Don't know how good a case Nintendo has here unless it can prove that Yuzu itself contains proprietary code that allows the ROMs to be played. If the decryption is being done on the ROMs' end, then that's just another reason to go after the ones dumping and distributing the ROMs. Nintendo couldn't even substantially stop Dolphin, and Dolphin actually had a decryption key straight from Wii firmware in it. Good luck to them, but they're likely going for the wrong legal target. Taking down what ROM sites they can (which would legally be a lot easier than the emulator makers) is just getting rid of drops in the ocean of the ROMs' spread, but they're the target Nintendo should be going after.
I remember very briefly playing Galaxies in the mid-2000s when my college friends and I were looking for budget MMOs to play together (WoW was expensive for me and some others at the time). It was OK but we quickly moved on from it. We actually played Pirates of the Caribbean Online for the most time overall but never did find one that we all really liked.
In actual negative impact on society, his companies are really no worse than any other big tech company, IMO. He just puts himself in the public spotlight more than the other CEOs.
Given the apparent amount of Gen V easter eggs in the S/V DLC, I would not be surprised if an announcement of Gen V remakes shows up soon, if not in this Presents. Then maybe I'll actually be able to afford to play a Gen V game.
I remember Gens back in the day, really solid competitor to Fusion, but hasn't been updated in a good decade. Last system I had it installed on was a laptop with 14.04, IIRC. I might still have a .deb of it on a hard drive somewhere, now I'm curious to see if it would work on a more modern OS/machine. On a similar note, anyone know if Gens was forked or anything like a successor cropped up anywhere?
Yes, because a Native American nation couldn't possibly have existed before the Australian version of pick-up trucks. If it's meant to be a joke, didn't quite land.
I know Super Mario Party allows for single player. Not positive on Mario Party Superstars since I've never tried it single player but I would be quite surprised if single player isn't supported on that. That said, my go-to party game is actually Smash Bros. Ultimate and that definitely supports single player.
I've been using it for the past year and can confirm, snap is an option but not forced on you like the *buntu family. It even comes with Flatpak and Flathub installed by default (and does not force that on you either). You have freedom of choice.
In addition, if you don't want to go the rolling release route, there's OpenSUSE Leap (which is transitioning to ALP), as well as at least one immutable option if that's more your thing.
The first two Paper Mario games are a lot of fun. When TTYD is released on Switch that may be the next Switch game I pick up.
Still going through P5 Tactica, on the second Kingdom of four. I do have to say I like how there are things like side quests in the game to help master mechanics that you can apply in the main story missions - makes the game more satisfying when you can do that.
It sounds like there could be some changes made to the initial hardware/design to make it work better out-of-the-box, but the modularity concept is a good one, IMO. It's still a new concept, so things are going to be expensive at first and the issues can be worked out over time. Might not be something to pick up right now with the current models for many (including me), but there is potential in the idea down the road as things like the hubs/ports and other hardware quirks get worked out.
That's really the issue. The creatures in the game, as I've seen pointed out in various places, are much closer in design to actual pokemon designs than in other poke-clone games, with some looking so close they might as well just be a regional form. I don't even know any of the pals' names but I can somewhat clearly recall seeing one that's basically "Luxray at home". I know the maker of the game has said he doesn't really value originality, but there's a difference between being unoriginal and straight-up plagiarism.
YouTubeTV and Hulu + Live TV already literally stream cable. Can't get closer to basic cable than that, lol. That said, remains to be seen whether Netflix is one of the services that survives the drastic market correction I think will happen eventually.
Don't know how good a case Nintendo has here unless it can prove that Yuzu itself contains proprietary code that allows the ROMs to be played. If the decryption is being done on the ROMs' end, then that's just another reason to go after the ones dumping and distributing the ROMs. Nintendo couldn't even substantially stop Dolphin, and Dolphin actually had a decryption key straight from Wii firmware in it. Good luck to them, but they're likely going for the wrong legal target. Taking down what ROM sites they can (which would legally be a lot easier than the emulator makers) is just getting rid of drops in the ocean of the ROMs' spread, but they're the target Nintendo should be going after.