When I've had something like that (or just underextrusion randomly part way through a print) I've decided it was a clog and did a "cold pull" on the filament to fix it and it seemed to work. It can be insidious because it sometimes clog and sometimes doesn't.
Though, I've also had people suggest it was "heat creep" where the heat gets too far upwards and melts the filament too early.
The bed hasn't been cleaned in a while, but the parts that aren't underextruded stick very hard. And it happens the same in every place on the bed (I've tried about 8 now, always with the same pattern) and 2 different beds.
I'm still thinking it's a pressure issue, where it initially doesn't have enough pressure for some reason. But I turned up the KAMP purge flow and it made no difference, and extruding 2 skirt lines made no difference that I could tell.
My next step is going to give the bed a good cleaning... And even try the other side that I'm pretty sure I've never used yet.
I'm printing ASA at 30/50mm/s right now, and I've halved the pressure advance value without any noticeable change. I agree with looks like pressure advance, though. I'll try a really slow print soon and see if that matters.
Printing PLA at 120mm/s had it show very lightly, but it's still there.
It's happening in multiple spots on the bed. I've tried about 6 or 7 now, and 2 different sheets. (PEO for PLA, PEI for ASA).
Rotating the square 45 degrees puts a pattern on the corner instead. It's always to the left. (To the right, when flipped upside down so I can see it.)
I've tried it on a textured PEI (ASA) sheet in multiple spots, and a smooth PEO (PLA) sheet, same results. It's always the same size and orientation, thought the PLA one was a lot harder to see.
The plate isn't that clean, and I've used a lot of 3DLAC on it. I'll likely try cleaning it again soon out of desperation, but I can't see it being likely to change anything.
I've tuned basically everything, and changing my pressure advance value made no difference. 105 bed, 245 hot end for ASA. 60/220 for PLA.
"He discovered that the amount of Denuvo code executed in-game is quite infrequent, with calls occurring once every few seconds, or during level loads.
This suggests that Denuvo is not killing performance, contrary to popular belief. "
No, it might suggest that this version of Denuvo and the way that this developer implemented it might not be affecting performance.
However, "every few seconds" is actually quite a lot, and if it causes a stutter each time, it's brutal on perceived framerate. So no, it doesn't actually suggest that Denuvo isn't killing performance. It's actually making it pretty obvious that it can easily affect performance.
Assuming that you've got a dongle for that wireless mouse, I think you could get a usb extension cable and simply get the receiver away from the computer and hard drive.
That'll never happen so long as there's the possibility of being sued for admitting you're doing something that might be illegal. It's simply not worth the risk to most people.
Wow. I can't count how many sites I've blocked from my newsreader because I was flooded with "How to find Rupees in Zelda" articles that are so basic as to be ridiculous. At the rate of 50 per week, that's all you'll get.
I actually do like guides like "How to find the secret underground vault and its 3 keys", but I don't want them in my news feed. I want them to be there when I search the site or Google.
But I agree with others that are saying it's just niche. It's a pure puzzle game. There's no exploration, crafting, combat, survival, etc. You have to really like puzzles to play a pure puzzle game.
I do, and I've still been struggling to make it all the way through. I'm just starting on the last of the first 12 sections, and some of them have kind of been a slog rather than a joy.
I can't even give any particular complaint, though. Each puzzle really is different from the others, so they aren't duplicated in any way that was obvious to me. It's just a lot, I guess.
When I've had something like that (or just underextrusion randomly part way through a print) I've decided it was a clog and did a "cold pull" on the filament to fix it and it seemed to work. It can be insidious because it sometimes clog and sometimes doesn't.
Though, I've also had people suggest it was "heat creep" where the heat gets too far upwards and melts the filament too early.