Their engine clearly has problems with large enemys and yet the game mostly consists of large and ultra large enemys. What did you expect?
Their engine clearly has problems with large enemys and yet the game mostly consists of large and ultra large enemys. What did you expect?
At least it’s a new setting, but as there was no gameplay it could be anything…
Who uploads a trailer letterboxed in 2024…
If only movies would make more money than a mediocre game with (micro)transactions…
“just”
It got delayed because it had the same release date as Star Citizen…
My dog refuses to do 2FA so that’s not going to happen anytime soon… /s
I liked the new sound…
The code probably checks if the following number is greater than 10 (which fails for NaN) and otherwise adds a 0 in front.
There is no such thing as too much RAM…
Update: We switched to Kitchen Owl as suggested in the comments.
We switched to Kitchen Owl and it works out okay. The recipe management is nice in theory, but doesn’t work well for most of our recipe sources (because of parsing issues most websites aren’t recognized and ingredient amounts are not parsed correctly for German recipes), but we usually just create an empty recipe with a link to the original. This isn’t perfect - in hindsight we should have stayed with Bring! because it just works better. We are hoping that the issues will be fixed sometime in the future although I am not sure what to expect…
My theory is that it already has been released on Steam years ago, but not as a Valve title. It has sold millions of copies in a Humble Bundle, but nobody has ever played it.
My home server is called Home Alone, my web server Carl Lewis. At work we use names of robots or computers from movies, games or comics.
It is explained in the article though…
So he proved his point, didn’t he…
I realized that, but given the level of optical customization and the praise the game received for its RPG component I had hoped I could play outside the existing character limits…
You know you’re allowed (some might even say supposed) to have different keys for different machines. They’re basically free to generate and take up to no space.
Good news: The gauge card is a standard component.
That is really a missing part of this whole thing. I get that I could build something myself, but I don’t want to have the hassle of doing it and keeping it working all the time (because I am able to build it, but not on a “works perfectly all the time” level). I really hope that sometime in the future there is a standard for smart speakers (and screens maybe) that allows me to add them to my cloud service of choice.