![](https://dormi.zone/pictrs/image/75867c27-2aa7-4277-9cc3-c0133d3a61f8.png)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/2QNz7bkA1V.png)
You should see what happens when someone posts news about Windows
Admin & sysadmin of a Warframe-focused Lemmy instance at https://dormi.zone.
Developer of a UI mod for Vivaldi Browser: https://github.com/HKayn/vivaldi-vh
You should see what happens when someone posts news about Windows
You’re right, Firefox deserves a little blame for that. :-P
If the lurkers don’t agree with you, does that make them trolls too?
Congrats on the release!
How is lemmy-ui-leptos coming along? Curious to know when it might be ready for primetime.
It’s easier to make small saves for games like The Pedestrian, because essentially all you have to track is which puzzles you’ve solved.
Whereas in an RPG with a persistent world like Cyberpunk or Skyrim, you have to save the state of every single object and mechanic the player has interacted with during their run, and there are usually a whole lot of those.
What’s bad about IPv6?
The fact that this is the top comment sends a funny message about the Lemmy community as a whole.
Federated?
You’re just throwing together FOSS buzzwords at this point.
☝️ This user has never donated to libre software.
Cue the Lemmy users confidently suggesting you just convince your workplace to migrate to Linux.
A sample size of 1 isn’t really meaningful.
Also, this post is refuting a claim that isn’t really being made? At least not literally.
I’m currently at work, so disclaimer: the following is an AI-generated summary.
I can understand the decision somewhat.
Putting “The Lord of the Rings” first in the title would imply that this furthers the main canon, when it’s actually only set in its universe.
They could have indeed chosen a better subtitle though, like “from The Lord of the Rings”.
With GOG, you can at least have full confidence that the game will continue to work without any outside connections.
I didn’t say they deserve no protection at all. You are twisting my words because my opinion doesn’t align with yours.
I advocate for games having a clear indicator for any online dependencies. I do not advocate for outlawing said dependencies or mandating “offline patches”.
If you are clearly told that you’re buying an ephemeral product and you are still surprised when it shuts down, then I don’t know what to tell you.
This basically boils down to “read the terms & conditions”, which isn’t unreasonable.
If a game states in its terms that access may be revoked at any time and you buy the game, then you have no reason to be surprised when access is eventually revoked.
Obviously when terms aren’t clear enough or intentionally obfuscated, that’s indeed an issue for legislation to act upon.
All this wouldn’t be necessary if gamers would just stop buying games that are obviously live services with remote kill switches.
Because most gamers don’t care.
You can use whatever license you want. You can even go ahead and write your own license from scratch.
You’d only have to worry about enforcing the license, especially when you include such unorthodox terms and conditions.