joe-the-tech
Joe the Tech
joe-the-tech

Yeah, they get a little out of hand with those. However, the alternative is what a lot of server equipment does, which is just make alphabet soup out of numbers and letters. Like, putting two Intel SR377s into a SuperMicro X11DPH-T.

I highly recommend trying it again with the Restoration Project (get the newest one from No Mutants Allowed), as it adds in the high resolution patch and allowed me to play it on a 1440p monitor and have it look exactly how I remember it looking when I first played it back when it was released.

I reinstalled Fallout 2 earlier this week and, after installing a couple fan-made mods (Fallout 2 Restoration Project and EcCo), I’m hooked again. This was a mainstay for me when I was younger, having played through and beaten it at least 5 times, but the added/restored content, balance tweaks, and bugfixes from these

Steam’s long-standing stance on this is that if you purchase a game, and it’s in your library, it will never be removed from your library. And I don’t think I’ve heard of an instance where a game has been removed from someone’s library with the exception of refunds or direct requests to Steam support.

Can you describe the taste? I’d like Brian Jacques levels of detail, but will settle for Guy Fieri.

Not to mention adventure mode, which is basically the Dwarf Fortress equivalent of Rogue played in a 1:1 scale model of the world your fortress is in.

Yeah, the bugs pertaining to visitors are pretty crippling right now.

I had a necromancer that spent his entire life writing nothing but books about himself, except for the one time he delved into the sexual reproductive cycle of dragons. I imagine that was a weird year for him.

That sounds delicious.

Camelbo?

Can’t wait to see the Temple of Elemental Evil movie. I’m hoping it ends up being filmed like Edge of Tomorrow.

I think it’s his photo. Meaning no offense at all to him, he looks older than 30 in it.

Sounds like something Arjen Anthony Lucassen would write in collaboration with Christopher Bowes.

Dwarf Fortress is a phenomenal game with a very steep learning curve (read: learning cliff). If you’re serious about playing, you will want to get familiar with the wiki and visit us over on the subreddit.

Gita, you’re missing the best one from last year’s update:

By the same token as your sentiment with Elex, it’s actually difficult to recommend any one game. Gothic II is my personal favorite because it was a fun, hard, open-world RPG when Morrowind was about the only other entry in that category. It’s full of quirky humor and throwbacks to the first (you don’t need to have

I think that adequately describes every Piranha Bytes game I’ve ever played, and Gothic 2 is still in my top 10.

A lot of people will echo this sentiment, myself included. I hope that Ford and Reiche are able to regain control of their IP, but if they’re unable to, I’ll gladly still purchase Stellar Dominion: Ghosts of the Precursors.

So, I’ve played roguelikes for year and years and years. They’re my favorite genre. That being said, if a game offers both a permadeath and a non-permadeath option, I’ll take the non-permadeath option because I have an incredibly strong fear of failure. However, last night I started up a new game of Rimworld, but

I haven’t either, but now I can’t unsee it.