Half-Life, Thief, and the original Sims games (City, Ant, etc) were my original gaming go-tos!
Mesophar
They are saying it is more general than money or information, that those are power but those specifically are not special. If we had a society without money, something else would occupy the same purpose of the psychological need of humans "to get more" to be on top.
They aren't saying "money isn't important to that", they are saying "money isn't important to that".
As someone else that doesn't go to a gym, it is a combination of: they enjoy working out or do so for another reason, they don't have the space for gym equipment at home, they can't afford to buy and maintain the gym equipment they want to use, the gym they attend offers classes or personal training guidance, they enjoy the atmosphere and encouragement of working out with other like-minded individuals.
It isn't something magical, it may just not be for you.
I play both Star Citizen and DRG without any issues on Linux (I use Arch btw).
For Star Citizen you need to run the installer through a compatibility layer like Lutris, but then it should install and work fine (though I haven't played in about half a year, so more recent changes may have broken things). For DRG, I just installed through Steam. I don't even think I'm using GE or anything and just running it native.
I do want to add in that driving slowly isn't safer, but driving predictably is. If it is easier for you, driving slowly is fine, but be sure to use directionals and other signals to indicate intent to other drivers, make sure to follow the signs and rules of the road consistently, and be aware of the other cars around you who may drive eradically if they are getting frustrated.
Being able to multitask well is fundamental with driving safely, and keeping your speed low is one way you can reduce that mental load. But driving slowly on its own will not do anything to keep you safer. (Rather, low speed collisions are safer, but driving slow won't necessarily prevent collisions or accidents on its own.)
There certainly are different calibers of personal life questions that can be asked, but I'm pretty sure in the example above it is about freezing without an answer entirely. "I'm sorry, but I don't feel comfortable answering questions not related to the position" would probably pass their litmus just as well as listing some hobbies.
I'm also a millennial, and I think it depends a lot on rapport as well. If you regularly talk with someone in text form, and consistently use punctuation, it probably doesn't come off as passive aggressive than if you suddenly respond with the trailing period. It also probably makes one-word responses a lot more abrupt.
I agree with above, replying "Cool!", or "That's cool!" would likely go over much better in that context