I thought Twitter/X was the one being wiped out, not Mastadon
I thought Twitter/X was the one being wiped out, not Mastadon
To be honest, I mostly play it on Windows, but occasionally launch it on my Linux laptop. My laptop is from 2012, has 4 GB of ram, and is pretty underpowered, so it’s slow, but it would probably work pretty well on a properly specced Linux computer. It’s a standard Unity game, so I suspect there shouldn’t be too many glitches or things that.
It’s a super complex game and I quite love playing co-op with my brother. It’s easy to spend hours designing all the various sub-systems of a warship only to watch it still fail against the mid-level factions.
Yes it is, because quite a few people are obese, and they deserve to feel normal too.
I quite like Besiege, but I’d probably have to go with From the Depths.
I quite like Besiege, but I’d probably have to go with From the Depths.
Someone clearly doesn’t play Cities: Skylines with mods
Hey, quite a few people bought Game Pass for a month to try out Cities: Skylines 2, because it was quite a lot cheaper than the game itself (and considering the poor state the game was released in, probably not much more than a month of replay value anyway)
Wait what’s the point of backporting to GTK2 then? And why should I as an end user care? Will it make the UI nicer?
What even is GTK2 and GTK3?
At least they’re all in regular GUIs instead of 1 GUI, 1 command prompt, and random configuration files hidden somewhere.
Nope, last Christmas I struggled to get Linux Mint to play a Steam game using Proton. Booting would lead to a crash, adding some flags would lead to the game being incredibly laggy. Mint had an option for proprietary drivers, but the game would crash regardless of the flags. In the end, turns out Mint was downloading the wrong drivers, and I had to manually download the correct ones from Nvidia’a website to finally get the game to work with average performance.
It took multiple hours of troubleshooting during my one Christmas vacation of the year. Meanwhile my brother, who had an identical laptop playing the same game on Windows, ran it flawlessly with great performance.
But with WiFi, you don’t have to pay extra for more data usage.
WiFi?
Because they care about your experience and want to ensure you’re getting the most out of your computer by suggesting helpful productivity apps?
Too bad it also blocks bus traffic. And it’s not like the buses have an alternative route.
Edit: in fact it’s worse for bus passengers as the Golden Gate Transit system relies heavily on timed transfers and many buses run once an hour, so even a 10 minute delay could cause bus passengers to miss their transfer and make them have to wait an hour.
Why not leave the defaults as-is? They’re probably set like that for a reason.
Epic is developing Hyperspace for Mac, as well as “standalone” (access Hyperspace in a web browser). Plus many hospitals use Citrix virtualization, so I wouldn’t be surprised if Linux is theoretically possible (though unlikely due to jankiness).
They specifically said they didn’t want that though.
Maybe they were a passenger and the actual designated driver got in an accident due to something out of their control.
That sounds like a lot of hassle for someone who doesn’t want hassle.