The Outer Worlds is like if you stripped half the soul and the content out of New Vegas, slapped a coat of paint on it and threw a brick on the accelerator.
The Outer Worlds is like if you stripped half the soul and the content out of New Vegas, slapped a coat of paint on it and threw a brick on the accelerator.
IIRC they’re replacing damaged chips.
Well, they called it live service, but did they ever really deliver?
Note to anyone heeding this advice: it has to be a metal water pipe, no plastic.
And you can emulate the Switch on the Deck.
Drives do this on their own.
I’ve got a BeeLink N100 system that’s just a bit bigger than a NUC, has two 2.5Gb LAN ports and came with a 512gb nvme drive. Works a treat as a Jellyfin server with TONS of processor and ram headroom. N100 is a great little chip, so long as you’re not expecting i5+ power.
How much work do you put in farming MS points?
You can use it as a firewall/router or a VPN gateway and even slap a wireless NIC or two on there and make it a combo router/AP, which can simultaneously play and transcode video as a Plex/Jellyfin server with zero hit to networking performance.
And waiting for the patch that makes it stable, and the sale that makes it a better deal!
Bone apple tea.
Don’t worry about the article being light on details, they’ll restart the project a few times between now and release.
Wifi is not for critical services, get that thing wired.
Has there ever been a good game that took over a decade to develop?
Hacking a console often involves a bit of work and in some cases that can include physically altering the console. With older Switches you need a PC or Android phone, a USB cable and a little thingy to jump two pins the right Joy-Con rail. There’s a bit of a process to it, but it really isn’t too bad.
Describing a soul is task for a philosopher. I merely recognize a familiar spark.