I am glad Ubisoft took a dump on these people for subsidizing their trash business practices. Maybe they will finally learn.
Fast left
I am glad Ubisoft took a dump on these people for subsidizing their trash business practices. Maybe they will finally learn.
CCP having a heated gamer moment
They hire 1/10th of Valves developer count and spend the entire budget on marketing.
It appears to work really well seeing how people keep buying Ubitrash and EA games no matter how bad the previous one was.
You are correct. I confused the berserker class with the berserker.
Which abilities did you like? I found some nice but many were a bit overpowered. But maybe that’s because I selected Brick Salvadore in Borderlands2. The dual wield button practically destroyed everything. They also had so much power that the unique guns (which was the original selling point for Borderlands) felt less impactful.
I don’t understand why everyone likes 2 so much. Borderlands 1 had the real dystopian Mad Max vibes. And there was Claptrap for some comic relief.
Borderlands 2 started making a comical relief character out of everything. Bandits were clowns. All the bosses were clowns. All major NPC’s were clowns… The entire “dystopia” went out of the window and Borderlands 2 turned Mad Max into a slapstick comedy.
Just the intros of the two games show the massive difference. There is no “survive the wasteland” anymore.
ARM has been in consumer systems since Android.
We also have proof that ARM sucks for gaming and has many compatibility issues running X86 programs.
Is ARM more mature than RISCV? Yes definitely. But just like RISCV ARM is also not a replacement for X86. Especially when running games or professional proprietary garbage software X86 is still the way to go.
RISCV is also viable to create hardware and software to do what people need.
The software just doesn’t exist yet.
It proves Apple is viable for consumers not ARM.
The Windows and Linux drivers for arm are severely lacking compared to MacOS Rosetta.
ARM is further in the development stage than RISC5 but both aren’t near X86 for desktop compatibility yet.
ARM isn’t present either.
Great catch. The buttons at the bottom are the exact same. Looks like a clone.
Maybe they only took the exterior like MSI did with their Claw OEMing the ASUS Ally.
VC money dried up. Time to fire everyone.
I see I was picturing a 25 pile stack of PC’s this makes a lot more sense thanks for the explanation.
I’m not sure if running multiple single SSD machines would provide much redundancy over a server with multiple PSU’s and drives. Sure the CPU or mobo could fail but the downtime would be less hassle than 25 old PC’s.
Of course there is a learning experience in more hardware but 25 PC’s does seem slightly overkill. I can imagine 3-5 max.
I’m probably looking at this from a homelab point of view who just wants to run stuff though, not really as the hobby being “setting up the PC’s themselves”.
Of course, but installing everything on multiple bare metal machines which take IP addresses, against just running it in VM’s which have IP addresses… It just takes a lot of extra power and doesn’t achieve much. Of course that can be said about any hobby, but I just want OP to know that there is no real reason to do this and I don’t understand so many people hyping it up.
I don’t understand why people want to use so many PC’s rather than just run multiple VM’s on a single server that has more cores.
In my experience they’re very solid. They also have thicker PD charging cables.
Resilvering a drive failure gonna take ages
Asus is a bit faster. Steam deck is cheaper.
I believe there’s going to be a new rog Ally soon too.
It’s also the camera and lighting. Someone remanded MW2 in Unreal Engine and while it looked better it somehow had a Fortnite feel to it.