You never own any game, unless you code it yourself. You might hold a CD in your hands, but the game is still owned by someone else. You only have the right to use it as noted in the license you agreed by purchasing it.
Short answer: Not enough bad reports, compared to older good ones.
Long answer: ProtonDB only takes the latest report of each reporter into the rating. Which means if old reporters come back with a negative report, it will shift the rating quicker, as if only new negative appear.
This game is in a situation where it got a lot of good reports, and in the last 6 months there were less than 80 negative. But the trending tier is already bronze. Probably needs just a few more reports to give it the last push. You can also see in API answer, that the confidence of the good rating is strong due to the many good reports.
Beside the fact, that the SA never worn face masks. You still have time to fight against this, the moment these people will not wear any masks anymore, you'll live in a fully fascist country.
There is another video, showing only the torso. It has no music, but the actual sound and this is not even less terrifying https://youtu.be/gl0GnzPIOl4
"oh, i don't know what this native english speaker is saying, i guess english is still a skill i'm working on"
I'm no native English speaker as well, and that's how I often think as well. In my mother tongue I know so many words, their meaning and their sound. In English, however, I'm still learning new words now and then, and it opens my world to the language every time. This is true for dialects as well.
Learning a new language is quite hard in the beginning, but it's so satisfying and world opening when you start to actually use a new language.
The ultimate goal of the WIneHQ team is to have their own fully DX12 implementation. The reason why vkd3d-proton exists is that Valve didn't want to wait for it to mature and AFAIK they did have differences in what should be included in vkd3d. Which is why they don't work on the same project.
@vaionko@sopuli.xyz I've found this (scroll down to #5 if it won't scroll automatically). It shows some tools that can be used to change DMI information for different Manufacturers.
This is part of the motherboard and can only be changed with specific tools from the manufacturer. Back in the days there was AMIDEDOS as a dos tool to change it in AMI Bios. You would need to find out, what tool can be used to change it in your UEFI. However, it's possible that those tools are not available to the public.
Additionally, to what was already said, the size of storage is giving in Decimal (1000B based) while after formatting it is often shown in Binary (1024B based), which makes the storage look smaller, which it isn't.
And the most of the storage is coming from software stored in your home, not the OS itself. The OS only occupies around 3.3GB on the 5GB root partition:
That's exactly what I use, works like a charm.