

Seeing multiple people pushing source code to misrepresent the movement makes me start to think they are bad faith actors.
Seeing multiple people pushing source code to misrepresent the movement makes me start to think they are bad faith actors.
Why do people trying to advocate against the movement push the narrative that source code is being asked for or that it is the only solution to make games work after it is sunset?
Just put in an offline mode like was done for Redfall. https://www.ign.com/articles/redfalls-final-update-is-live-bringing-with-it-offline-mode-dlss-3-and-more
Knockout City provided tools for gamers to run their own private servers after it shutdown
https://www.knockoutcity.com/private-server-edition
Suicide Squad Kill the Justice League has servers still running but put in an update to provide offline mode
And fans have picked up the slack in Hitman with the peacock project when the companies lock certain things to online.
To reimplement the server side part of Hitman to run locally. So that if/when the official servers go down, anyone can still play the game. They’ve also made it easier/better to mod the game in various ways.
This includes leaderboards, contracts, game progression and unlocks, bonus/event missions, as well as being able to play elusive targets with scoring. All things that are unavailable when you play offline
https://old.reddit.com/r/HiTMAN/comments/12o76t3/what_is_the_purpose_of_peacock_project_mod/
So that’s what I’m guessing the movement wants. Just to leave the game in a playable state as opposed to inaccessible when servers go down. And source code wasn’t provided for these solutions.
OnePlus 7 Pro had my favorite approach to front camera with the pop out. Sad they went to regular screen holes like everyone else and then later got rid of the physical mute switch too.
This was fun and my first time participating. Just helped color some stuff in a bit.
I like that KeePass on PC and Android lets you use an autotype feature if autofill isn’t working instead of using copy paste.
I’m waiting to get a new phone until the EU battery requirements go into effect in a few years to see if replacing battery becomes easier to comply than it is now.
Next challenge is trying to make Linux more popular outside of enthusiasts for desktop use.
So it shows other companies are short term thinking focusing more on quarter profits, and also explains why they missed put on two console generations worth of time to make a dent in the PC space when the industry was claiming PC was dying.
It’s always excuses and lack of willingness to take risks on plans that might not pan out immediately. Then when it becomes successful from another company excuse is what is the market share in the present.
Yet other store platforms like epic, gog, blizzard, origin, and uplay don’t bother supporting Linux and are content with Microsoft.
So as much of a survival tactic it might be it would seem any other company wouldn’t bother and still aren’t.
Showing the importance of sustainable business models over the throw your entire budget at everything then end up firing hundreds and thousands of employees while giving bonuses to executives because the quarterly earnings weren’t as high approach that lot of publicly traded companies have moved towards.
Paid games hasn’t kept them from not having aggressive microtransactions themselves and sometimes worse. And there’s so many sources of games now beyond big publishers. The gaming landscape just isn’t the same as in the past that it can get away with setting whatever price they want and expect to turn a profit. The old hour of value stance isn’t as relevant, and is more likely to lead to bombs even amongst triple A publishers with their vast marketing budgets with that attitude. There’s way more options now that people don’t have to settle.
But you can get hundreds of hours from a f2p game, so that’s the competition $70 games have. Then there’s older triple a titles that are cheaper, and there’s so many that it’s not possible to have played all of them. Then epic giveaways, game bundles, indies, etc.
And price increases push more consumers away from impulse purchases. And that can lead to them becoming patient gamers once they see not buying at release isn’t a big deal.
That’s when you play PvP games that piss you off so much sadness goes to anger, which can be a nice distraction.
The opening was absolutely amazing and at least that part should be watched.
Syncthing has been so helpful in making me move away from cloud based options. And to think only reason I found out about it and gave it a shot was because I was trying to figure out how to easily sync my non Steam game save files between my Desktop and my Steam Deck. It’s been invaluable since then.
I don’t see mass amount of comments insulting you, but I do see you being unusually hostile from the get go as though wanting confrontation. So not surprising people aren’t receptive to the tone in terms of voting, but all things considered not seeing toxic discourse in response.
So I don’t know. I guess it might help to present things in a more calm manner? Unless that suggestion itself is what is considered toxic.