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sugar_in_your_tea, do games w $80 for Borderlands 4 too costly? Randy Pitchford says, "If you're a real fan, you'll find a way to make it happen"

Exactly. That’s why I buy Nintendo games near release and am patient for PC games.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w I'm a console gamer so, Why the hate on the Epic Games Store?

Here are my reasons:

  • no Linux support - Heroic works, why doesn’t Epic do what GOG do and revenue share w/ Heroic?
  • exclusivity deals, which reduces options outside of EGS
  • Epic’s anticheat works on Linux, but their own games that use it don’t, that’s a pretty big slap in the face

I certainly want more competition to Steam, but that competition needs to do something other than exist for me to use it. GOG is that, and if they properly supported Linux, they’d get most of my gaming money. But they don’t, so they only get some of it.

Yeah, this probably reads like a Linux fanboy post or something, but I’ve been using Linux longer than Steam supported it with its client, and I’ll still be here if Steam leaves. It’s my platform of choice, and a vendor needs to meet me here if they want my business. Valve did, so they get my money. I honestly don’t need much, I just need games to work properly on my system.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Harassed by Assassin’s Creed gamers, a professor fought back with kindness

Go fish.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Grand Theft Auto 4 for PS5, Xbox Series X/S reportedly in development, could release this year

Yeah, I’d much prefer they make it a DLC or something for the existing game instead of a new entry entirely. I’d ideally be able to toggle between old and new in the same game.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Grand Theft Auto 4 for PS5, Xbox Series X/S reportedly in development, could release this year

Someone’s not a fan of hot coffee.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Grand Theft Auto 4 for PS5, Xbox Series X/S reportedly in development, could release this year

It’s probably because things get janky on high FPS. I wasn’t able to complete the game until I capped the FPS in the final mission (helicopter scene).

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Grand Theft Auto 4 for PS5, Xbox Series X/S reportedly in development, could release this year

I have no issues with them remastering old games for newer platforms. I have a problem with remaking old games instead of making new games.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Palworld confirms ‘disappointing’ game changes forced by Pokémon lawsuit

Competition naturally degrades over time as companies go out of business and consolidate.

And it naturally improves over time as companies challenge established players and “distupt” the market. As long as the barrier to entry remains sufficiently low, there’s no reason for a net degradation in competition.

Large companies tend to become less efficient. Yes, they have economies of scale, but they tend to scare away innovators, so they switch to lobbying to maintain their edge.

The correct approach IMO is to counter the lobbying efforts of large orgs, and that means stripping governments of a lot of their power. Regulations tend to result in more monopolies, requiring antitrust to fix, and as you noted, that’s extremely rare.

Do you think a more direct “medical patient union” would work? Skipping a government intermediary?

Yeah, that can work. I’m thinking of having your primary care orovider offer your “insurance” policy, and they’d be on the hook to fund any procedures you need. So they have an incentive to keep you healthy, and that agreement could be a legal obligation that the doctor is doing their best to keep you healthy.

I do think we should socialize emergency services though. If a paramedic determines you need an ambulance ride, that should be free.

I’d prefer socialized healthcare over single payer

I prefer privatized care with transparency in pricing across the board, shortened patent durations, and some government assistance for the poor. But failing that, socialized care is probably the next best. Anything in the middle just breeds corruption.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Palworld confirms ‘disappointing’ game changes forced by Pokémon lawsuit

Okay.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Palworld confirms ‘disappointing’ game changes forced by Pokémon lawsuit

In what way?

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Palworld confirms ‘disappointing’ game changes forced by Pokémon lawsuit

Creation costs like the cost of an advanced degree?

No, copyright has little to do with advanced degrees. The creation costs are the time and resources needed to produce the book, movie, software project, or other work, which can be substantial.

There’s a better argument for patents, but still weak.

That was a rhetorical question

Right, and rhetorical questions by definition don’t have good answers. There needs to be a reasonable limit here, and what’s reasonable depends on what specifically we’re talking about.

For example, I benefitted a lot from my public education, but I can’t really quantify the impact to a a dollar amount, so I don’t think it’s reasonable to say my career success is due to public funding.

For me to accept that an innovation came from the public sector, I’d need to see a direct link between public funding and the innovation. Just saying a company got a tax incentive to put an office somewhere doesn’t mean all innovations from that office is government funded.

Is it unreasonable to say that the state is paying you to drive?

Yes, that’s unreasonable.

Driving is heavily subsidized by the state. For example, a lot of the funding for roads comes from income taxes instead of direct use taxes like registration and gas taxes. Even so, I don’t consider that to be paying me to drive, but it is an incentive to drive.

The government does pay me to have babies since I get a tax credit if I have kids. The difference is I have to do something proactive to get the benefit, whereas the roads will be funded whether I drive or not.

If a company gets a tax incentive to put an office somewhere, that doesn’t mean all inventions made there are publicly funded unless that’s specifically called out in the incentive deal.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Palworld confirms ‘disappointing’ game changes forced by Pokémon lawsuit

So you’d rather give power to corporations.

If the market is sufficiently competitive, yes, I trust corporations more than governments. I firmly believe giving more power to governments results in more monopolies, generally speaking, because it creates an opportunity for the larger players to lobby for ways to create barriers to competition.

That’s a pretty broad statement though, and there are certainly cases where I would prefer the government to step in.

monopsony/single-payer system where all the buyers effectively are unionized

I don’t think that’s true. I think you’re making an assumption that the payer has an incentive to reduce costs, but I really don’t think that’s the case. What they do have is a lot of power over pricing, and while that could be used to force producers to reduce costs, it can also be used to shift costs onto taxpayers in exchange for favors from the companies providing the services.

That’s quite similar to the current military industrial complex, the military is the only purchaser of these goods, so the suppliers can largely set their prices. A monopsony means the value of making a deal is massive for a company because they get access to a massive market, which also means the value of lobbying to get that deal is also high.

So I really don’t trust that a single payer system would actually work in the US to reduce total healthcare costs, it’ll just hide it. If we want to actually cut healthcare costs, we need to fix a number of things, such as:

  • malpractice suits - providers need expensive insurance plans and hesitate to provide certain types of care (i.e. need more tests even though they’re very confident in their diagnosis)
  • pharmaceutical and medical device patent system, and subsequent lobbying to set regulations to hedge against competition
  • backroom deals between insurance companies and care providers where both sides get a “win” (provider inflates prices so insurance rep can report that they’re getting a deal by getting a discount)
  • whatever is causing ambulances to be super expensive

The problems are vast and I think single payer would likely just sweep them under the rug. We either need socialized healthcare or maximum transparency, single payer would just be a disappointment.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Ori studio in crisis: No Rest For The Wicked could be their final game

Yeah, Zelda was originally what I thought of when I heard “ARPG” because I grew up on the NES games. If I started w/ something later, I might consider the series “action-adventure” instead, because the definition of what an ARPG has changed somewhat. And yeah, I’d consider BotW “action-adventure” as well using today’s definition, but it would’ve been an ARPG using the earlier definition.

There are plenty of other somewhat similar games that do qualify as ARPG today that are very different from Diablo games, like the Ys series, Gurumin, and Cross Code. The Ys series is fairly diverse, but generally speaking, gear upgrades are plot-based (find in a chest in the dungeon you’re exploring) and there’s not a ton of diversity, and leveling your character is very important (1-2 level difference can be the difference between a nearly impossible boss fight and a manageable one). In Gurumin, there is a fixed set of upgrades, and you combine these to get effects. CrossCode has stats, unlockable abilities, and action-oriented combat. Loot isn’t really a major part of any of those games, they’re too action-oriented to be an RPG, and they have too much emphasis on progression to really be action-adventure.

Those are the sorts of ARPGs I absolutely love, yet everyone seems to focus on the Diablo-like dungeon crawlers where loot is a defining factor.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Palworld confirms ‘disappointing’ game changes forced by Pokémon lawsuit

You can also legislate mandatory R&D in budgets for large corporations

Yeah, that’s not going to be abused/scare away companies.

You’d need to elaborate I’m not clear what you mean by this.

A few ways:

  • the term “R&D” can be pretty broad, so it’s unlikely to have the effect you’re thinking about - pretty much everything in a tech company is “R&D” whereas almost nothing in a factory is; making this somewhat fair is going to be very hard and will likely end in abuse
  • companies are more likely to set up shop where such restrictions don’t exist
  • enforcement could be selective to target companies that don’t “bend the knee” - esp true if the required amount is high enough that it’s not practical

force

Not a word I like to hear when it comes to government. The more power you give it, the more likely some idiot will come along and abuse it. Look at Trump, the only reason he can absolutely wreck the economy w/ tariffs is because Congress gave him that power and refuses to curtail it.

It sounds like the military is still getting what they paid for

Sure, but they’re getting a lot less of it than they could if it was a more competitive market.

They pay obscene amounts to get decent results. I think they could get the same (or better!) results with a lot less spending if the system wasn’t rigged to be anti-competitive.

Single payer also applies to healthcare proposals and is generally seen as a fantastic solution to keeping healthcare prices down.

I think that only works in countries w/o a large medical devices/pharmaceutical industry, otherwise you end up with ton of lobbying and whatnot. I don’t think the total cost of healthcare would go down, it would just shift to net tax payers and healthy people. Look at the ACA, it didn’t reduce healthcare spending at all, it just shifted who pays for it, and it seems healthy people ended up spending more (to subsidize less healthy people).

To actually reduce costs, you need to make pricing as transparent as possible, and I don’t think single payer achieves that. It can be a good option in certain countries, but I don’t think it’s universally a good option.

sugar_in_your_tea, do games w Palworld confirms ‘disappointing’ game changes forced by Pokémon lawsuit

If that’s people’s main motivator then why does copyright exist in the first place?

Copyright exists to create a temporary monopoly so the creator can recoup their creation costs and some profit on top, since creating a work takes a lot more resources than duplicating it. Likewise for patents, though that’s more focused on sharing ideas.

large enough institution

We probably are. A quick search shows 100-200 patents, many of which have long since expired. Most of them are incredibly mundane, and I highly doubt a government would’ve been involved in funding it, and I don’t really know how to find out if they were.

How many transition steps are needed

That depends on a variety of things, but in general, very few? Like 2-3?

Let’s say my company gets funding to disseminate OSHA information to employees so they know their rights and what the company is obligated to provide. That has absolutely nothing to do w/ funding the actual production process at plants, even if those plants are subjected to OSHA safety requirements. In fact, it likely runs counter to increasing production because employees in a seminar by definition aren’t producing product at the plant.

So yeah, I would say government funding has to be pretty directly related to R&D to count as “funding” R&D. Maybe there’s an award for the first group to come up with something or a general subsidy to fund research in a given area.

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