Eh, on PC, you can generally get a decent price or wait a little while for a great one. It was selling for $25 not too long ago. Game sounds fun, though.
Eh, on PC, you can generally get a decent price or wait a little while for a great one. It was selling for $25 not too long ago. Game sounds fun, though.
Even people who know what they’re doing are worse than an edge pro. An edge pro can’t be “outpaced,” whatever that even means in terms of sharpening a knife. Customization is easy with an edge pro, it’s just a way to get a very precise angle with the same, albeit smaller, stones and other sharpening tools like…
Obviously, but my point is that this saying relies on something else being the real motivation. The words themselves aren’t motivational.
Good to know, thanks for the summary. Looks like PC performance is pretty good, which is what I’ll be playing it on.
Unhappy marriage? Only 40%, stick through it no matter how much it sucks. It’s great if you only do this for things that will pay off rather than as a form of submission to what you’re already doing.
Eh, EdgePro has pretty much all the possibilities covered. Don’t know about many more possibilities than getting a knife sharp, though. Well, serrations are weird on stones. That’s one of the reasons I like the Sharpmaker. But, yeah, I have spent less time sharpening than I should be. Then again, I’ve also spent less…
So, yeah, like I said, time and money. You don’t really mention the time investment for stones freehand though. I think it matters how much one values their time and need for paying close attention.
Eh, everyone is worse than an edge pro.
Yes, well, it’s pretty hard to beat an EdgePro and there’s not much to “get.” I don’t know about the money it takes to get into water stones, but I’m betting it’s not cheap, not to mention the time investment. Someone mentioned a Spyderco Sharpmaker and I think that’s also a great option. I don’t think that doing…
I have a Sharpmaker and I think it’s great. I mean, anything seems better than getting into water stones.
I feel like getting an EdgePro would be much easier and result in much more precisely sharpened (and maybe sharper) knives.
Actually, the trackpad has more potential for feedback. I’m not sure of the current implementation, but it’s likely configurable. Not sure how the stick is better, but I use a wheel for driving games.
But is it good enough for super meat boy? The left touchpad is a better replacement for an analog stick than a dpad.
The left touchpad can act as an analog stick replacement.
It’s not an issue of bare functionality but of precision and broad utility. The left touchpad is at least as good as an analog stick for that type of input. The analog stick was a matter of compromise, not ergonomics. A legitimate dpad is irreplaceable.
I agree, I think it’s fantastic and, at worst, it’s as good as a regular controller. That said, going with an analog stick instead of a D-pad was dumb. That center touchscreen would have also been quite nice, but just that, not essential.
I think the issue is how much other people slobber.
I haven’t played the game, and though it does look not great (considering your reserved recommendation), what videos you’ve posted shows an incredible lack of effort. That is to say, are you sure you should be the one reviewing this game? Though the mentioned flying bodies might be hilarious, so is the idea of your…
I inferred that, since they used “sticks,” plural, they were talking about the controller in general. Also, why would they ask if it would be fair against someone on mouse and keyboard if they didn’t want to know how it compares to a mouse and keyboard? Saying that it’s not is directly answering their question.
No gamepad is going to be good enough against a mouse and keyboard in most competitive PC games. I think the Steam controller is at least as good as current gamepads. I wish they had stuck to their guns a bit and had a d-pad instead of the the analog stick since the left trackpad is more suited to replacing an analog…