I'm a total introvert, so I prefer being alone most of the time. Crowds make me anxious. I like both, I have no preference. So long as the color palette of a design looks appealing, it's good in my book.
It's reeeaaally good. So far I've 100% completed the first and second game, about 3/4 done with the third. At the moment, my favorite thing about this game are the revamped cutscenes (just released Agent 9 and goodness gracious, I could not stop smiling at this crazy monkey).
The original/Reignited trilogy, of course. But if you're asking which of those three original games I like more, it'd be the very first one. It was the first game I ever played and completed when I was little.
When I first played A New Beginning, I was surprised to see that the storyline was a lot darker than I initially expected (considering most Spyro games are targeted towards kids). This wasn't a bad thing, mind you. It was just different from what I was used to seeing. The new battle system was something to get used to though, and it kinda wrecked the pacing for me. Regardless, the story intrigued me enough to keep playing through until the very end of Dawn of the Dragon. My brother and I played the last one together since it was 2-player co-op (he played as Cynder, since she was his favorite of the two for a lot of obvious reasons). As much as I saw the last game in particular as a bit too similar to the plot of Lord of the Rings, I had a fun time with this trilogy. I'd give it a solid 7/10.
What Christmas will you always remember for the rest of your life and what about it was so significant?
Probably the time when I was gifted my drawing tablet. That pretty much changed my drawing hobby forever.
Wow, that many already? I haven't noticed. Honestly, not much different from how I am now. Maybe it's because I simply don't post as much on this site anymore, and I'm a lot more active on DeviantArt and Discord these days. I'm not sure how else to explain it honestly. >_>;
Inspiration comes and goes for me. If there's something that grabs my immediate attention (like a new game I've been hyped up to play comes out), I'll draw it. But if I wait too long to do so, the inspiration fades pretty quickly. That's not to say I forget my inspired ideas at all. My mind's like a steel trap, so most of them tend to sit in the back of my brain until something brings them back into the spotlight of my "idea lightbulb", so to speak.
I don't know how to answer that question, as there are too many variables in terms of both the teacher's competence/patience and the students' behavior. It really depends on how calm or rowdy everyone is.