Would’ve loved if Horizon Zero Dawn on PC came with a manual I could read while it compiled shaders…
Would’ve loved if Horizon Zero Dawn on PC came with a manual I could read while it compiled shaders…
I think once I accidentally made a microblog when I meant to start a thread in a magazine? It felt super vague and I basically haven’t bothered making too-level posts since. I just lurk and post snark.
Shocked, but thrilled. But also VERY shocked. But in a good way.
I don’t think a game engine needs feature parity with Unreal, it just needs to be easier to get in and make something. The learning curve with Unreal is very steep and Unity’s has historically been… well, less steep (arguably?).
Unity has other problems to solve for though. Like undoing the damage from their ex-CEO.
I built one of these a couple weekends back and have been blissfully extracting ROMs from my cartridge collection since then. I love it so much, and it’s a really solid design!
Exactly. I’m one of these gamers. I’m tired of souls-likes and rogue-likes, boomer shooters, gritty grimdark action dramas…
Like you said, life is hard and expects so much from me. I want games that feel like it’s okay to exist without having to try too hard or prove myself. Cozy is exactly the genre I want to be spending most of my gaming time in.
Thank you. Obviously “we would buy them if we could” is given; but just as obviously, this was just wishful thinking out loud.
No more than it was before the DLC release, no.
Wasn’t PoE exactly this, but for Diablo 3? Apparently the Diablo series just spawns community-built competitors each generation now?
I miss Google Wave. It was my preferred way to collaborate with friends for a long time.
Agreed. I never should’ve done that.
I can vouch for the extension being useful for getting the receiver away from other USB 3 ports and cables, which as others have said is almost certainly what’s disrupting your BT signal.
I’ve dealt with the same kind of problem, and using an extension really helped, as long as I put the receiver away from USB 3 devices and cables.
I work at a company which doesn’t make games, but interacts with a lot of game devs, and employs a lot of ex-game devs; and everyone I work with is either glad they got out of game dev or glad they skipped it altogether.
I used to work for a very reasonable (smaller) game studio, and while it was fun, I still got a massive pay and quality-of-life improvement by changing careers away from making games.
Thank you for this. I had the same impression, and was starting to get annoyed; but if it comes with more features out the gate, then that’s nice!
I only care if the new guy gives me back the content I paid for when the game first came out.