Kitty History, just like ours! https://youtu.be/faOUDoRmK_E
Kitty History, just like ours! https://youtu.be/faOUDoRmK_E
Yeah, videos from my phone. Most things aren’t an issue.
Other video players work fine. My PC is fairly new.
I find VLC really struggles with UHD high frame-rate video.
Look at those baggy jeans shorts. Money can’t buy taste.
For me it’s always, “this is hacky as shit, but it works, and nobody will ever see it but me.”
I recall Bastion winning GoTY from some major publications.
I hate the forced Chromatic Aberration. Photographers spend thousands of dollars on lenses to minimize the effect. Meanwhile, devs just slap it on games without any way to disable it without mods (which they’ll ban you for if you use them online).
I just need a sip.
I can’t even remember the instructions I just read. I’ll never remember to take a picture of them.
To be fair, game devs did the hackiest shit to deal with the constraints of the time. They did things that no programmer would do today because they’re bad practices when you’re not worried about tiny amounts of RAM or storage.
Nothing will ever match the feelings when you were young and things were new. It’s easier to accept that than face the constant disappointment trying to recapture it.
It’s not unusual to have big stars in movies. There are movies full of nothing but A-listers. It’s been the norm since before any of us were born. However, I find there are some big actors where their presence overshadows their character (if that makes sense). I do tend to enjoy movies with smaller actors that I haven’t seen quite as many times already.
I’m not really a fan of real A-list actors’ faces in games. Inspired by real faces? Sure. I know the term “immersion” is mocked a lot, but few things force me back to reality than seeing Hollywood megastar multimillionaires in my fantasy world.
They’re going to steal your NFTs!
Somewhat related, but not really: I hear that Gen Z (in general) are worse at tech support issues than the past couple generations. The theory is that Gen Z grew up with tech that, for the most part, “just works”. Troubleshooting issues isn’t as common, and isn’t as necessary of a skill.
Here we’re taught to go with the flow of traffic. It’s safer to go the same speed as everyone else than to be the one car everyone has to go around.