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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)KA
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2 yr. ago

  • I think there is a "graphical plateau" to gaming; a universal constant a bit like Moore's Law. And while it's not certain, it's very possible the Steam Deck has mostly moved beyond it.

    I definitely don't think there's an infinite bound to the detail games can add, especially within the resolution displayed on the Deck. Plus, many formats of games have not been well-served by that sort of extra detail. When a fringe hit like Liar's Bar, REPO, or Lethal Company comes along, it never really needs the extra horsepower of top consoles. There's a few rare PS5 exclusives that may struggle on it, but given Cyberpunk 2077 runs on it, I don't even think we need be too worried.

  • It sounds like Nintendo games would really be the preference for librarians.

    • They stay at high price so many patrons will want them
    • They’re often kid friendly; and part of a library’s goal is giving kids a destination
    • The console they’re designed for can be carried to the library
    • The media is resilient to damage or being faked
  • This is a problem a lot of VR games have to work with. They work best when you’re not adventuring around, so many of them prescribe a long set of challenges in a small space.

    If the Princess gets any kind of ranged ability, you could make it like a sniping “puzzle” game across a wide parapet. And, if trying to elongate the game, come up with story reasons why just as the Knight opens the gate to her keep, he’s discovered and an evil dragon/Baron whisks her to a different tower. (Kinda like what Super Meat Boy does every level)

  • Another Crab’s Treasure.

    Oh, haha, a souls game but with crabs, funny parody haha!

    Except, no, while it does seem like it would be compared to SpongeBob humor, and it does self censor “shit” to “ship”, the themes of the story go well beyond just “Crab must find his stolen shell!”

    It takes time to ramp up but in some ways it feels like a better-written game than most Soulslikes (to me, that’s not a high bar given the way many of them wrap their lore in many layers of obfuscation that you don’t get to enjoy in the moment)

    Watching speedruns and trying NG+ is also a lot of fun.

  • While the proposed bill in the article was a poorly-defined measure, I object to the idea that gun control will always be losing. It's one of The Onion's reliable jokes; "No way to present this, says only nation where this kind of thing happens regularly". And that's not because healthcare and housing are perfectly solved issues everywhere else.

    I've spoken with several gun owners in my state who are in perfect agreement that many do not respect the weight those objects have, and follow no safety rules - and would like to see sane regulations on model production and better background check systems, based specifically around how the most gun crimes are committed. We're just in a ridiculous spiral where the right keeps complaining Democrats want to take away all guns, and lawmakers keep aiming for these vague "assault bans" that would accomplish nothing.

  • This is actually why I want more politics to happen via webcam conversations. Bots can’t interfere, and it’s harder to express a totalitarian sentiment like “AlL iMUGrEntS dIE BYbY”

  • I’m mostly PC. I have a PlayStation, and I just like the rental tryout system of PS+. I still think it’s a nicely cost effective way for someone new to gaming to try a lot of stuff.

    But yes, even then you can often get much of the same through Steam key bundles.

  • I still don’t understand the sentiment that turn-based doesn’t sell. We just got Clair Obscur breaking expectations.

    Part of it is, you have to make the combat interesting visually, tactically, and sometimes even tactilely. Some games get that right: Persona 5, Like a Dragon, etc.

    I would also go on a limb and say that 99.9% of strategy in turn taking games is terribly designed. Buff attack, use strongest attack. The one that I really wanted to see more of is a system like Cosmic Star Heroine’s.

  • Recently, Clair Obscur told another story of ex-publisher success. So far, we only know of the review success and I don’t actually know if it’s a financial success.

    If it is, I can only hope it leads to some investor understanding in just how done the world is of lottery-planning in the game world; seeing one victory, and having every single publisher chase it.

    • Cover shooters
    • Candy crush mobile games
    • NFT games
    • Battle royales
    • 5v5 Overwatch clones
  • That's the thing, though. I respect the analogy, but the equivalent here would be if the game was also checking your drive for other games, for financial apps, scanning your browser's cookies to see which sites you visit, etc.

    If, while playing a singleplayer game, they're recording what actions you take within that singleplayer game, it's understandable some people wouldn't even want that - but I also don't see that as nearly so invasive as other data travesties. Worse, highlighting it here feels like a "cry wolf" situation where you'd desensitize people to the most harmful privacy breaches.

  • Based on the article text, it’s only citing things like how long you play. I thought most games collected telemetry like this?

    Don’t get me wrong, if it was scanning your drive to sell data to harvesters, I’d be extremely unnerved. And you should definitely be able to turn this off. But I feel like even Valve has recorded things like “60% of players quit after losing to this boss”

  • If anyone is done with the official series and wants some more, some indie games that nicely follow its success:

    Gyakuten Live, a fan game based on Love Live School Idol - three cases in, generally based around lower-stakes crimes but with surprising escalation

    Occult Crime Police, a series based on small town paranormality

    Tyrion Cuthbert: Attorney of the Arcane, takes place in a world of magic where rules of spells are often a form of evidence.

  • I'm going to warn you: There's a lot that ICE and the administration have gotten away with because of people claiming "No way. Their actions would be too ridiculous if that's what it was. There must be more to it."

    What we knew already even before scarce details emerged:

    • Judges are extremely slow to take deliberate actions, to affirm their position as a fair arbiter that gives all sides chances to respond
    • ICE has scarcely ever provided sufficient evidence for many of their arrests, including most of the high-profile ones
    • The immigrants involved in this crime showed no indications of being violent or dangerous (even though ICE claimed they were)

    So no, I don't think ICE can be given benefit of doubt in this case. Every officer involved with this one can be arrested - and they can provide their argument when they go on trial.

  • I’m imagining something like being able to go to a lawyer, or journalist’s office - somewhere they’d have established notaries, and show them a driver’s license or other notable documentation. They wouldn’t be granted rights to record that information permanently, but would grant a cryptographic signature sourced from their office to express that their office has seen them.

    This would rely on professional trust - that the people you show your info to will not record it; and, that if they for some reason have to, they won’t turn it over to warrants. By the same token, they’d be trusted that they’re not inventing people from thin air.

    You’re right that someone engaging online long enough could be exposed. That would then rely on any effective “Right to be forgotten” laws to erase unnecessary data.

  • This is the one thing I hoped for out of crypto/blockchain.

    You, commenter, don't need to know that I'm "Brian Brianson, a citizen living at 123 Abenue Avenue". But, it's good to know that the person commenting is a real person who has been seen and verified by someone, as a simple true/false flag. If there were good ways of verifying basic conditions of people you interact with online, without exposing personal details, then it could curb botnet opinionation as well as be useful for a lot of things.