This is practically a brand new, fan-made Fallout game, that’s even got voice acting and takes place on a new map, with the game set in the Black Bear Mountain National Forest in California.
This is practically a brand new, fan-made Fallout game, that’s even got voice acting and takes place on a new map, with the game set in the Black Bear Mountain National Forest in California.
Saints Row IV has this beat by several orders of magnitude.
Pretty sure Home Run Inn is regional. Never seen that in California.
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I had the opposite problem. I bought an unlocked LG G5 from Amazon, and AT&T made life difficult. In the entire time I was using that phone, I never was able to connect to LTE, and I couldn’t use visual voicemail, because the Google Play listing for AT&T’s app claimed my device was unsupported, despite it working fine…
A year or two ago I had to use a site that was still using a Java applet. It was the third party that my bank uses for check ordering. Merficully, the applet was only for previewing the check design, because after an hour or two of Googling and tinkering I determined that it’s basically impossible to run Java in a…
What makes you think this is limited to government?
I used to work for a software as a service company whose largest client was a major grocer. We had to support Internet Explorer 8* as late as 2016, because that was what the grocer’s corporate workstations were still using.
Then that’s one more hoop. You have to find a web hosting that’s reliable, based on a country that isn’t party to or doesn’t enforce the Berne convention, manage to find compatriots to work with via the platform you just set up, and the host has to accept Bitcoin.
Nearly every country in the world is party to the Berne Convention, which requires that signatories recognize the copyrights of other signatories. Sure, some aren’t as good at enforcing it as others, but good luck finding reliable hosting in country that isn’t a party, that accepts American credit cards as payment,…
Source code is indeed protected by copyright, but you’re correct in that the fan code was probably an entirely original work and thus not a violation of LucasArts’ copyright. Of course, as the other commenter said, that would be a matter for a court to decide, and the whole point of a cease and desist letter is to end…
Never played it.
Not really clear how he intends to make money with a DS if you didn’t already have that background.
I think the worst part of this photo is that you know there’s no way he’s washing his hands before touching that keyboard.
The game’s plot involves the cantankerous Wario deciding to get rich quick by going into video game publishing and selling as many games as possible. The trick, he figures, is to make the games last about three seconds each.
“In the original game when you aimed, your camera stayed still and your crosshair moved around the screen,” he said. “I think most modern PC gamers would find this rather awkward, so I’ve changed the aiming system. Now the crosshair stays in the center of the screen and it’s the camera which moves.”
True, but can you think of a second example?
This reminds me of how there’s still a Hillary 2008 community in Second Life. And when the Hillary 2016 community sprung up, the two did not get along.
The downside of this I see is Obsidian will probably never make another Fallout game. Bethesda wouldn’t want to release a Fallout that doesn’t have a Playstation version; Microsoft wouldn’t want a studio it owns making a game with a Playstation version.
Thank you. There’s good Fleetwood Mac material, but it’s not on Rumours.
I’m a little behind on the Assassin’s Creed series. I played the first two around the time they came out, and just played through Brotherhood over the last month and started Revelations a week ago.