😁 Sorry not sorry!
Nah, I wouldn’t even wish it gone, really. I just couldn’t care even a bit about anything they had to show that day.
BG&E was that charming single-player adventure game, with quirky and lovable characters and a tiny handcrafted universe. And with a non-ending that begged for a direct sequel.
What they showed in that E3 preview was yet another freaking Ubisoft open-world. It was supposed to be planet-level huge, because of course it was powered by boring procedural bullshit. It was always online, multi-player oriented, and “if you really want it, you could play it alone, but why would you?”
Oh, and it was a prequel with different characters, because fuck your closure I guess.
That was me, too.
And then, 6 years ago when they showed it at E3 : “Wait, what?.. Uh, I’m good Ubisoft, I don’t need whatever this is anymore.”
And then of course it disappeared again anyway.
You got me briefly wondering what Three-Body Problem’s search function meant.
What is it with Spielberg finishing Kubrick’s stuff? No disrespect to either, but it’s not like their works are very similar.
Those cars cause a lot of shit apparently. Worst of all they are a liability around emergency vehicles. If this is a way of protesting that, I get it.
It’d look better. Even with the struts out.
10 micron tolerance is rather impressive for a mashed potato sculpture.
I’m sure he did pretend it was, though.
Probably any less flattering pic of him (so all of them).
deleted by creator
I don’t think anybody seriously used twitter as storage.
Rather the point is that, similarly to every time a blogging platform or another online service with user content shuts down, a bit of internet history disappears with it. Links are broken, traces of opinions or bits of knowledge from another time are not available anymore…
It’s not the end of the world, and at that point I wouldn’t really care if twitter disappeared completely overnight, but still, some stuff will be lost.
If you start eating packaging like stickers glued to the rind of cheese, I think you can legally be considered a kind of human-goat hybrid.
It is just glued on it. It’s just on the label, not implanted inside the cheese wheel. The “you could be eating microchips!!!” part of the article is pure clickbait.
All they say is they’d be safe to eat if for some reason it ended up in the cheese. Like the rest of the label I guess.
Somehow Windows has always been and is still crap at managing archives. Ultra-slow, has trouble opening or extracting individual files inside the archive, etc.
However, 7-zip has been doing all that perfectly forever now. Not sure why anyone would use WinRAR, paid for or not.
Unless you got tricked into getting the terrible switch version. Utter crap, I definitely regret backing the game. They had the gall to tell us the game would work on Wii U and Vita back then. In the end it was almost unplayable on the Switch.
I got a PC version long after that (only because it was cheap), and yeah, that one is good.
I suspect the guys blocking the road could have prevented it by staying there, but assumed it wasn’t really their problem after all and kinda wanted to see this shit happen.
And I wouldn’t blame them.
“Please complete the next 200 captchas so we can have a reasonably accurate estimate of your success rate”
Peer reviewing is how you know the methodology is not flawed…
Not sure I understand. Does it only count the first creature you scan on a planet? Or the first creature you scan at all?
I guess in both cases I’ll wait for a fix, even if you get one chance per planet I don’t like these odds.