How crocs are made
How crocs are made
Vangers is a postapocalyptic and fundamentally strange top-down driving/exploration/mystery/action-RPG.
It has a unique back story, hostile worlds and an intriguing and expansive vocabulary that helps tell the story. If you are the type of person that appreciates poetic neologisms because they get your brain going, guessing at the etymology and sucking up the layers of connotation, this is up your alley.
Even if you manage to complete the game, you’ll be left wondering whether what happened was even meant to happen. It’s sort of post modern with deconstructed words, rituals and behaviors all jumbled up and muddled together as a result of a great and important event that once had meaning to creatures that may no longer even exist.
So is your car the only car in the universe? As far as I recall the only form of local transportation has been that miniature train system on New Atlantis. If your own transport ships need to travel to an outpost 200 meters away, they go to space and back to get there.
Why is Fedora a psycho? Or is that not the relevant part? Maybe just business-like?
I’m really struggling with this game. I got it on sale and played for 3+ hours, but somehow it didn’t grip me. It was really annoying having to constantly start over. Not trying to detract from other people’s experience of it.
What does ‘user device access’ mean?
Any ship traveling towards another ship would have its nose pointed towards it.
If both ships travel towards each other, their noses would be aligned, but their roll would likely be different.
That’s a bit different from what’s being shown in the comic where ships seem to have any orientation, no matter the context.
As for a galactic up/down, the galactic disc would be the obvious reference. That still leaves a 50/50 chance that two civilizations would choose the same direction as up.
This one is tricky, because Lemmy hates both Musk and AI.
Buy him out, boys!
deleted by creator
“Testing” in case they decide they don’t like money after all.
Or that, with no explanation, they were used to classify the LCD as also being in need of replacement.
The explanation came when GN pressed them: fixing the blemishes meant switching out cases, and switching out cases meant switching LCDs. They actually put that ‘explanation’ in writing.
Pictured: Teenagers
SteamOS (the operating system for the Steam Deck) is based on Arch Linux (the blue A), so that’s what’s going on in the bottom panel.
The red swirl is for another Linux operating system, called Debian. I don’t know what OP is referring to by Steam ‘leaving’ Debian in the top panel.
If AMD wasn’t already cheering to Valve, they have to be at this point
brb, going to rm -rf /bin
Still on Flathub though.