This makes me feel even more uneasy about Double Fine's acquisition by Microsoft: I'm afraid that MS could someday deem the studio redundant and kill it rather than let employees buy it back just like Bungie was allowed to do back then.
The games are the property of the publisher (in the case of Hi-fi Rush, Microsoft Games), so (baring licensing issues like music) as long as the publisher is around the game should still be around.
It looks like the pictures went through a background removal tool then the resulting pictures were pasted on top of a wood texture, with no regards to the original pictures' orientation.
That would explain why in some pictures the article seems to be cut in half as well as the confusing perspective on most pictures.
A millionth percent. People are not remotely aware of the whole Manifest v3 drama and will either not care for the degraded experience or put the blame on extensions developers.
I have a completely different experience from yours: it would import random packages or rules and suggest stupid shit that made me disable the feature after less than 10 minutes of use. And again and again after IDE updates would re-enable the feature!
Yeah, modern Windows and HDDs don't mix well. I refurbished multiple laptops and each time just throwing in a cheap SSD (and cleaning the cooler + sometimes reapplying thermal paste) would breathe new life into them.
The "minor" stake could potentially be up to 25% of the team, making sure he would still be in control of the squad.
If I understand it right, Lawrence Stroll isn't planning to sell his entire stake, just a portion of it to make a quick buck while remaining the majority stakeholder.
This makes me feel even more uneasy about Double Fine's acquisition by Microsoft: I'm afraid that MS could someday deem the studio redundant and kill it rather than let employees buy it back just like Bungie was allowed to do back then.