Tried my hand at rewording it:
Developers for the Game “Once Human” Remove Post Made After Game Breaking Update Requesting Positive Steam Reviews.
I’m no linguist, but I feel it’s at least better than the original.
Tried my hand at rewording it:
Developers for the Game “Once Human” Remove Post Made After Game Breaking Update Requesting Positive Steam Reviews.
I’m no linguist, but I feel it’s at least better than the original.
As a little note, the eye tracking would be a huge selling point for social games like VRChat. Very few headsets support it so far.
I would have to go with landmines. If that isn’t enough of a deterrent, and claymores or even some bouncing betties.
Bogos binted?
“Welcome to Applebee’s! Would you like apples or bees?”
“Bees?”
“HE PICKED THE BEES!” chefs angrily shake jars of bees
He says what everyone’s thinking!
My guess is a 3D movie mixed with a 6DoF motion setup. 9D still sounds stupid though.
I would use it for like 1 game on the quest store and more portable/wireless VR on PC. Even though my Index, is superior in almost every way, an easy headset to give to a visitor would be nice.
I probably wouldn’t pay $200 for one, but if a friend was getting rid of one for $50-100 I would likely snatch it up.
Pasting the first section of the article because of the stupid anti-adblocker on Mobile:
Shinobi Warfare, a 2D turn-based RPG multiplayer game, is being called out by Steam users after it was discovered that the developer has been rewarding players with in-game currency for leaving a positive review. The lucrative reward has led to the game receiving an ‘overwhelmingly positive’ review badge, but goes against the platform’s terms of service agreement.
The discovery was made by Reddit user Glavurdan, who took to the Steam subreddit yesterday to reveal their findings. The post has multiple images of the questionable practice, with the most notable being on the Shinobi Warfare Discord server, where an admin on the server offered players 1,000 in-game gems to leave a positive review.
If I remember correctly, the ELI5 is it’s impossible to measure something without interacting with it in some way. The calculations and science determine it will turn out like the top image. The moment we try to measure it though, we have to interact with it. This changes the calculations and whatnot, thus producing a different pattern.
It’s that correct more or less?
Was hoping for more about the game takedowns, but not much of anything was said:
LP: […] how does The Pokémon Company handle Cease & Desist letters with regards to fan projects? How did you find them, and where did you draw the line on what’s allowed and what the company thinks needs to be shut down?
DM: Short answer: […] someone from the company would send me a link to a news article, or I would stumble across it myself. […] I say this to my students: the worst thing on earth is when your “fan” project gets press, because now I know about you.
LP: Oh. Oh no.
DM: But that’s not the end of the equation. You don’t send a takedown right away. You wait to see if they get funded (for a Kickstarter or similar); if they get funded then that’s when you engage. No one likes suing fans.
I second this. If you already have one (or even a ps5 controller) then they are a perfect choice. I imagine a switch pro controller would work too, and you get the bonus of having a nice controller for your switch.
If you don’t have one then 8bitdo is a safe choice
Apparently, this is the code for a Hello World program in Malbolge:
(=<
#9]~6ZY327Uv4-QsqpMn&+Ij"'E%e{Ab~w=_:]Kw%o44Uqp0/Q?xNvL:
H%c#DD2^WV>gY;dts76qKJImZkj
A scrap/repair shop could probably get a few useful parts out of it. Not for $800 of course.
Don’t know much about the internals of that Mac book, but I imagine you could salvage some keyboard key parts, internal cables, ports on the side, or maybe even the ram or hard drive if it’s out of the way.
“utilithing”
I managed to get through it on my old 1050ti. Laggy at some parts, but still mostly playable.