I mean, I remember it being weeks myself.
But it’s not as if things went back to the way they were either. There were definitely effects due to those weeks.
I mean, I remember it being weeks myself.
But it’s not as if things went back to the way they were either. There were definitely effects due to those weeks.
Did Wc1 even have a version with a cd-key?
edit: On that matter, doesn’t every version of wc1 require DOS or Mac?
Meanwhile someone will be eating gummies to cure themselves of some modern disease instead of using actual science-proven medication.
I mean if you brag enough they can request a takedown, go ahead!
Pointing fingers with this kind of thing is silly. It’s obvious it’s because it drew attention.
So basically they’re protecting you from something that’s only possible, because of something they shouldn’t have done.
Of what i’ve seen I can’t say anyone should be calling it a pokemon clone. It doesn’t even have an ounce of turn based combat. The monster collection is as close as it gets.
It seems closer to Minecraft/Ark/Terraria than to Pokemon.
Pirates aren’t porting anything. The closest you could say are the decompilation projects, but they weren’t made with pirating in mind.
I don’t know how I feel about this.
I feel like either you don’t care about this, because a lot of Yakuza fans will just play the game for the story and be done with it.
Or you do care about this and…I guess pirate it because NG+ being locked out seems kindof outrageous
It just doesn’t seem like an audience thats going to bring in much money compared to the outrage?
It’s not like you can even target streamers cause most don’t play NG+
If you haven’t, look up Nicole Goodnight once you’ve seen it. She’s the Princess and there’s also a run where the team involved did a playthrough with live VA. Fun watch.
I mean, it’s because those are easier and less risk-prone. The things you probably want AI to be used for probably aren’t going to be ready nearly as soon.
And other AIs are being tested on masses so they just seem like novelties or annoying at worst. It’s just not at the point of having more serious applicable uses yet.
It’s usually people who weren’t thinking of giving to a charity until the charity host did it. And it’s usually also done for in return for entertainment.
So while there’s definitely an overarching goal to get something to a charity, it’s usually about grabbing people who would normally not think about doing it.
I mean…sure you should be able to wait on the updates, but that’s not that common once you actually do the updates. And it’s not as if you don’t do updates on Steam deck (You absolutely should, and the flathub apps have tons of updates at least weekly when I run them)
To be fair that’s the older LCD model, not the OLED the article is discussing, which is 549 minimum
It’s a classic yes. It’s been re-released very sparsely though.
It’s kindof like a smash-bros like game with a simplified combat style and weapons, especially the second game where they added 4-player gameplay
Ahhh…you’re trying to play Windows 3.1 games…that’s why you’re having issues…yeah emulation for Windows 3.1’s random differences from Windows 95 and DOS are surprisingly rare still.
There’s no dedicated emulator for Windows 3.1 yet. I personally installed a copy onto Doxbox, but it’s not a very easy solution.
But I can tell it’s 3.1 cause one of those is The Learning Company and the later versions of the Super Solver games have the same issues.
Even a whale can decide to just spend more money on a game they like more. It’s not an endless market for companies to delve into.
I’m assuming it just does config for you like a lot of the other emulator related stuff on steamdeck does.
The problem is had the No Man’s Sky team did nothing, nobody would’ve really done anything about it.
And even now there’s people who won’t come back because of the release issues.
There’s just no incentive other than whether or not the company wants to do it, not even much of a reward for doing so.
Very few games actually come back from that though.
And patches even existed before the advent of internet, they just were also rare.
It’s probably because I generally saw the sub shutdowns as a result of the protest, and not as an ongoing protest. Reddit clearly wasn’t in any talks with the mods at that point and vica versa.
Honestly i’ll just go with it being months. I’m basically just arguing semantics at this point.