I’m not personally interested in the tech, but I could see it being relevant if your refrigerator is connected to the internet and you are at the store. You could find out whether to buy more or not.
I’m not personally interested in the tech, but I could see it being relevant if your refrigerator is connected to the internet and you are at the store. You could find out whether to buy more or not.
Reminds me of the Alpha Grip controller. Has a (really janky) trackball and an entire keyboard on it.
Owning and still loving the Steam Controller, the haptic concaved trackpads could be set up to really feel like a trackball and, in my opinion, had all the benefits of the trackball without the downsides.
I also use a Steam controller. I like the touchpad so much that I wish there was a stand alone one that I could use for day-to-day computing activities instead of having a physical ball.
I know there are square touchpads you can buy for pointing devices, but the ergonomics are completely different. They are more replacements for finger trackballs rather than thumb trackballs. Like just give me a Logitech MX Ergo with the pad.
Cyberpunk 2077 - been on my backlog for a while, finally got to this and am having a blast
Last Epoch - big fan of ARPGs and was waiting for it to get out of early access,
V-Rising - played quite a bit over the last few months but am easing off since v1.0 is coming out and will mean wipe to everything
I am not a morning person, so I consider the best mornings to be the ones I sleep through.
It was a fun game for a bit, but the game also felt rather tedious at times.
I’ll probably play it more at some point, but I’ve stepped away from it for the time being.
Completely foreseeable response to a greedy mtx cashgrab on a single-player game.
I never actually played 4E. My friends ran a brief campaign and said it was no good, so I never got a chance to try it.
Still I’d take a look at Pathfinder given what they did with 3E.
Not familiar with Pathfinder 2E. Is it still modeled after DnD 3.x?
games end up being tailored around micro transactions.
One of the things that is tailored would likely be that the game is locked down to prevent modding. While this may not be as much of a concern for multiplayer games (unless the game allows private servers and such), it is more of a concern for singleplayer.
Paying money for a game item that is single-use? That’s a pass for me.
If you only have to do it once (or a few times) and can use it repeatedly ad infinitum, you can be just about as discerning as you want.
It’s also a lot more forgiving from a texture perspective.
This is also why I see milk and eggs being easier to develop. Non-animal dairy actually already exists (see: Perfect Day Foods), though I’ve only seen it in a few products.
Regardless, we really shouldn’t be preventing progress for the sake of protecting jobs. Especially when the status quo is so wantonly destructive. And even as this would replace some jobs, it would create new ones.
All that said, I’m very skeptical of this tech.
In short: PC gaming allows the fans to fix potentially good games, or make masterpieces even better!
Yes, mods are one of the big reasons I prefer PC over console. A game with a rich mod community allows you to customize your game experience.
A game with good bones can become something that is played long-term.
I have to use a lot of static IP addresses, and I’d take this over what I normally deal with.