see more content from me, and I am determined to fulfill that quest. The goal of 1000 followers is real. If I achieved that, I would likely be in the top 0.1-1% of all (legit) Scratchers, and that would be enough for me. Expect a project from me in the next week. Look at my shared projects, and reminisce over the beauty of programming and human endeavor. There is a quote from Terry A. Davis, a genius yet schizophrenic programmer, that follows: "An idiot admires complexity, a genius admires simplicity." It is not like I must code, and that is what is causing the motivation problems, but it is also as if I must code, causing the sudden bursts. See you soon.