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2 yr. ago

  • A very good point. I had forgotten about I2P and I don't know a ton about how hosting an onion site works

  • I was wondering if Void was still popular. It was kind of feeling like NixOS took all its hype

  • Isn't CPG repacks in the megathread? It has visual novels

  • All the article is trying to say is Cyberpunk took development expenses to another level.

    He may have been jesting with the interviewer, but it’s not far from being the truth. It was revealed that year that Cyberpunk 2077 was a drastically expensive game to both develop and fix. It cost CD Projekt a whopping $125 million to fix the game and pump it with new content after it was released – the firm spent $21 million alone in marketing for the Phantom Liberty expansion. That’s more than some developers spend on an entire game.

    By the time CD Projekt was ready to move away from Cyberpunk 2077, almost half a billion dollars had been invested in the game. If budget alone is enough to make a game ‘AAAAA’, CDP came close to that designation with Cyberpunk 2077.

  • Even if there was a multinational effort to stop P2P file sharing I feel like other methods would just be adopted or become mainstream

  • I think it's better to use photos in combination with text for the reasons other people have already mentioned.

    I think you can upload images to Reddit directly now and have them automatically displayed but I feel like the process is still a tad easier on Lemmy and you see it more often here. Using AI images as examples or to add flair to a post or comment might be a better way to stick it to Reddit.

  • That's part of the reason I am hoping Lemmy doesn't become the new Reddit with a total migration of users. I like the smaller userbase as selfish as that is. I feel like at least with the federated nature of Lemmy we would see less power mods that run a majority of communities preventing crosspromotion with other communities/instances and limiting feedback.


    I get why rules need to be added as a community grows but with Reddit this seems to mean a lot of micromanagement over things that wouldn't effect enjoyment of subreddit members and adding hurdles for new or infrequent users

    Here's a hypothetical example that kind of goes along with my previous comment:

    I want to post in a Elder Scrolls game modding subreddit asking about quality of life mods for games before Skyrim. It gets removed because the subreddit requires you to tag a specific game using a format like [Oblivion] or [Morrowind] for easier searching and sorting. The issue is I am not just talking about one game and tagging every TES game since Arena would eat up a lot of title space.

    In the grand scheme of things it makes sense but it's annoying to deal with especially if the subreddit doesn't clearly prompt users on why their post was removed and people who are just popping by to ask a quick question might be discouraged.

    I am hoping we don't see things like that become the norm on Lemmy.

  • I find the moderation is better here. My posts aren't being removed because they didn't match some forced title formatting or some other arbitrary reason.

    People also aren't just redirecting people to decade old posts and megathreads which is nice.


    Think about what AskReddit is like with the same kind of posts over and over again because they decided to limit posters to the title text.

  • Might be bots, might be youtube pushing these more to make everything feel more friendly..

    I wouldn't be surprised. A lot of YouTubers I follow have talked about how you can get a thousand positive comments but the one negative one will make you second guess everything. Maybe it's their way of fighting that encouraging more content to be produced

  • I don't even know how much of a role the monetary aspect has. I feel like a lot of Reddit is naturally gross and inauthentic but also soulless and elitist in a way. People still post content because they want the Reddit karma and rehash the same prompts that gives the same predictable answers that seem to appease the crowd. Other times when things are reposted comments will act harshly and and redirect them to a post or wiki from years ago.

    Reddit, to me, seems to lack genuine human interactions.

  • Yeah if you check the post you'll see that I linked to an article about it that explained how it came to be and has a few example clips.

    It's a bit like "Turkish Star Wars". It wasn't intended to be a joke or a meme but that's kind of legacy it's stuck with.

  • Part of the reason I posted it here specifically is because you wouldn't need to worry about the limitations of online DRM.

    If you wanted to you could read a book, watch a TV show, or play a game. A lack of internet doesn't need to be all that limiting.

  • No worries HowToBeat is a good website if you want to gauge how long a game might take you.

    Every so often I feel fatigued by long games so I'll look for something shorter.

  • Fair enough. I'm not sure what's in your backlog but there are some gems that can be beaten in a single play session. Titanfall 2's campaign for example only takes 6 hours.

  • Someone else linked one related modding but there are several other Minecraft communities that are more niche. There's one specifically for seeds for example.