The only major thing this infographic leaves out is the differences in subsonic vs supersonic ammo.
If you're firing supersonic ammo you're going to get the 'crack' of the round breaking the sound barrier no matter what, and it's always going to be somewhere in the vicinity of loud as fuck.
Did some of their games flop due to publishers pushing games as a service garbage? For at least some of them I'd say that's a solid chunk of at least one recent flop.
Last I heard- which was very recent- Naughty Dog's next game won't be TLOU 3. And they're done- afaik- with Uncharted. So unless we're getting Jak 4(look I can fucking hope ok) then it'll probably be a new IP. Their multiplayer title got cancelled but it's not like they're ceased existing. Hell, it getting cancelled is certainly better for their image than releasing a terrible title.
I think Bioware's issues probably have the least to do with live service garbage. They've been trending downward, imo, since Inquisition. Anthem was an absolute dumpster fire. That game was in such rough shape I don't think it's even fair to blame the live service parts.
idk how much of Suicide Squad's shittiness can be blamed on the live service aspects either. Certainly some, but I don't see how the plot being ass is a live service issue. It was just badly written.
Redfall was less of a live-service thing and more just that they fucked up and we got an absolute stinker of a game. From my understanding, that game had significant issues from the very beginning. I'm willing to give Arkane another shot, at least- I love basically every other game they've made so I'll give them a chance and won't pre-judge their future stuff based on Redfall. Hopefully Microsoft lets them go directly back into their niche.
So basically, I think my take is that usually shit games are just shit games, and even good devs deliver them once in awhile. The fact that they're live service titles is maybe a part of the issue, but certainly not the whole issue.
Either option is viable. Depends on the question. Usually things are either downvoted because it's too stupid to be a legitimate question and it's clearly just someone being inflammatory, or it's a question that, while arguably stupid, doesn't really fit with the idea of the community.
"What are your thoughts on photosynthesis" is a post that's -2 right now. It's probably getting downvoted because it's just a fucking question. It's kinda stupid, but only in the sense that I have no clue what they're wanting to hear about photosynthesis. It doesn't fit the community. Goddamnit I still instinctively type subreddit. It would work better for a general discussion community.
Sometimes there's a rare question that's actually incredibly stupid and clearly not someone trolling, but they give zero further information.
Like "Could time start moving faster due to climate change?" How do you answer something like that without knowing how the hell they came to that conclusion? "No." isn't exactly a satisfying response, but it's pretty much the only one you've got.
Hell, your question isn't a particularly great example of a 'no stupid questions' question. It's really more of a shower thought.
To be clear, the Breath Of The Wild aspects are pretty minor. It plays little jingles when you find new landmarks that are very BotW-esque, you can get a glider, the UI is similar sometimes, and it has a climbing system that I never use. It's clearly an inspiration, but it's mostly not gameplay features.
It's a lot more similar to Ark in terms of the base building/progression. The combat is it's own thing- nothing springs to mind as a clear comparison.
But yeah, fair. Nothing lost by waiting and seeing where it goes.
The only aspect of Christmas that's inherently Christian is the fact that it has 'Christ' in the name.
When I was young it was a bit different- we'd pray on Christmas, have a themed tree, a little nativity scene setup. That sort of thing. I don't do that anymore. Christmas is as religious to me as Valentines day, my birthday, Saint Patrick's day, and Thanksgiving. It's more a cultural event than a religious one, is what I'm getting at.
If anyone wants a further example of "Christmas but not even slightly Christian", try watching a few Christmas movies. A lot of them aren't particularly religious. I recently saw Violent Night, it's an excellent example lol.
I definitely agree- this isn't 'nostupidquestions' it's just 'random questions'. Maybe the mods should be a bit more strict and redirect people to an asklemmy community? idk if that exists, though, which is possibly part of the problem.
They're inherently louder. But they're not always inherently loud. There's a lot of different switch types, and some are loud on purpose. So if you get a keyboard with blue switches they're going to be loud because they're specifically intended to be both tactile(you feel a 'bump' when the key activates) and loud (you hear a click when the key activates). I had an internet buddy with blue switches, and the whole fucking chat knew when he was typing because his mic picked it up.
Personally I like tactile keys, but I absolutely hate loud keyboards. So I have brown switches- they have the tactile 'bump' that I like the feel of, but they're not obnoxiously loud.
You can also go with red switches, and those are just straight up-down switches. No bump, no click. They're generally the quietest common switch, especially if you're not whaling on them. There's roughly a billion other types of switch, as well. It's not just blues, browns, and reds. There's even "silent" switches. I have zero experience with those, though, so no idea how silent they actually get.
Note: I'm not crazy into mechanical keyboards. I just did a bit of research before I bought one awhile back. So... grain of salt and all.
The page still loads behind it, usually, there's just a popup keeping you from accessing it. So I don't see how they could stop you from just.. removing the popup.
I don't engage socially in random Discord servers, I'm almost certainly just there for an FAQ, to ask a question, or to use Discord's- pretty decent- search function to find someone who's had whatever issue I'm having before.
I love this reference, thank you.