telewizor czasami łapie zmułę, nie przedstawia się po HDMI odpowiednio szybko, więc dekoder schodzi najniżej jak umie żeby nie odciąć użytkownika od urządzenia
ale no, to jest zgadywanka, bo nigdy się z czymś takim nie spotkałem.
Kolejność kanałów i napisy prawie napewno są przechowywane w pamięci stałej, do godziny zazwyczaj jest osobny chip zazwyczaj z własną bateryjką, a rozdzielczość tv może nie być przechowywana w stałejq. Proponuję połączyć dekoder na jakiś czas do innego najlepiej dość nowego tv (albo monitora komputerowego) i zobaczyć czy to się dalej dzieje, jak tak to odpadają “zmuły” telewizora.
Since you mentioned Vintage Story I’m gonna go ahead and praise that suggestion. A game truly worth supporting! Developed by only two people, with a huge dedication. Game has a lovely community too. Definitely give it a shot 👌
I don’t understand this bullshit, if developers/publishers drop their games, just stop investing time into their games or buying from them. How could you force private companies to invest into something which gives zero return?
Why is that ridiculous? Seems like a totally fine solution to me. Probably not possible in most cases due to licencing issues, but if not this is the best thing a developer could do. And making games and/or their servers open source isn’t even the only option. In most cases it will suffice to just provide server binaries and patch the game to make it work with self-hosted servers, or just patch it to make it playable offline. It’s that simple. Developing games with that in mind from the beginning makes this even easier.
never build in forced server components to begin with
patch out the need for the server as part of the last update before support ends
give buyers access to run their own servers with an officially-provided executable and set the client to connect to that executable
open source the whole thing
And maybe others. It’s about making sure that a product you have paid for actually works as it was sold to you. It’s honestly a really basic consumer protection concept. You sell me a television and it stops working within a reasonable lifetime due to your own failure, and you’re obligated to repair or replace it. The same should be true of software.
Chained Together - running gauntlets while … chained together
Children of Morta - adorable graphics meet solid gameplay and vivid storytelling
Core Keeper - top-down Terraria with great pixel art, full release in a week!
Cosmoteer: Build your 2d-Spaceship and do what you want! Full workshop support with tons of available mods.
(hmm so much stuff starting with c, gotta change my game)
Element TD 2 - classic tower defense experience
Heavenly Bodies - Adventure game with physics!
Kingdom: Two Crowns - the right thing for chilling :-)
Necesse: even more Terraria, but with a huge world and settlements to build and manage. Still in EA, and needs polish, but great game even now!
Neon Chrome: Cyberpunk twin-stick shooter
Operation Tango: Asymmetric Coop, one is a hacker, the other is the agent on the ground
Streets of Rogue: “immersive sim”-top down twin stick action roguelite - i cant even describe it well, but it is heaps of fun and chaos can pop up around every corner!
Synthetic: twin-stick shooter with tons of guns and a hefty difficulty later on
Grim Dawn: ARPG, and one of the best in its class. Dated, but still updated (and gets a new expansion soon-ish!). community is running seasons which add new areas, items and whatnot! i’ve sunk 1500 hours into that one, so i am probably biased when i say give it a whirl.
I liked Grim dawn for the amount of time that we (my other half and I) played it, but I seem to remember it had issues with shared quests in that you had to complete all quests individually (I’m pretty sure that was it, forgive me it’s been awhile), is that still a problem? I might have to go check it out again if it isn’t.
Since you played all Borderlands and just finished a D&D game, why not play “B&B” on Borderlands, there’s a game called Tiny Tina’s Wonderland which plays like Borderlands but is set in “medieval” fantasy (but still has gun for some reason)
A few I’ve played with a friend of mine: the We Were Here series, Portal 2, Monster Hunter World, Factorio and Deep Rock Galactic (which we both didn’t like, but it’s pretty popular)
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