I’m a huge fan of Garuda. Enjoy!
I’m a huge fan of Garuda. Enjoy!
Literally unplayable.
Will this make my electric bill not $500?
Pseudoregalia is a 3D platformer/Metroidvania with a low poly art style a la PS1.
Beeny Super Kiwi 64 is a 3D platformer where you play as a kiwi, reminiscent of N64 era RARE games.
Edit: I meant Super Kiwi 64. Beeny is by the same dev but more like an SNES game such as Donkey Kong Country.
I finally finished Zelda II this year and really enjoyed it.
I picked it up. Has anyone played it?
There’s a handful of minimal launchers out there that operate the same but nothing as fully featured as Niagara.
As far as costs go, I feel like $7/year for as many updates as they make and how much I use it (on multiple devices even) is one of the more fair pricing structures.
That doesn’t answer your question though. OLauncher might be your best bet and while it isn’t the same as Niagara, I could also recommend Kvaesito.
Woah. Never once in my life have I heard that reasoning for not pulling the lever. I have always thought that since I was actively choosing not to pull it, that it was still a direct effect of my choice. I fully believe that people think the way you just described and now I have to reevaluate humanity.
Thanks! I’m still getting used to navigating Lemmy and using different apps.
Can you share some details about the machine you’re trying to install it on? Are you able to boot a live image?
Just here to add that depending on how obscure the game is, it could be found on My Abandonware - I’m unsure of the rules here about links and such but it’s easy enough to find and I’ve never had issues with it.
They’re not an expo, though. What they’re doing is working for them. There’s no need to try and be anything else.
Edit: After actually reading the article, I agree with the complaints. The award show aspect has fallen to the wayside and they should drop the act or do it differently.
What’s wrong with just a thumbs up and thumbs down?
No. It’s not a remaster or remake or even a port. LRG are predators and market manipulators. They’re preying on your nostalgia with the hopes that you’ll pay top dollar for the most “premium” version of their release by creating a false sense of scarcity. All of this just so people can own a “new” physical copy of a disc or cartridge running a few games on an emulator.