[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

Remember when Facebook’s overarching company bought out Oculus? Well, some VR games seem to start out as exclusives on the “quest” headsets. (I know Facebook [the parent company] changed their name to “Meta”, but I refuse to acknowledge that)

[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

I don’t have the tech-saavy for emulation, and I’ll still wait for console exclusives to come out on PC (unless we’re talking Nintendo exclusives I’m actually interested in). I’ve actively waited for Ghost Signal: A Stellaris Game to no longer be a Facebook exclusive, and now I’m doing the same for Out Of Scale.

[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

In a roundabout way, you could argue both were factors.

Twitter’s echo chamber becoming cacophonous with spite and worse means less people visiting the site, and refusal to support the site would be a better look, but that pr move might be easier on the corporate wallet as well.

[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago

That being said, I question how that applies in this context. Corporate leadership doesn’t exactly strike me as trustworthy nor worthy of mercy, although that could be a lean toward cynicism on my part.

25

So, let’s say there’s a species of bacteria that is known to dwell in Greek yogurt. How long would it take before that species of yogurt-dweller only has modern descendants different enough to qualify as one or more new species?

[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 4 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Considering this and No Man’s Sky having to spend YEARS clawing back good will, I think the lesson here is “don’t make deals with AAA publishers”.

1

I’m tempted to start making oddly specific small statues made of random materials, maybe with limbs pointing to the previous statue in a sequence. Is there a better method?

54

For example, why did zinc, of all things, start getting utilized by brain and prostate tissue in humans?

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Just as an example, there were evidently reports during the 2007 Glasgow airport attack that someone attempting to subdue the assailant and assist police kicked said attacker in the testicles… but somehow managed to do so hard enough to injure one of their own foot tendons.

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[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 17 points 8 months ago

One one hand, I don’t trust Kotaku articles as far as I can throw them. On the other hand, I’m hoping the “major games going out of stock” part isn’t gonna be a problem in terms of historical preservation of these games.

[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 2 points 8 months ago

So I’m guessing the chart is telling me that non-phone-nor-Switch/Deck handhelds don’t even have a niche scene, by comparison?

[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 2 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

And oddly, it also seems like handheld dipped into near-nothingness even sooner than arcades (perhaps due to things like the Switch and the Steam Deck merging the former field into PCs and consoles, I guess?). How common were arcades when the original version of the Nintendo Switch came out (2017-ish)?

[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 1 points 9 months ago

Talos Principle. The VR version of the first game, haven’t gotten around to the second game yet. I love the puzzles (when I don’t struggle with timing running past mines), and it’s hilarious that the philosophical test to make a Milton admin profile showed me how utterly unprepared I am for philosophical debate, and how weirdly contradictory my viewpoints might be. Mind you, the only philosophy class I’ve taken in my life was an ethics class.

TL;DR Talos Principle is amazing so far, even though it makes me want to slink off back to college and sheepishly register for a philosophy class.

[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 5 points 10 months ago

Ok, so it’s just a taste thing in this particular case, and not some other logistical thing like preservation?

5
[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 10 points 10 months ago

Arguably, whether this turns out decent or atrocious may depend, in part, on whether it’s a straight adaptation of the games (removes sensory elements that games and film don’t have in common, causing serious issues); or if it’s something that would fit better in a film, albeit taking place in Hyrule.

It may also depend on whether portions of the production team actively dislike the source material (cough cough Netflix Witcher cough cough)

[-] JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world 5 points 10 months ago

Didn’t think the modern-day incarnation of Atari even had interest in games anymore. I could’ve sworn an entirely unrelated company bought the name when the original Atari died out.

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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by JoshuaSlowpoke777@lemmy.world to c/lowsodiumstarfield@sopuli.xyz

spoilertitleThe naming themes here almost seem all over the place, or maybe I don’t know about a couple of the inspirations. Some are named after scientists (or perhaps the units of measure named after some of these), but the moons of Arachna are named “Itsy,” “Bitsy,” and hilariously, “Worthless.” I also have no idea where the names of Nascent and its moons come from.

Any idea how some of these planets and moons got their names in Delta Pavonis?

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JoshuaSlowpoke777

joined 1 year ago