Nintendo traditionally has only broken backwards compatibility as part of a major change in form factor. The Wii could play Gamecube games, the Wii U could play Wii games. The Gameboy Colour could play Gameboy games, the Gameboy Advance could play Gameboy Colour games, the DS could play Gameboy Advance games, the 3DS could play DS games.
Given the Switch 2 is still a hybrid handheld, it would be out of character for them to break it.
Really funny how many of those "features" were just an embedded browser with no additional interaction with the service. You know, like every app can do, and has been able to do, for a decade+.
I went with the Motorola G Stylus 5g. It's not perfect, but it does have an SD slot, a headphone jack, FM radio, an easily unlocked bootloader, and a built-in stylus I didn't expect to care about but which I have grown weirdly dependent on. I just wish it had a removable battery.
Eh, I'm experienced as fuck, and once you learn Simulacrum it's basically over.
Also, forcing the DM to "deal with" you is power; narrative power. An "OP" fighter requires you to add another enemy, or increase some HP, or higher athletics DCs. The types of things they can do barely change. As a wizard levels up, you have to account for their powers in more and more scenarios until your entire prep time amounts to "how can I make this interesting and not just something the wizard negates?". Every midboss needs to either know counterspell or have an abjurer on staff. Anywhere you don't want the PCs to go has to be covered in guards and wards and forbiddance. Every fight needs legendary saves and the ability to reshape the battlefield to become meaningful.
The fact that with enough effort you can negate their power isn't proof they're not powerful, it's proof they are.
Depends on the setting, in D&D. In Krynn, for example, you must possess an inborn aptitude (actually a blessing from the moons) to learn magic. Someone without it simply cannot learn it.
Unless an iphone becomes literally the only option, I don't see myself ever getting one. I'm deeply morally opposed to their walled-garden approach, and I won't even get one Samsung's Androids for the same reason. It would be nice for me if there was more people like me, but regardless, as long as there's a freer option, I'll be taking it.
I use it quite a lot, and its code is usually either functional, or within a stone's throw, and debugging its code is usually faster than writing something myself.
Well, think about it. Agriculture is civilization. Farming enables cities, specialization, and large-scale cooperation. Without it, we're tribal hunter-gatherers.
I don't, tbh. I did, for 15 years, because it was the most customizable and feature-rich browser on the market, but when they killed XUL support all my important shit broke, 15 years of customizations and getting things just how I wanted them, and instead of spending that again I migrated to Vivaldi essentially out of spite.
What's funny is, there's an actual Hardy Boys novel where they get talked into a D&D LARP, and it's not this one. It's called Dungeon of Doom, I remember loving it as a child and reading it over and over again, and no I will not ever read it again for fear of discovering it actually kinda blows.
It's even more complicated because he posted it to YouTube two days before the game even came out, potentially devastating their early sales
It's impossible to prove the harm piracy does or does not do, and in general I agree that it shouldn't be illegal in the first place or at least shouldn't carry more than a slap on the wrist fine, this is the world we live in and the dude uploaded a game to YouTube in its entirety before the game released, which is the kind of thing you don't do in a world where copyright claims send you to jail