It seems to be more or less on life support now. Recycled battlepasses, not a lot of fresh content, slow rollout of promised features. Still, you can have a lot of fun with that game if you’ve never played it before.
It seems to be more or less on life support now. Recycled battlepasses, not a lot of fresh content, slow rollout of promised features. Still, you can have a lot of fun with that game if you’ve never played it before.
Two Worlds 2 had a very interesting idea for a magic system where you find cards and slot them to create and modify spells. It’s pretty jank but maybe worth a look. The game also had one of the most interesting multiplayer setups for open world rpgs I’ve ever seen.
If you have the steam version of Skyrim it’s very simple to get running.
https://store.steampowered.com/developer/SureAI/#browse has both versions (depending on if you have the launch version or special/anniversary edition). Also found here is Nehrim, their total conversion mod for Oblivion
I would argue that the problem with gaming on android isn’t as much the quality of the games as it is the quality of google play.
Most games on the platform are not something I’m interested in, and while that goes for any platform google aggressively don’t care about my preferences and would rather use most of the available space for ads instead. Sure, it has an algorithm suggesting stuff to you, but when “no” isn’t an answer the algorithm isn’t really useful to me (which is by design). There’s no search for tags, no way to filter and even searching for the exact title of a game will present you with several other games before the real result shows up.
It also doesn’t help that the ratings system is terrible. When (almost) every game has a 4.1 rating it isn’t really of much use.
Halls of Torment is probably my favorite “clone”. Feels like “Vampire Survivors, but Diablo”.
Soulstone Survivors is also pretty good.
The destruction of queer rights in the US will harm me regardless of me ever setting foot in the country.
Twitter hired a well liked (in that industry) ad exec. I think she started in early June. I’m guessing her credibility and connections are at least partially responsible for the increase.
They could do a 3 franchise mashup and name it “Bravely Quad Strategy”
It’s a pretty young distro so there’s some stuff missing or not working. My main issue (beyond struggling to install it due to a wrongly setup usb that would fail at the end of the install for no discernable reason) is window snapping not working properly on monitors in portrait orientation.
But I’ve had a few times where stuff should work but didn’t with no feedback from the OS. It feels like a beta version that’s almost ready for release.
I switched from win11 to pop_os this week. I’ve had a good deal of linux exposure but most of that was in the '00s. As such I don’t have familiarity with any other distro in recent times, but I would not recommend people start out with pop. It feels not quite ready for prime-time yet. It would probably be perfect to try after you’ve had a bit of experience.
I remember seeing that stated around the time of steam machines, steam link and steam controller.
The game has been very popular with the people who knew about it while it was in testing. Combine that with the last battlefield game not doing great (and even some trouble brewing with Squad) it seemed like a hit waiting to happen .
This is the way the Reddit ends. Not with a bang but a John Oliver.
The Playstation version has couch co-op but requires a ps plus subscription to play.
The pc version will run on a steam deck but since it’s a battle.net game it takes a bit of work to get it running.
I doubt inventory will be too much of an issue on console/controller. I’ve not tried myself but the interface seems decent and I’ve not seen anyone complain about it being annoying.
A crypto coin is only worth as much as the hype surrounding it, so the people holding a lot of crypto needed something beyond “you can use this to buy drugs on the internet” to generate hype.
It turns out that more than a few people investing in tech don’t really understand what they invest in, but are highly susceptible to FOMO so any tech company wanting a quick cash injection put together a blockchain/nft/play-to-earn/web3 pitch.
quarterly reports of MAU for blizz went from 45mil at OW2 launch to 27mil to 26mil and the last one has 10mil diablo 4 players. It may not be dead but it’s hemorrhaging players like there’s no tomorrow.
Launch quarter for OW2 also had a wow expansion launch but it sounds like it was mostly bought by the smaller, core fanbase who have kept playing. Either way, adding 10mil MAU in Q2 and not being able to get the number above Q1 via a new game does not speak well of their retention.