I've heard that Steam provides some guidelines to get your games to work well with Proton. I'm not able to find them but maybe they're behind a developer portal or something. If it works with Proton there's no reason to aim for a native Linux binary since your time will be better spent elsewhere.
Proton has been a blessing and a curse. What's the point of making a native Linux version when you can more easily make it work well with Proton (or don't bother at all and it might still work with Proton).
If that's the case they should not say stuff like "oh we would totally support Linux if the Steam Deck would have sold 10 million copies, the userbase is just too small now" but then proceed to support ARM which has a much smaller userbase still while there's not even a guarantee it will outgrow Linux in the near future. Just quit the BS and say you'll never want to support Linux.
The Nintendo Wii used gyroscopic controls (first gen original controllers only had accelerometers. The Wii Motion Plus add-on added gyroscopes, but later controllers integrated both into a single unit). The IR bar was just for the Wii controller to figure out which detection was towards the TV.
I've had a server running without whitelist because a friend hadn't bought the game yet, within 2 weeks it was griefed. It was just the two of us playing.
There are crawler bots just searching for unprotected Minecraft servers and it's just a matter of time before they find yours.
It's a shame the server lacks a pretty basic feature such as password protection.
The biggest thing is that you won't know how long you will be able to play it. At some point they'll stop updating the app, a new Android version will be released that's not compatible with the app, or they will take down the server that the app relies on etc. It could be years, a decade, but at some point it'll be either really hard or impossible to play anymore.
Same here. Moved from Outlook to Mailbox a year ago and I'm happy with it, using mostly custom domains with catch all. I havo also recently enabled encryption which wasn't hard to integrate into my mail clients at all. They dont have a free plan, but the cheapest plan is 1€/month (which doesn't allow custom domains).
This is the old SteamOS from over a decade ago and isn't usable anymore. The modern SteamOS from the Steam Deck isn't available yet for desktops.