They gave it a fantastic ending at the end of the last season, and they should have just let it die there.
They gave it a fantastic ending at the end of the last season, and they should have just let it die there.
“Overwhelming majority” is a very common turn of phrase with a specific meaning. It doesn’t mean that anyone is actually being overwhelmed, just that it’s a very significant majority.
Lacto-saccharine sounds better
I haven’t played much of the arcade version of Contra, but on the NES version, the S can actually shoot faster. There’s a limit to the bullets you can have on screen, so if you mash the button fast enough, you get to shoot again as soon as a bullet leaves the screen. If there’s nothing to stop your bullets before the hit the edge of the screen, you’ll end up with a line of bullets in front and a spread of 3 bullets. If there are any obstacles that stop your bullets early, eventually, you just end up with a stream of bullets in a straight line in front of you with no more spread.
The laser only does 4 hits per beam, but you can only have one beam on screen at a time, and if you fire again before it hits, it just disappears before firing the new shot.
They’re going to get sued by all the developers who already put out games with the existing license that Unity is trying to unilaterally change the terms of. They’re trying to charge money for installs on games that are already published and already sold.
Y’all are coming here trying to turn Lemmy into Reddit.
If you keep your game library on an NTFS drive, both OSes can access it. The Linux version of Steam just downloads additional Proton files for your games.
I believe Protondb has the option to sign in with your Steam account, and show you the status of everything in your library.
In a GUI, your options are human-readable and all presented to you. In a terminal, you have to know the names of the programs/commands. It’s not a big deal for something like Notepad or vim, but it gets more complicated when you don’t know the name of what you’re looking for. It’s easier to remember the which program you need when you have a list and icons. You can do all the same things, but a GUI is much more intuitive for the majority of people.
Yeah, of course games made back then are going to look ridiculous scaled up to 1080p or higher. The SNES had a resolution of 256×224, and the graphics were designed with the drawbacks of 50/60hz interlaced displays in mind. Nowadays, we have progressive scan consumer-grade TVs at 4K resolutions and refresh rates of 120hz. It doesn’t make sense to scale the graphics up directly.
House centipedes are the better than spiders at killing bugs. Sure, they’re creepy looking, but they hunt the bugs that are actually problematic.
I don’t see any problem with that, and posting a weekly update is far from spammy behavior anyway.
Has anyone else seen the issue where clicking on the menus at the top of the window will open the menu on another monitor?
It doesnt let you “ungroup” windows on the task bar
Sure it does. Right click the taskbar, go into the Taskbar settings, and there’s a dropdown called “Combine taskbar buttons” with an option to never combine.
Which games don’t already have roms of them floating around on the internet?
Lots of meming about Linux on Lemmy, but have you tried it for gaming? Unless you’re playing certain competitive games with intrusive anti-cheat systems like Valorant, nowadays just about everything runs on it.
The pyramids are way out in the desert. Cairo is also way out in the desert. Egypt is basically a desert with a river running through it.
Notice it says “a DX11 title,” and that title is Halo: The Master Chief Collection. That is to say that the game likely used to perform very very poorly, and now performs acceptably.