Over a week later Apex Legends is still broken on Linux / Steam Deck
Grangle1 @ Grangle1 @lemm.ee Posts 0Comments 433Joined 2 yr. ago
Why do I feel like this is gonna just be M$/Activi$ion/Blizzard going, "Hey look at Starfield, we have a sci-fi thing, let's copy Starfield with our sci-fi IP".
This has to have been in the planning/development stages for a while. What we may not know is whether they were planning on launching now anyway or whether they moved their plans up after the editor was fired.
Ah, the graphics-based console wars. Been going on since the '90s, despite especially the last couple console generations proving that realistic graphics are less relevant to a game's overall quality than ever. Nintendo's been doing just fine with "underpowered" hardware since the Wii (N64 and GameCube could keep up with their contemporaries hardware-wise but Nintendo made poor storage format decisions that held those consoles back - imagine what a CD-based N64 could've been...). The Wii U didn't sell as well but it still was by no means a bad console (though Nintendo can thank the 3DS keeping them profitable enough to produce the Switch during that time - looking at the games that came out then, you can tell Nintendo knew their "main" console in that era was actually the 3DS). Heck, the Wii U maybe could've gotten the third-party support it desperately needed if Nintendo didn't push them to shoehorn in funky gamepad features so hard.
For all the talk the Japanese gov't makes of using pop culture like anime, manga and video games to introduce people to other more traditional parts of Japanese culture (such as taiko), Japanese gaming companies sure aren't buying into it. Oh no, someone's eating an onigiri! Quick, make it a doughnut before it gets to the West!
I dunno, when it comes to the "gamer moment" meltdowns over this game, I haven't seen them related to Miles, he seems to be pretty well-liked. I've mainly seen them over MJ's design. Not saying I agree, just saying what I've observed.
Ugh, it took me so long to find that when playing Pokémon Sword so I wasn't deafened by the cries whenever someone Dynamaxed.
Remember when earlier gens locked the run button behind an unlock?
Last time I played Mario 64 on 3D All Stars I tried a "stay out of the basement" run, to see if I could collect enough stars to beat the game with only touching the basement levels to get the metal cap and do the required Bowser level for progression. I ended up picking up another game at the time before I finished it, but I've been looking for something to play this week after beating Tears of the Kingdom, so maybe I'll go pick up where I left off while waiting for the Mario RPG remake!
It's fine. No real crash/stability issues on the flatpaks I've installed. The real downsides are that, yeah, some apps don't integrate well with the rest of the system either in some functions or theming, due to the sandboxing, and if an app has many or large dependencies it can take up a lot of space compared to a native/repo app and you also may then have more than one copy of those dependencies on your system. That doesn't usually cause conflicts (a positive side of sandboxing), but it may be a problem on smaller storage devices if you use a lot of flatpaks or need other large apps installed.
I hate it when developers make what they say are side games in a series essential to canon, especially when they don't tell you they're doing it or when they go into the side game not planning to make it canon and then decide it's canon during or after development.
Or I should say, I hate it when developers make the next main series game assuming you've played the essential "side" game and leave out or half-ass their catch-up for people who haven't played it. I call it "Chain of Memories syndrome" after when Kingdom Hearts made Chain of Memories essential to fully understanding KH2.
Allot yourself a certain time of the day to play them. Basically, schedule your play time and only play during that play time. That's what I do. I play at a certain time of the evening, for 2 hours maximum. Otherwise I don't really touch my games. If I'm doing something else at that time that I feel takes priority (such as working on something or doing something else with friends or family) then I'm probably just not going to play that night. That's basically how my friends and I helped get one of our group out of a gaming addiction: hanging around with his brother at their place doing other stuff. Over the course of a few months he slowly would come out and make his way closer to us or hang around in the doorway of his room watching us for increasingly longer periods of time, until he eventually would actually log off the game and join in our activities. We just consistently got together at the same time every week. Nothing more to it.
I finished it this weekend. 🥳 Now I need to find something to play next, lol. I'm waiting on the Mario RPG remake and not really big on getting any new full-price games in the meantime, so Mario Wonder will have to wait, if I do pick it up. I think I've got some stuff on Steam to hold me over until then.
Got all the shrines (both surface and sky) in TotK and am finally on the last content. Should finish it within the next few days, hopefully this weekend. Apparently there were some missions in the Depths that should be main story missions because Josha won't help you advance in the main story until these missions are done, but they're labeled side missions so I put them off. Annoying. I just want to fight the final boss!
Konami couldn't even get the classic Castlevania collection working right on Proton out of the box (though they did eventually fix it). They can't even get these PS1/PS2 games running at 60 FPS on the Switch, or even fitting completely on the cart. What the heck are they doing?
There have been games like Stretch Panic where you stretch individual objects, but yeah, not one where you stretch the world!
If anything, they are too afraid of litigation in any way. I know protecting your IP is important for running your business and controlling your brand, and I respect Nintendo's hands-off stance on any sort of outside issues and not wanting to be associated with anything that could damage it, but Nintendo's IP attorneys really need to learn to chill a bit. You have to get permission to stream the tournament for spectators and can't even use the game's name or logo in tournament publications? Really? You can hold a tournament but can't even tell other people what game it's for without permission?
That said, I would guess that the scandals/fiascos that hit the Smash Bros tournament scene a few years ago were the big impetus for this (on top of wanting $). As mentioned above, Nintendo is notorious for guarding its image and avoiding any sort of outside controversy whatsoever, to the point that they're even willing to kill off any kind of grassroots tourney scene to avoid it. Many of their execs still see Nintendo as a kids' toy company and run it as such.
Some favorites of mine:
Sonic (just about every game in the series): even during the "dark age of Sonic" ('06 through Unleashed) and in flops like Forces, the one thing the series has consistently gotten right is the music. Jun Senoe will rarely steer you wrong.
Ace Attorney (also the whole series): has it all - some fun melodies, tracks that fit the mood whatever it might be, great character themes, and just about every Pursuit theme is an awesome hype track.
Octopath Traveler (the original): I love the instrumentation, more wonderful themes for characters as well as locations, and the Battle II music has to be my favorite battle music in any JRPG ever. I'm a sucker for good string music.
Gaming: Only if you're playing one of the VERY few games that doesn't run in Linux yet, and that number continues to drop rapidly. There's plenty of tools out there to make games work well in Linux.
Office: For basic things, there's a million and one office suites that work in Linux and you can even use Office 365 Online if you really need that Microsoft Office experience/compatibility. This is only valid if you or your company need specific add-ons that don't have any equivalent in other office suites. My own employer uses these, so in that instance, yes, I do need MS Office for those. But from what I know, still not an entirely common thing, and you can still get by with Linux compatible office suites for most things.
Photoshop: I don't work with images, but from what I understand this one has some validity, comparing the tools available in Photoshop vs the GIMP or other drawing tools. But that's just if you're doing some really advanced image editing.
Ecosystem: if this is just referring to the fact that most people don't use Linux, there are plenty of FOSS programs that work in both Windows and Linux and very few common file types that aren't mutually compatible.
Hardware: another instance that has greatly improved over time, and there hasn't been anything in years that I haven't had "just work" by plugging it in. If the proprietary drivers don't install, there's probably an open source driver out there to get your hardware running. Will admit that in some instances features may be more limited, depending on what the drivers will be able to do, but as I mentioned that's really getting better almost daily.
Not sure if KDE Neon counts as a "less popular" distro, but it's what I've been using for around the last half year. I appreciate the stability of being based on the latest Ubuntu LTS along with the package availability of a Ubuntu-based distro, while also getting all the latest updates to KDE software and enough updates to other software to keep me satisfied. Snap is installed but not default (my system uses very minimal numbers of snaps as a result) and Flatpak is installed so I can also easily install software that's not in the Ubuntu LTS repos as a binary.
Gave up on trying to find the last few shrines in TotK by myself and just dug up a guide because I want to finish the game with at least all the surface shrines found in a reasonable amount of time. Surprised at how many I missed that were practically right under my nose. They also love hiding way too many shrines in caves. I have 8 more surface shrines to go, then the decision of if I want to finish the sky ones since it's such a PITA to try to even get up to where they are in the first place. I do still have to farm a few Light Dragon parts and Sundelions to finish powering up a certain piece of gear, so I'll have to spend some time in the sky anyway, so maybe I'll go for the rest of the sky shrines while I'm at it.
It's always the anti-cheat.