Celeste is 75% off and is a near-masterpiece of a game.
Portal 1 and Portal 2 are on sale again of course on the chance you haven't yet hit these absolutely classic legendary games.
Persona 4 Golden is 40% off and is awesome, and Persona 5 Royal is 60% and is even more awesome.
Metal: Hellsinger is 70% off and while it isn't a GOTY type game, it's a hell of a lot of fun if you're a contemporary metal music fan.
but my biggest recommendation is probably gonna be
Recettear: An Item Shop's Tale at 80% for only $3.99 (US) which is an completely underrated hidden gem of a game and a huge recommendation for anyone who likes quirky cozy-hybrid games or who, like me, spent way too long on the shopkeeper segments in RPGs like Torneko Taloon's chapter in DQIV.
edit: why in the world would anyone ever downvote a personal recommendation comment? Weird behavior, fam
The inability to resize the Undertale window without using a third-party program like Sizer continues to be INFURIATING to me.
Undertale is a good game, but it just makes me so goddamn angry every time I open it to not have control over the sizing on my own goddamn monitor that I haven't been able to finish it.
This reminds me of the proliferation of content creators who make content advising content creators. Like if you had the tips for success wouldn't you just be successful rather than barely scraping by? It feels like there are more of these content coaches than non-coach content creators these days
Fr seeing in the modlog that people are regularly getting banned from parts of the fediverse for innocuous shit like "chronic downvoting" is so disappointing.
Imo however you do or do not hit the little arrow buttons should never have any bearing on your account or standing, at all.
I don't even understand why mods/admins have access to see how people are voting, fuck that bullshit.
I am not saying the two are equally comparable, but I wonder if the same "most rapid change in human written communication" could also have been said with the proliferation of computer-based word processors equipped with spelling and grammar checks.
The reason chatgpt would recommend Nike though is because of its human-based training data. This means that for most humans the Nike ad campaign would also be the first suggestion to come to mind.
I'm not saying LLMs aren't having an impact, or denying that said impact is negative, but the way people talk about them is infuriating because it just displays a lack of understanding or forethought on how these systems work.
People always talk about how they can tell something "sounds like chatgpt" or, as is the case here, is the default chatgpt answer, while ignoring the only reason it would be so is because of the real human patterns which it is mimicking.
Brief caveats: of course chatgpt is wildly fallible and when producing purely generative content it pulls from nowhere because it's just remixing unrelated sources, but for things within the normal course of discussion and output chatgpt's output is vastly more human-like than we want to pretend.
I would almost guarantee that Nike's "just so it" was the singularly most popular answer to this kind of assignment before chatgpt existed too.
Yes, actual typos. LLMs don't perform spell checks. Yes, they can "spell check" your inputs, but that isn't what is actually happening. It's all predictive text, and if they've learned to predict that the appropriate word in this context in 98% of cases is Minnesota, but since their dataset includes real human errors, it's not unrealistic that then the LLM could also conclude that the appropriate word in 2% of cases is "Minneosta" instead, which means given enough output variables the misspelling will appear.
Again, I have personally had LLMs generate output with typos, not just factual errors.
It doesn't though. Because AI was trained on human data, it contains and can replicate human errors. Its extremely rare yes, especially compared to real human output, but I have personally seen ai make misspellings and other human-like errors in its output.
I haven't ever played BPM, I'm sorry.