One of them will have to be minesweeper because I can pretty much play it endlessly. The other 4, I'm not so sure. I love some of suggestions other people made.
As much as I dislike about Discord, I can't deny that its level of service, polish and ease of use are just superb. Especially for voice chat with friends with integrated screen sharing that just works.
There are show stoppers sometimes - occasionally messages just don't get sent or received for whatever reason, and Discord's handling of it is just bad. It's pretty important for a chat app to work reliably for chat. But when it works (which is almost always), boy is it nice.
Haven't tried Revolt and I likely can't because of the network effect already mentioned by someone else. How does it compare in ease of use, ease of setting up, feature set for free users, etc.?
Having used KeePass for a few years, syncing via a self-hosted SFTP server, I can't recommend it for most people.
It's too technical, especially if you want sync, but even if you don't
Apps on different platforms don't quite agree with each other in all ways, making syncing a bit annoying (particularly: how to associate a login with multiple URLs)
It can be hard to pick which app to use on each platform, other than Windows, because there's no official/canonical best option (Mono has lots of drawbacks)
I've switched to Bitwarden and I'm sticking with it.
Correct - even if you include the (necessary) option of making up your own answer. If you pick a percentage at random, you have a 0% chance of picking 0%.
There's a falafel place that closes at around 13:00 every day and doesn't seem to really care all that much if you pay or not. I can't imagine it not being a money laundering scheme.
They're fine, but as you mentioned in the first paragraph, lack of a standard is their main drawback. You could find two power supplies with the exact same connector but different voltage and polarity.
Right, but how long did it take to build?