It is small and cramped in adult hands.
Migrated to @SatyrSack@feddit.org
It is small and cramped in adult hands.
But is space (and its resources) truly infinite?
“Games as a service” are by design never really finished, right? If you are cool with that, go for it. I have never personally tried one.
As an illustration, grab an endgame save from 1.0 and open it up in a modern version of the game. The moment you step out of the door, you will be greeted with a series of cutscenes/dialogs explaining several of the various game mechanics that were added in the versions since 1.0. These are game mechanics that, if they had been part of the game from the start, would have greatly altered how one would have chosen to play and reach endgame. One may have prioritized different crops, events, upgrades, relationships, decorations, etc.
Stardew Valley is absolutely worth the money, and the content updates definitely make it even more of a bargain. But calling the transition from 1.0 to 1.6+ “minor adjustments to gameplay” is disingenuous.
I just miss the days when games were already finished upon release.
What would you call it? Live service does not really fit
My issue with Stardew Valley content updates is that they change how the game works. It is not just adding extra postgame missions or something. The content updates tend to fundamentally change how some things work. Your possible/preferred routes to reach endgame today are much different than they were in 2016. It makes it feel like perpetual Early Access.
Game changing updates like this every so often that make you feel like it is an unfinished game still in early access. You may as well just wait until it is finished to actually start playing.
https://www.stardewvalleywiki.com/Version_History
EDIT: Sorry, that is far from “high level”
I have used this as a drop-in replacement, with no complaints.
Florisboard (Android keyboard) was recently updated for the first time in two years. Literally one day after I had given up on it and uninstalled it.
The decade is not even half over yet…
But so far, from what I have heard, I would place 99% of Nintendo’s eShop in that category
I agree that comments like that are unhelpful/unnecessary, but how is that “for their own benefit”? Other than the actual devs themselves using that as a way to just ignore issues, I do not follow
Wtf is search engines and why is no one explaining it
it’s almost flawlessly jailbreakable, allowing you to play anything that was produced for it, including games for PS1 and PS2!
Do all models support PS2 emulation? Unlike with official firmware, where only a few models have that support.
If they didn’t give permission then he has rewritten the code.
How does that work? Like, refactoring?
*squints* Sir, that is an LCD model you have there.
Do carriers still require a new two-year contract when you get a disocunted device from them?
SuiPlay0X1 runs Playtron’s device-agnostic gaming operating system, enabling gamers to play both Web3 and Web2 games across PC and mobile.
GamesBeat have some more details, noting it will have "native Sui blockchain integration via zkLogin and Sui Kiosk SDKs, enabling asset ownership directly connected to a device’s account system for the first time in the gaming industry
What is a web3 game? Something that allows you to grind for NFTs?
Sony has a much better [trigger rumbling/tension] implementation in the PS5 controller, nothing outside Sony published games use it though - but it’s compatible on Windows with additional drivers (DS4Win) (not sure about Linux here)
It also does not work wirelessly. The controller itself and its basic rumble obviously do, but you will not experience the fancy haptic features unless the controller is connected via USB.
Yes and no
https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Glowie