What rom hack did you play? I’ve been meaning to do another playthrough and I’m not impressed enough with pixel remaster to buy that.
What rom hack did you play? I’ve been meaning to do another playthrough and I’m not impressed enough with pixel remaster to buy that.
Definitely, this app is now my daily driver for Lemmy (which is essentially all of my social media at this point). Great app and awesome pace of updates.
I’m really happy they pulled it forward. Can’t wait to dig in myself. I played a bit of it, but shelved it to keep it fresh for full release. What class did you have the most fun with during EA?
Link Between Worlds and the Links Awakening remake count, though. If you haven’t checked those out they are both great.
I’m partial to the litany against fear. Not super deep, but I can say I’ve recited it quietly to myself a few times! It’s a decent tool to acknowledge, process, then repress and move past true fear.
I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past, I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain
Hear hear. The steam deck is making me appreciate that the most. I initially hoped cross-platform saves would work for games on the Switch and PC, but I don’t think I’ve seen a single game where that works. It’s part of the reason the Deck has replaced the Switch for me. Steam cloud saving is usually flawless between Deck/PC.
The downside of true cross-platform is that it requires server side saving. Which usually means another launcher and multiplayer/GAAS BS. Diablo is no exception.
For more modern CT-likes I would recommend Chained Echoes and the soon-to-be-released Sea of Stars. Chained Echoes was fantastic.
Speaking of “legendary”, he played literal Satan in the movie Legend. Huge fucking horns and everything. Also RHPS of course. Truly a legend. Too bad about his stroke, but he’s still voice acting!
The wafer equipment market has more US roots than the fab market, as many tools are designed here (even if built in Asia). Their supply chains are different than TSMC/Samsung and less localized to “home country only”. Also, TSMC was bringing their supply chain with them for AZ.
Two points:
The Fremen are the most interesting in my eyes. It helps that we are introduced to them through the Atreides lens, so everything seems so strange and alien. The way they respect the desert, worms, and water scarcity is hard to imagine for the reader, but becomes internally consistent with how the Fremen operate. In Messiah that breaks down a bit, as the water scarcity foundation is ripped away and the Fremen lose purpose. They’re initially framed in a positive light (freeing Dune from the Harkonnens) but the jihad and religious fanaticism show their ignorance and weakness the following books. Still though they are just AWESOME
My son (7) and I just finished reading the book, which he loved. I downloaded the 2 hr edit and we had a blast watching it. It definitely skipped parts from the books, but it also largely was missing some exposition and context for why and where they were at a given time. Since we just read the book, it was easier to follow. Without that, though, I think you’d get lost as the scenes jump around quite a bit.
Generally yes. I played for a few hours then stopped as I wanted to keep it fresh for release…but what I did play was definitely fun. I’m excited they pulled the release ahead of starfield.
While this is inevitable, it’s also terrifying. I don’t think we’re close to Skynet, but I could definitely see needless escalation due to over-relying on AI analysis.
Yeah in fairness the article is making that leap as well. But the $ to build an EV factory or a semiconductor fab are so mind boggling that it will dwarf the new construction spend on some of the more traditional manufacturing industries. That said, there are some beautiful buildings- now vacant- in the rust belt that I wish would get re-purposed. The urban ones have likely turned into loft apartments by now, but the rural factory buildings may not ever get used again. Those old brick and stone buildings with the slanted skylights are iconic. I’m not sure they’ll ever get filled again, unfortunately.
It is interesting that there is a lot of new construction, as it highlights the changing goods that are being produced in the US. I imagine many of those closed down factories in the rust belt/Midwest aren’t coming back, as those jobs (machining, welding, stamping, etc.) might still be done in LCC. The new construction $ is likely driven by biopharma, semiconductor, EV, and other high-tech manufacturing as the article starts to imply.
You’re not a “doomer”, as I read it more like the opposite- your defense of global trade is optimistic. Trade and specialization doesn’t work nearly that cleanly in practice.
Companies and governments saw the disruptions of the past few years and realized that there are unaccounted for costs (and benefits) to the global supply chain. COVID, shipping disruptions (strikes, Evergreen, prices), the chip shortage, etc. all have taught a lesson about the diversification of supply chain risk. Decentralization isn’t less efficient when you include those costs. So it makes more sense now to make goods in America for America, and make goods in China for China. Not all goods, obviously, but the scales have shifted…and that’s a good thing for the health of global supply.
The XP is my worry too. These long CRPGs burn me out because they require almost 100% completion to get to level parity. I’m still loving BG3, but if the later acts are like Act 1 I’m not sure I’ll make it. The content is all superb, but it seems like I need to do it ALL in order to progress.