it's a niche game that i know little about, have no interest in, and definitely am not going to shell out money for; he's bitter that I don't care and I'm not impressed that a franchise older than I am shat out another entry.
This you? This was what I was referring to when I was saying you were being negative. You knew basically nothing about the franchise and yet automatically assume it's shit. For the record, neither do I, but I don't make judgements based off of zero evidence
I mean to each their own but all I've seen in this post from you is just negativity with very little knowledge. You shit on games while knowing very little about them, which is kind of sad
I think you missed the OP's point about the ongoing enshitification of paid services. From the words of Gabe Newell,
"The easiest way to stop piracy is not by putting antipiracy technology to work. It’s by giving those people a service that’s better than what they’re receiving from the pirates.”
The reason why so many people are pirating even when they can afford it is because companies continue to make their services worse for their paying customers. Simply "paying for your content" will encourage these companies to continue their predatory, behavior.
Edit: I think I should add this isn't really true if you can buy physical copies of the content, but that's becoming less and less of an option as large streaming services make sure the only way to watch their content legally is buying their shitty subscriptions
To be fair, I think it's important to examine the social trends that influence people's body images and contribute to them wanting to get a lot of plastic surgery done. I don't think that's healthy and it's a lot more complicated than just "looking how they want"
I started messing around with Linux when I was ~15. I was trying to install it on an old laptop so I could actually use it. I started with Debian before moving to Linux mint. Eventually I bought a raspberry pi and started to tinker with that and made my own website for shits and giggles. Eventually, I kinda stopped tinkering with Linux for a while
Flash forward a few years and my job has a piece of software that boots into a live gentoo environment in order to perform hard drive wiping, and I got a lot more familiar with the Linux command line (bash in this case) as I had to do a lot of troubleshooting as well as testing as I was in technical support and then later QA. This was also my first experience with VI, as I had to edit configuration files while inside of the live environment.
At that point, I started to experiment with Linux again, and even managed to install arch on my laptop. I did end up switching to Manjaro as my daily driver, as I couldn't be assed to spend enough time to get arch working how I needed. I also now have an Ubuntu server (I know) that I use as a media and game server, and continue to daily drive manjaro though I'm planning on switching to EndeavorOS soon.
I think the handle's a little short