Realnoize42
Realnoize42
Realnoize42

Which goes exactly in line with what I was saying. They used to make good gear in the past. But their build quality tanked quite dramatically over the last 5-7 years or so. What frustrates me the most is that on top of that, all those expensive premium or gaming mice they do aren’t easily repairable. Most of the time,

Controller attachments are nice but not everyone like them. It feels to me the same as using a freaking dongle for plugging headphones. It feels backwards. I much prefer something that has built-in controls. Like, sure, attachments DO work, but I much prefer a device that has this built-in already.

But even so, this

Logitech makes pretty solid hardware

And that’s the thing. Microsoft see the Xbox consoles simply as a mean to access their ecosystem. They want people to invest in the platform, and they figured that giving access to more people through consoles, PC, streaming, etc, is where the money actually is because you’re expanding the pool of potential customers.

I have a coworker who has almost no immune system anymore, PLUS having a condition that makes those vaccines almost ineffective for her. So yeah, a shitty situation. Also, my boss caught COVID about 2 months ago and she was unable to get up from bed for about a week, and barely able to function the following one. And

In my corner of the world, right after the last remaining safety measures were dropped, everything went up again to a level similar to what we had in the first and second waves (and that’s still the case more or less right now). Number of hospital admissions are constantly high (with of course some variations on the

It’s not 1994 anymore, but that doesn’t mean modern ways are inherently better. Things change, are they don’t always change for the better.

The thing is, in the old days, a show needed to be successful in its time slot compared to the competition. The more successful it was, the more the channel could ask for advertising spots during that show. It was a relatively simple affair. Be better than whatever else is out there on the other channels at that time.

Canada is known to be a shit-hole, internet-wise. Not that we don’t have good internet. It’s just insanely more expensive here than anywhere else on the planet for the same thing. To give you an idea, the big players (those who offer a good enough connection) for that same gigabit connection you have at 35$, are

The problem is that people think it’s only about your ISP bandwidth, and don’t care about latency and ping and many other factors. Also, my family is comprised of four people that could fire up a stream on a tablet/TV at any time, so you never truly know what bandwidth you really have available at any one time, and

Maybe Netflix should just stop implementing shit that nobody asked for, produce more what people are actually asking for.

To be technical, the Magnavox Odyssey “cartridges” only contained switches (and not program code) used to alter how the main board was working. So technically, they were not “real” cartridges, as they didn’t contain anything that wasn’t already present in the console itself.

But yes, the Fairchild Channel F was the

The big majority of good mobile games (there are some out there) are those you can literally buy with a one-time payment and that’s it. You can get the full XCOM2 game with all DLC for about 20$ which is a steal. Same thing with Alien Isolation. Dead Cells is another one too. Sure, they’re not super recent games, but

You know, I could’ve said the same thing. I still like gaming in general, of course, but games are, more and more, feeling to me like engineered products rather than something made from a passionate team of people. Sure, some of that joy and passion still shines through some big new games sometimes, but I find myself

Agreed.
Gaming has become like most other medias now. Same as movies, music, books, etc... in the sense that what’s popular and all over the place is usually pandering to the lowest common denominator. To actually get something good (or not derivative) these days, you have to veer off into the sideway tracks, away from

I like your Star Wars analogy, but I’ll add a point of divergence to it. I think a follow up to something that wasn’t done since many years is kind of allowed to bank on nostalgia at first. Like, The Force Awakens was a bit too close to the original movie on many levels, but I think it was ok, as, like I said, it

The problem with F2P mechanics is that it requires adding stuff that doesn’t make sense from a gameplay perspective, with the sole reason behind it being to incite players to part with their cash. There is no game-related reason for these mechanics to exist.

In a past life, some years ago (mostly during the 360 and PS3 days), I was an active member on both Sony and Microsoft dedicated forums (including the official ones) and boy, let me tell you that the Sony side had some of the most irrational fanboyism level I’ve ever seen.

I mean, sure, there was Xbox fanboys too on Xb

I think a Pi 4 could be enough for N64, at least for Mario 64, which most emulators can run decently. And use something like Batocera (an OS dedicated to retro emulation), which is dead easy to install (just flash the system OS to an SD card and put it in your Pi and that’s it).

Well, while I would never say piracy is mostly a victimless crime, I’m also not believing whatever ridiculous numbers companies are putting out when seeking damages, roughly equating each pirated copy as a lost sale. Because that’s ridiculous. I think reality is much more nuanced than what both sides are claiming it