bin.pol.social

blimthepixie, do games w Medal of honor on the PS1

Shooting people with the shotgun and watching them do a flip.

JonsJava, do games w Day 299 of posting a Daily Screenshot from the games l've been playing
@JonsJava@lemmy.world avatar

Seriously impressed your still doing this

daskye, do games w Day 299 of posting a Daily Screenshot from the games l've been playing
@daskye@fedia.io avatar

nice! what are you gonna build

MyNameIsAtticus,
@MyNameIsAtticus@lemmy.world avatar

I’m not sure yet. I’m honestly impressed i could emulate it, i wasn’t expecting it to run perfectly. Now that it does though i might just do a survival world and see what i build impulsively. i might go to a super flat too and try to build a city. That was one of my favorite things to do growing up (The ‘city’ was like 3 houses and an assortment of Pixelart)

YMS, do gaming w Shower thought: Valve could do the ultimate boss-move this year

SteamOS would be a particular poor choice as a desktop operating system compared to basically any other Linux distribution. It uses an immutable file system and reverts all system changes upon every update. That’s nice if you don’t want to fuck up your handeheld gaming device with some dumb changes, but it’s generally not what you will want on a device you use for all kinds of things. Of course, with some effort you can work around this, but then, why don’t use a system that doesn’t just use such a paradigm in the first place and won’t roll back your workaround to make it usable with the next update?

tatann,

I’d personally prefer to have an OS dedicating to playing, one I can’t broke by installing too many stuff or, on the hand, I could reinstall quickly without having to reinstall all the other stuff (printer, cloud syncing, etc…)

So having a multi-boot for gaming and regular (although rare) computer use. There’s a good chance I’ll still sadly have a Windows boot option for some multiplayer online games (anticheat 😐)

prole,

I use Bazzite on my main laptop (basically SteamOS) and it’s fantastic.

It’s really not that difficult to learn his immutable works, and it’s really not that limited at all, just different.

lost_faith,

Hows it work with rtx(looks supported now?) and vr? last time i tried and said i had nvidia it said “Go away!”

cronenthal,

Fedora bluefin is a much bigger project and a much larger paradigm shift in how Linux distros can be understood than what you make out to be. Tweaking system files might be a good choice for users who need to go beyond what comes with the standard, but it’s not something a wide majority of users will or should need.

bilb,
@bilb@lemmy.ml avatar

When you can easily spin up virtual operating systems with distrobox, you never need to. You might, for some hardware support reasons, need to layer in some additional packages, but I’m curious how true even that is.

Ulrich,
@Ulrich@feddit.org avatar

Not true. Steam OS is not the only immutable distro. Lots of people actually prefer that for their desktops.

BmeBenji,

As someone who uses my desktop for gaming (and maybe web browsing) exclusively, and as someone mildly but not very familiar with OSes, I read this as “SteamOS is bad because of reason I personally don’t like that many people don’t understand, so do more research about Linux”

The barrier to Linux as an OS is not how good it is but how understandable it is. After Pewdiepie’s video went up I’m confident the search phrase “Linux OS download” skyrocketed in popularity because people don’t know let alone understand what a distribution is.

SteamOS is a great intro to Linux for the majority of PC gamers because it’s not only basically ready to use as soon as you boot it up, but also because it is being maintained by a team of people intent on making it the optimal PC gaming platform.

Once Windows users are introduced to a basic Linux experience why not let them take their time learning more about the variables in distros?

Maybe SteamOS is not the perfect distribution because <list your gripes here> but is there a perfect distribution?

teawrecks,

Maybe you don’t understand it, but that doesn’t mean you don’t rely on it. If I said an OS was unusable by 99% of people because it didn’t support multithreading, it doesn’t matter if 99% of people know what multithreading is, that’s clearly a true statement. Similarly, if you’ve ever expected your PC to have the same files on it tomorrow that you put on it today, then you might find it annoying when that’s not the case.

Unboxious,

I read this as “SteamOS is bad because of reason I personally don’t like that many people don’t understand, so do more research about Linux”

It’s easy to dismiss this as something that won’t ever matter to you, but this is something that can cause problems in all sorts of ways even for gamers. The first thing that came to mind is not being able to install custom drivers to support weird hardware, like a racing wheel or something.

BmeBenji,

I’m not vouching for SteamOS as a permanent OS. I’m just defending the strengths of a corporation-maintained distribution of Linux as an introduction to Linux, of which I think SteamOS has many. After being introduced, I think more people will get curious about other things they can do with Linux. It’s really just that starting hump that people need to get over

Btw I appreciate the brief explanation. I was actually having trouble with that sort of thing myself on Bazzite the other day and I was curious why SteamOS differed from Fedora on some specific things.

PanArab,
@PanArab@lemm.ee avatar

It doesn’t revert things stored in /home according to my experience, that’s good enough for most users

CrabAndBroom,

Yeah anything I put in /home has always stayed there, and things like customizations to KDE and whatnot always persist. I’m sure it changes a bunch of system files being an immutable OS, but I really don’t think it’d be anything a layperson coming fresh from Windows would ever really notice.

JustEnoughDucks, do gaming w I'm looking for the Holy Grail of multiplayer gaming
@JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl avatar

Really depends on what you consider grinding.

Pretty much all MMOs or PVEs have you grinding for gear (helldivers 2 I don’t feel is grindy in comparison, but some do)

Survival games like ark, valheim, etc… Have you grinding for bases and the next section of the game

Pretty much all PvP games (CS2, valorant, apex, starcraft, Rocket league, etc…) have you grinding out muscle memory skills

The antithesis to these are instance-based games where at max you grind aesthetic gimmicks, but in single player games they don’t have those like REPO where you always reset and fall guys where it is minigame based

The problem with these games is since you don’t have a “reward for work” (grinding), people get bored of them.

kbal, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of May 11th
@kbal@fedia.io avatar

Speaking of Talos, I have been continuing my quest to discover every Skyrim mod that adds big new locations to explore by playing The Gray Cowl of Nocturnal (10th anniversary edition which was released earlier this year.) I feel that over the years I have got to the point where I know a thing or two about Elder Scrolls lore and yet I have no idea what's up with the ancestral cheetahs, where they come from or whose ancestors they are.

termus, do gaming w I'm looking for the Holy Grail of multiplayer gaming
@termus@beehaw.org avatar

SpiderHeck!

Poopfeast420, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of May 11th
@Poopfeast420@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Decided to give Overwatch 2 a shot, until the new Doom is out.

First time playing OW in a couple of years, just doing normal 5v5 Quick Play, and it’s been fun. Mostly Tank and Support, but occasionally the Matchmaking Algorithm graces me with a DPS game. Current favorite heroes: Hazard and Orisa for Tank, Brigitte and Juno for Healer, and Venture for DPS.

After I’m done with Doom, I’ll take a look at Stadium, the new game mode that was added to OW recently.

saigot,

I have a conspiracy theory that the game tracks your total playtime and rewards people who play a lot of support and tank with better dps queues. I mostly play support, but if I queue as both Support and DPS I will almost always get a DPS game, last night I got 8 games in a row as DPS.

Poopfeast420,
@Poopfeast420@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

These past couple of days, I’ve been always queuing flex and I got 5x DPS in 60+ games, including one in the final 10s of a loss, where I didn’t even make it to the point.

It doesn’t really bother me, I like Tank and Support, and since Blizzard added a bunch of them when OW2 came out, so there’s still a lot to try and learn.

mrodri89,

This is my game of choice. If you ever get a chance and want to laugh go to custom games and try out 12 hogs 1 hole.

Poopfeast420,
@Poopfeast420@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

That one at the Illios Well? I know that one and have played it a few times in the past.

mrodri89,

Yeah it’s hilarious. I was on an edible the last time I played it and was cracking up.

AceFuzzLord, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of May 11th

Way too much Dungeon Clawler on my Steam Deck. I think that and a little bit of Baba Is You are mostly the only non-mobile games I’ve really been playing over the past week.

Ethereal87, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of May 11th
@Ethereal87@beehaw.org avatar

Called it quits on Blue Prince last week. 20-30h in and I hit the main goal of the game of reaching the 46th room. I started scratching at some of the deeper puzzles and mysteries to solve but I think the combination of some frustrating mechanics (drafting the right rooms, running out of resources, etc…) along with time being a premium, I had to stop myself. I just realized my excitement for “one more run” just wasn’t there and rather than sour my opinion on it, it was better to move on and appreciate the depth that’s there for people getting into it. Super impressed by everything that I’ve seen in it and definitely recommended if you’re a fan of puzzles and taking notes to piece a lot of things together.

And on what feels like the other end of the spectrum, I started Skin Deep and am having a blast. It’s such a weird, stylistic immersive sim where you’re rescuing these low-polygon cats from pirates taking over their spaceship. The humor is good and the systems interact really well. Everything telegraphs what it can do, how it can be used, and the game seems to reward experimentation. I’m trying to be stealthy but there’s no penalty to breaking stealth, and some rewarding per-mission objectives that encourage you to check everything out.

You also get to flush heads down toilets which is pretty cool (and definitely something missing from Blue Prince)

Coelacanth,
@Coelacanth@feddit.nu avatar

I get that on Blue Prince. Even with the RNG control you’re afforded late game you’re still heavily affected by the luck of the draw. I still think it’s one of the best games I’ve ever played.

If you’re looking to see the rest of the game through someone else’s eyes to get a glimpse of the remaining puzzles I thoroughly recommend Luckless Lovelocks playthrough on YouTube. It’s still ongoing but I’ve really enjoyed his note taking and puzzle solving.

Ethereal87,
@Ethereal87@beehaw.org avatar

Definitely good to know. I don’t think I’d call it one of the best I’ve ever played but it was certainly awesome as pieces started clicking into place and I could see the outline of how it would go. I’m curious to see what else is really in there (I’ve spoiled some bits and pieces to it) and may go down that path. Thank you!

Coelacanth,
@Coelacanth@feddit.nu avatar

All the detail, the world building and the little pieces of narrative, the puzzles within puzzles and the constant feeling of the game just opening up under you and always throwing things at you making you go “wait, how big is this game?” was just so cool.

I might be high on recency bias in my praise but I was thoroughly enamoured with it.

Katana314, do gaming w Let's hear both sides

I get a lot of good information from bad reviews, just by having a bit of introspection.

“This game is too easy!!”
Oh, that’s okay, I was looking for something easier.

“Two body types!!”
Oh, wow, so the only people that hate it are bigots.

“If you die once to the first boss, then it kneecaps your stats and you get no healing items for half the game.”
Wait, what…? But everyone else loves the game. Is this true?
“lol it’s fine, only scrubs die to the first boss, if you do just restart the 3-hour intro.”
Are these reviewers paid!? No thanks.

_Lory98_, (edited ) do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of May 11th

I played a bit of Phantasy Star Portable, but my PSP’s battery is half dead and I’m waiting for a replacement so I didn’t play long. Seems like a fun game tho.

I finished Xenoblade Chronicles 2 and I have a few thoughts about it.

The gameplay starts slow, too slow to be interesting, but after around 20 hours you unlock all the main systems and it gets really fun. It is however dragged down a bit by how bad the blade gacha and how grindy other secondary mechanics are (affinity charts and region development/mercenary missions).

The story was fine, it was pretty standard for a JRPG. I felt like the main characters were more interesting than the ones in the first game, but the overall plot and themes were a bit weak.

Various (minor) XC2 story spoilersI did find the theme of death and remembrance interesting in this setting, but I didn’t feel like it was explored deeply enough. Same for the ethical issues of using blades, which the story acknowledges, but never really deals with it. The blade gacha system also goes against what the story is trying to say, as it forces you to treat common blades as expendable or just workforce for mercenary missions.

The story feels overall a bit rushed towards the end (especially the ending comes abruptly, I was expecting it to be a fakeout) and weirdly unfocused before that, but still engaging enough.

CluckN, do games w Day 299 of posting a Daily Screenshot from the games l've been playing

The console demo used to be time locked. I’d go over a friend’s house to play split screen and see how far we could progress in 20 minutes. We use to speedrun building a nether portal until we found the one hidden inside the Minecraft logo.

MyNameIsAtticus,
@MyNameIsAtticus@lemmy.world avatar

That’s what me and my sister used to do growing up lol. We couldn’t afford the full game, so we’d use the demo and speedran as much of the Tutorial world as we could. We didn’t figure out you could actually skip the tutorial until a year after we bought the full game though lol

hamsterkill, (edited ) do gaming w I'm looking for the Holy Grail of multiplayer gaming

My interpretation of your request boils down to “what’s a good co-op roguelike” where the grinding is the replaying.

So, depending on how many players you need it to support and preferred genres, you might check out games like

  • Risk of Rain 2
  • Enter the Gungeon
  • Children of Morta
  • Vampire Survivors
  • Streets of Rogue
  • Gunfire Reborn
  • Barony

There’s also a game called Jumpship that i’m keeping an eye on the development of that’s supposed to be hitting early access in the coming months.

Coelacanth, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of May 11th
@Coelacanth@feddit.nu avatar

Still on an extended break from Blue Prince, hoping my sister and her fiancé catch up to me eventually so we can take a crack at the final(?) puzzle together but they’ve been busy lately and not had much time to play. If you enjoy puzzles and haven’t played it yet you are truly missing out. I still think it will be in GOTY contention even with all the other heavy hitters this year.

In the meantime I’ve been utterly enjoying Clair Obscur: Expedition 33. I’m probably over the halfway point now in the story, though I’ve been dragging my feet doing side content and optional bosses to extend my playtime. For once when it comes to a JRPG I wish it was actually longer. I could easily lose myself in this world, story and among these characters for 100+ hours.

Really recommend the game, though with the effusive praise it’s been collecting that’s hardly a surprise. Brilliant music, engaging combat, interesting story and well written dialogue that is superbly acted whether you go for the English or French. And all that for a €50 game?!

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