Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)PR
proceduralnightshade @ proceduralnightshade @lemmy.ml
Posts
0
Comments
73
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I own a Steam Deck too and I can't see a Full HD display being necessary at this form factor/display size. 1280x800 is a bit small, yes, but I really want someone to try 1600x1000 which I theoretically consider the sweet spot if you have slightly beefier graphics to support it. Also FreeSync or something similar would be cool imo.

    16GB is just enough. According to a guy who modded his Deck to have 32GB RAM it only reduced stutters in AAA games, but at least 24 GB would be a nice have to be future proof. Keep in mind that the 16GB also hold video memory and games are getting hungrier for VRAM.

    RGB lights anywhere are just an unnecessary gimmick. This is but a personal opinion and comes down to preference and taste.

  • I usually only find like 2-3 interesting games out of 200, but the ones I did find were pretty sweet. Sometimes you're not lucky and exclusively play trash.

    I mainly enjoy 2 types of games, ones with replayabilty (Stellaris, Rimworld, Slay The Spire, Roguelites in General, some RPGs) and short to medium single player games which I usually only play once. If you don't like the second category, my recommendation is definitely the wrong approach, yeah

  • So this is interesting... My favorite of the definitions of "opinion" I found is

    belief stronger than impression and less strong than positive knowledge

    Because I was about to say that it's impossible not to have an opinion, which might not be entirely correct.

    In DBT we were told that there are helpful, consequential and inconsequential ehm... evaluations? Assessments? Judgments? I don't know the exact translation. Anyway, an important thing I realized then was that opinions/values etc are not something you form consciously, they just kinda pop up in your head and change shapes depending on what you learn and experience. You are able to detach from your opinions, look at them from the outside.

    edit: so what I ultimately wanted to tell you is that you can do this detachment thing with other people's opinions as well.

  • Played it again right after they stopped releasing updates this year. If you don't play it expecting an RPG or immersive sim, it's good.

    I like Phantom Liberty even more. They didn't attempt to compromise on anything regarding the game genre anymore and just made it a shooter action adventure with a cinematic story, which plays in it own little open world area.

    2077 is one of the few AAA games that doesn't feel completely soulless. It could've delved deeper into the philosophical "what if" aspect of the Cyberpunk genre though.

    Also they should've made the badlands story part with Panam it's own game, in retrospect it's what I enjoyed the most out of the base game.

  • The guide is on the site they linked. It works, I did it a few times. They have to mirror the LTSC installation files unfortunately, but there's a guide on how to verify they're genuine if you don't trust them.

  • There's Windows 10 LTSC, which gets security updates til 2027. And IoT Enterprise LTSC, which gets security updates until 2032.

    "But should you even use those versions?!? They are not meant to be installed on a desktop PC/laptop" - idk, it's either this or Win11.

    For more info on how to install, check https://massgrave.dev/windows_ltsc_links

  • In a perfect world, every dollar we spend goes right to the creators who made the creation.

    In a perfect world, shit's created without someone having to create it to make money. A market without middlemen is still a market.