Quick tip - if the majority of people who read something find it ambiguous, it is. Plain and simple - especially for languages like English that don't have a central authority for setting language rules.
I don't think it'd work all that well to be frank. You'd wind up with dozens of pages for each subject since each instance can have their own. You could probably come up with a distinct federated solution that might work though, where the servers are federated but the content is shared. Not sure how that would look in practice though, and how you could keep instances from diverging
Glad you found a system that works for you! I'm on the dead opposite side of the spectrum, i rarely leave the house with more than phone (w/ wallet case), earbuds, and keys. And if my wife is with me, I generally make her keep the keys in her purse so that I've got even less to carry lol
shoot - that's still way more dressy than I do for my Work from home lol
My standard outfit is just a comfy t-shirt (sometimes a tanktop if it's >100 outside) and either basketball shorts or sweatpants depending on the weather
Right but they could have done that without promising that 10 would be the last Windows version. Let's be honest, everyone is already locked into their ecosystem outside of enthusiasts and people with Apple Hardware. If you want a non-mac laptop/desktop, unless you go well out of your way, you're almost certain to end up with a Windows PC, they didn't need the "last version" gimmick to keep people on Windows.
Hell, a lot of non-techy people who are already used to using Windows would rather not use a computer than learn to use a new OS. It's easy to forget how tech illiterate the average person is
Also have to remember that a fairly large portion of “local” craft breweries, at least in terms of sales volume, are owned by corporations like InBev
This is a fair point, I was a bit dissapointed when I learned that my go-to beer that I thought was from an (admittedly large) craft brewery was just an InBev subsidiary (Space Dust)
Yeah that's pretty much what I mean, with this change, the senate is proclaiming that there's no need for formal dress on a "regular day in the office" (which I 100% agree with), but to make that declaration, while still insisting your staffers stay formal is literally saying "We get to be comfortable because we're important and rich, and you can stay uncomfortable, because who gives a shit what you want."
That'd make sense, I just remember visiting my brother in-law around christmas last year and he was playing it and telling me about the controversy about it being the same game.
But yeah everything blurs together lately, don't know if it's because everything is so chaotic, or just because I'm getting old lol
Guarantee almost every single conservative boycotter switched to another beer brand owned by InBev and didn’t even realize it lmfao.
My uncle was literally complaining about Bud Light being "Woke" while drinking a Space Dust at a family gathering when all this was still fresh lol. I chose to not say anything for comedy reasons lol
Are people drinking less beer, or just more local/craft beers? Because my experience has been the latter. I honestly don't know anyone under the age of 40 who regularly drinks the "big name beers", not when they have other options at least.
Given that the switch version looks terrible even by Switch standard, I think they're right to complain and refuse to buy it. And not everyone can just "invest in better hardware" the second an upgrade comes along. Let's not forget that up until the Steam Deck, the switch was the gold standard for handheld gaming - mainly by virtue of being the only real option
the main quest isn’t where you have the best interactions.
No worries there, I've been focusing on faction quests and stuff like that for the most part, only occasionally dipping into the main quest for a few missions. One thing I feel like Bethesda did well with the writing of Starfield is that they finally made the main quest not world-saving urgent (at least not from the get-go). In practically every other bethesda game I can think of, the player starts off pretty much right from the start with a "Hurry! We need to do [Quest] before [Bad Thing] happens!", which inevitably kills the immersion a bit when you go fuck around for a solid month just exploring and doing side-quests. But in Starfield it makes perfect sense that you're not necessarily out there every single day chasing down artifacts, at the beginning of the game, they're just a curiosity
I'm sure there are others, but it's really not as uncommon as you're making it sound, especially for AAA titles. I'd also argue it's disingenuous to say that No Man's Sky has "very little else going for it". It was shit at launch, but they've built a really solid game now.
Again (and I feel like I need to keep re-iterating this, because people on this site are so sensitive about any criticism to their favorite games) Starfield is fun. That just doesn't mean that it couldn't have been better, and there's nothing wrong with pointing out the areas we feel it fell short. Really, I think what Yahtzee Croshaw said about Tears of the Kingdom applies here - "If the game had these things, you wouldn't be saying they didn't matter"
That feels like a pretty big false equivalency. There's a huge consumer demand for cocaine, that's the whole reason cartels exist.
No consumer wants behavior driven marketing, it's forced on them for the benefit of companies. If ads were outlawed right now, I doubt you'd find any communities online trying to get bootleg ads working on their machine lol
Quick tip - if the majority of people who read something find it ambiguous, it is. Plain and simple - especially for languages like English that don't have a central authority for setting language rules.