

It doesn’t. It prompts you to solve it when first logging in.
Bun, meat, salad, tomato, onion, Cheddar.
It doesn’t. It prompts you to solve it when first logging in.
Isn’t it as simple as exporting all torrents as .torrent
files, importing them in qB, then pointing qB to the same downloads folder?
TBH I wish Steam had a mobile store. There are some games which exist on PC and Android, having cross buy and cross save between versions would be cool.
I can’t believe an objectively true claim gets downvoted.
Not in languages where you don’t manually handle memory, such as PHP, SQL, Python… Higher-level languages using 0-indexed arrays are letting the abstraction leak.
Steam has the worst launcher, except all the others.
Electricity isn’t a “basic necessity”. Humanity survived for thousands of years without it.
Cloud saves are a basic feature of any modern game. It’s extremely easy to add on Steam without even having to implement it in the game. It’s just configuration, so not having access to the original source code isn’t an issue.
But… the defenders of multi billion dollar corporations told me that I was a crybaby for not wanting to create an account at a company who has had several outages and security incidents over the years. I can’t believe they were wrong.
There is a finite number of integers in this context. For 32-bit it, it’s 4 billion or so (2^32).
It’s a very good game! I remember 100%ing it, lots of fun.
They don’t care about this. The ports of SM64 and Zelda are still up. Nintendo only sues legal emulators of current gen consoles.
Tetris DS is still king after 18 years.
It’s wrong. 1/3 + (1/3 * 1/3) = 3/9 + 1/9 = 4/9
. It’s close though.
However, one third plus one half of a third is correct. 1/3 + (1/2 * 1/3) = 1/3 + (1.5/3 * 1/3) = 1/3 + 0.5/3 = 1.5/3 = 1/2
Not quite the same but there was a working GBA emulator before the console released.
ActivityPub is the protocol powering the Fediverse. Platforms include Lemmy, Mastodon and Pixelfed.
RetroArch and most of its cores are under the GPL or MIT, which allow commercial use.
It’s called Gaming on Linux. Not Gaming in General. However, they are not a Linux gaming publication, as they mostly talk about Windows games whose Linux compatibility is irrelevant; that stopped being news since 99.9% of Windows games work without issues.
It would be like Windows Central making an article about every Switch release that works on emulators. Sure, they are allowed to, but it’s not what their publication is about.
Most games run on Linux if we take compatibility layers into account. What’s the difference with IGN if they talk about all games that run on Linux?
I want to read about it, hence why I don’t read GoL: because most of their articles are irrelevant. I don’t care about a random indie game running on Linux; this isn’t news.
Gandi massively increased their prices 2 years ago.