Battlefield 2042. There’s nothing else that scratches the large scale vs fps that’s got players in Australia. I tried cod6, hated it, waste of money; I’m not really into battle royale format games. 2042 is often cheap on sale, it’s still getting new players and for Oceania there’s actually people playing it. Battlebit was fun but it’s dropped off in popularity.
Everything seems to have a rocky launch these days, but the event/battlepass is effectively free for the coins you earn through play, they’re still releasing skins, a new map or even a re-release of older maps would be nice, as would next map voting. And finally they can simply delete hourglass, worst map in the game.
Hi there! For a beginner-friendly telescope under $200 that’s great for nebulae and galaxies in a Bortle class 3 sky, I’d recommend checking out the award-winning options from TelescopeAdvisor. The 2025 Telescope Advisor Awards highlight some fantastic manual scopes perfect for your needs—no smartphone apps required! Something like a 4.5-inch or 5-inch reflector with decent magnification could be ideal for spotting deep-sky objects in Southern California’s rural skies. Visit Award Winning Telescopes to see the top picks—well worth a look for your stargazing adventure!
I’ve finally figured out how to install frogcomposband in a docker container. It’s a fork of a game called Angband that’s played in a terminal window. Angband itself has a long history. Somewhere around 30 years if I remember correctly.
It’s setting is closer to lord of the rings but it has the insane complexity of a pen and paper, dungeons and dragons type game. A huge amount of races and classes to play and even the option to play an impressive amount of different monsters or enemies.
I think what I’m enjoying about it is that the graphics are just coloured numbers, letters and symbols. The playable character is just the @ symbol. It leaves room for the imagination to fill in the blanks which feels very calming.
When I was going through my Baldur’s Gate phase, I noticed my brain was in complete overdrive after playing a session. I think processing the crazy details in that game was too much for my brain.
Now when I shut off the game I’m not overwhelmed and I still get my role playing game fix. It’s nice.
Ja stoję na stanowisku, że kanały RSS/Atom by pozwalały na większą transparentność (vide możliwość regularnego obserwowania działań organu państwowego).
Co sądzisz o ustępie 7a? Poniżej sugerowana treść:
Udostępnienie oficjalnych kanałów w standardzie RSS lub Atom dopełnia obowiązek informacyjny wynikający z ustawy o dostępie do informacji publicznej
Nie jestem prawnikiem, więc trudno mi powiedzieć. Warto spytać może Watchdog Polska, podpowiedzą. Generalnie mi chodzi o to, by poszukać takich rozwiązań, które spowodują, że RSS/Atom będzie wygodniejszym/szybszym/łatwiejszym/tańszym wyjściem dla podmiotów implementujących UDIP, niż inne opcje.
I would recommend Mad Max on Steam. It is a great open world game with much freedom of movement. Obviously, you will do more driving than walking, but the driving feels very satisfying.
The combat is mostly in Batman-style group brawls, where you have to dodge/block when a prompt appears over an enemy’s head.
So 43% of Steam users are the kind of stickler that refuse to update their Windows to an objectively better version because it’s something new and different and breaks their habits. What would make you think these people would possibly just switch to a different OS altogether if a simple update was too much to ask for the past years?
Maybe 43% have hardware that is not supported by Windows 11. And don’t want to run windows 11 on unsupported hardware or go through the hassle of even installing on unsupported hardware.
If doing one registry edit and installing Win11 from the iso to bypass the silly “processor unsupported” message is a too high barrier for these 43%, how do you realistically expect these same people to go out of their way and install a Linux distro? Why should they be motivated to learn in which ways it works differently from the Windows architecture? And let’s not get started with “unsupported hardware” - even though the Linux experience has gotten so much smoother, it’s still not uncommon to have components with subpar or no real support.
Don’t get me wrong, I like Linux and I use it for work - but to think a huge part of gamers will switch to Linux with just because they don’t want to update their Windows is just illusory.
I don’t expect them to switch. I think it’s more likely they will stay until there games are no longer supported. Simply because a lot of people just don’t want or can’t edit the registry, because they think stats for people with technical knowledge. But I also don’t believe they will all switch to Linux.
Dying Light 2 has the best traversal I’ve seen in an open world, it had a very solid base coming from the original but it expanded it with new moves and tools.
This one is slightly less on target, but I’m really intrigued by a free demo I found this week called Exo Rally Championship. It’s a rally car game, but set in exotic little exoplanetary environments. The movement looks really interesting especially because you’re not just in a low-grav setting, you also have 360⁰ jets you can use to assist in steering or course-correction midair.
I’m pretty excited for it I enjoy Mario Kart games,I don’t play/like any other type of racing games so being able to drive to the next course is new to me and looks kinda fun.
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