I know most of those words, all except “ryona” and “paied”.
I know most of those words, all except “ryona” and “paied”.
I haven’t played it on mobile, but it does seem made for it. And everything is turn based with absolutely no timers.
I avoided the game after hearing the addiction rumors. A friend bought it as a steam gift.
It didn’t get me as good as Slay the Spire did, but it’s pretty good.
Isn’t that a serious federal crime? How did they not get caught doing that?
There’s absolutely no way I’ll donate after they announced shutting down mozilla.social in favor of flushing their money down the AI path.
On the other hand, it’s the absolute least intrusive marketing, you can turn it off permanently, and it supports Mozilla who are one of the main bulwarks defending privacy.
https://sell.amazon.com/pricing#referral-fees
I guess, according to you, it costs more to host files than it does to ship you a physical USB.
Maybe all these apps stores need to look into physical delivery in order to bring their costs down.
Epic can only compete because they’ve few users and are willing to operate at a near loss
Bullshit. Epic’s loses are in paying for exclusives and giving away games while ruining their PR.
Steam could operate at 15% if they wanted to. But… why would they do that?
Especially on mobile.
I installed a fresh copy of, I believe, Debian. Wayland, for some reason, couldn’t handle 4 monitors, with one above the other three.
Not the issue I expected on a fresh install. Oh, and the biggest issue I had with Windows was copied straight into Linux. I want my (single) taskbar on a monitor that isn’t my primary.
I’m currently back to Windows. It was already going to be a rough transition, and missing the ideas I was looking for while also adding complications just hasn’t made it worth it.
Mumble is another strong, open source, self-hosted option.
You can get a RaspPi instead, and after a year or two you’ll have saved enough electricity to have paid for itself.
you really shouldn’t be using variables with the same name but different capitalization in the same sections of code anyway.
It’s a standard convention. Notice step #3 here: https://scottlilly.com/learn-c-by-building-a-simple-rpg-index/lesson-08-1-setting-properties-with-a-class-constructor/
Edit: Step #4 is a different standard convention that also applies here.
It turns out that the easiest thing to program isn’t always the best application design.
The point is that if you’re going to keep blackmail, you have to share with the government.
The easy answer is to stop keeping blackmail.
IRC at least you have text logs, but I agree.
It does say, prominently, “Who you vote for is secret.”