Yeah the prologue level they showed looked incredible. I really hope they can give the game all the polish it needs, after so long in development they absolutely need to release something with quality to match.
I suspect performance is a criteria and it is tested but I don't think the testers play through the full game. I seem to remember Horizon Zero Dawn or something got verified but only the starting area performed well. Could be misremembering the game but it's definitely happened.
You might find the lectures from Harvard called Justice: What's the right thing to do interesting. There's also a book by the same name written by the professor that I'd definitely recommend.
Guys we just need to come together, why is there so much division? You just need to see the common ground and not act so combative while we systematically take your rights away.
But not this bit of the bible. There can't be any translation errors, missing context or exaggeration on this bit specifically because we like this bit.
I don't know what you mean by 'bring your game to the deck'. How is it any different from listing it on Steam? Anyway to answer the question I think it's because they actually have a decent platform that's worth the cost for most developers. If you start conditionally lowering prices you also create an extra incentive for people to hold off putting their games on steam in the hope of getting a special deal.
I don't think it's used as a prefix but as a unit symbol. Point still stands though, unfortunately.