

I played the first game for a bit, I’ll give the sequel a shot for sure


I played the first game for a bit, I’ll give the sequel a shot for sure


oh that brings me back


I simrace competitively, autogears would destroy my MMR 🤣
Though lack of practice would do that too.
Realistically, I won’t have fun doing it that way.


I have a couple severed tendons and lots of stitches, my entire left hand is immobilized and wrapped up.


You’re using the USA, a country just as shit if not worse than China when it comes to human rights to try and make China look good.
That’s the bad faith argument.


I care about good faith arguments, and you’re not making one.


I can’t lose my home for criticizing the government. I can fight an eminent domain claim and be compensated properly.


He’s not far right, he supports politicians that are far right.
That has the same energy as ‘he not a nazi, he just thinks Hitler is cool.’


deleted by creator
Good on you for rejecting a job offer over something so minor, I guess?


Unless there’s a specific thing you need in the newer versions, there’s no point upgrading. Use the framework you started with. Make your next project with the new framework.


Oh look, another shitty live service game getting scuttled after people gave their money to the corporation.
I can’t wait for the next shitty live service game release.


Please learn about fire extinguishers before using one.


It took the firemen 45 minutes to put out my car after the full fuel tank ruptured.
An EV catching fire isn’t an ‘electrical fire’, it’s a metal fire. That’s why it takes so long to put out and you just kind of try to suffocate it and let it die out.


Dungeon Master was distributed on a floppy disk that had a specific weak sector that would randomly return 1 or 0 when read. The game would periodically read that sector and, if it returned the same bit x times in a row, it would kill your entire party. When copying the disk, the original would read either 1 or 0 and then write that value in that specific sector, meaning the copy would always return 1 or 0.
The check was random, hidden in graphics files, and this, combined with some obfuscation and some more copy protection, meant it took over a year for the game to get cracked. A record at the time.
The dev claimed that the time and effort spent on the protection scheme was worth it as it allowed the game to keep selling through typical sales channels for much longer than usual.
Look I didn’t get a job because I needed work, I got one because I need money.
“Oh teddy, why hath thou forsaken me”
I remember playing that all the way back on the Amiga