obligatory mention of cliff stoll and his website.
obligatory mention of cliff stoll and his website.
i would be stuck in the subnet teleporting around aimlessly between ruins floating in space with different architectures while trying to shove every stick i found to every hole i come across.
(im talking about submachine: legacy)
isn't this person's whole shtick making shitty takes so they can farm views on youtube and redirect people to their stream?
come on no love for lucas pope? he doesn't miss. after him probably obsidian and bay 12 games.
i don't interact with chuds so you're right. that list is absurd lmao. half of these games are woke because you can choose your pronouns. imagine buying a game, downloading it, installing it, opening it and then immediately closing and refunding the game because they've implemented one of the basic features of the English language.
i love how g@mers say they like games while simultaneously hating most of them for absurd reasons.
I've started playing Jenny LeClue: Detectivu, which is one of those children point and click games that was crowdfunded in the early 2010's that is almost played exclusively by adults to feel like children again. it's a good game i doubt it'll be long but it's fun and cute.
probably gonna play submachine: legacy after it which is an interesting puzzler by the looks of it.
great bit honestly but I would imagine even the most stupid g@mers would catch on if they see the first game is furry gay love 2 or something like that.
the title is not accurate, i don't see any mention of cock and balls or penises.
I really don't have any concrete intuition as to what the stop killing games initiative is trying to achieve. can someone help? do they want companies to keep up the servers forever? or force them to distribute all parts of their software necessary for thr game to function? or just more disclosure in advertising material about how the support of the game is not indefinite?
just pick one don't overwhelm yourself with choices. testing out different software is part of the experience just be prepared for possible migration. currently I'm using hyprland and I'm happy with it but for Xorg/X11 i3 is a fine choice.
ok im turning around on this guy. let's see what else he has to say.
well it's definitely better than the ad hawk solution i was using but nope it doesn't help. this is a sanctions issue. it seems like all services related to jagex accounts are blocked but otherwise everything else like the game server themselves are not blocked. jagex is really shitty about customer service i don't even know who to complain to about this. it looks like it's been going on for some time i just haven't noticed because i wasn't playing the game.
i would, but unfortunately the login service is now blocking my country for reasons (probably the default of their infrastructure they didn't bother to change). i foolishly thought the problem was with my account being legacy, so i upgraded to a jagex account but now not only their launcher doesn't have native support for linux, I can't even launch the launcher because it fails to initialize without contacting the login service, so i can't even trick it to launch the game with runelite. it's bullshit.
to be clear i expect this bullshit from american live service games but:
there was some login issues a few days ago maybe they accidentally blocked us when fixing it. i guess I'll complain about it in their discord but i don't expect anything out of it.
wait you are telling me there are more Minecraft versions after 1.8?
i agree posters are sick as hell but unfortunately this magazine was before my time. the aforementioned posters are still up. it just that they have been aging for the past decade so they don't look too good.
the 24 news cycle website style journalism really lacks the excitement of biweekly magazines with sick ass posters. you can just forget about it for 2 weeks then get excited for new releases and have a cool ass poster on your wall. i wish we could go back on this front.
they've released their entire archive a few years back if you're wondering what they looked like: https://www.dbazi.com/magazine-archives
and if you can't view them because you don't understand persian or site design, skill issues.
one of the first if not the first iranian video game magazine called Donya ye Bazi (world of gaming). sadly they stopped publication 10 years ago now it's just a website with very low effort articles that's not worth following.
most of the issues came with a poster of upcoming releases, usually the cover art. i had a family member that covered the entirety of their walls with them. the magazine itself wasn't anything out of this world, but it was something new.
me when i see ur mum.