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Cake day: Aug 14, 2023

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If I haven’t seen the first 9, will I understand the plot of ROG Ally X?


Which is why the robot voice actors should unionize. It’s a crime that human voice actors have been stealing their jobs for so long!


It still failed to hit projected box office returns with that factored in!

It’s just funny because it’s a good movie and the first one won an academy award but is terrible.

And they won it for writing “damaged” on Joker’s forehead… at least in part.


Fun fact, The Suicide Squad (2021) was a box office flop, whereas Suicide Squad (2016), the only academy award winning DCEU film, was a box office smash hit!


Kids out of college who are grateful that they’re being given a chance to follow their passion don’t think they have collective bargaining power, and the people who stay in the industry tend to do so because they enjoy pain.


The art style looks lovely.

I was going to say that this feels like a weird franchise to adapt into a video game due to the age of its viewers but when looking up who the Smurfs are targeted at, I found this wiki page:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_The_Smurfs_video_games


Very true. Though I would click that bait so hard!

I still prefer this type of article to lots of others in the bait family. Obviously they want people sharing this article and saying “See! That thing I believe is proven!”

It’s a nicer engagement-driving piece of content.


While Helldivers 2 and Baldur’s Gate 3 might look like sudden jackpot successes

This article is funny. It’s like the feel-good inverse of a rage-bait article. It’s stating what we all want to be true and cherry-picking two games that only sort of provide evidence towards it, and only if you squint really hard.

Both games are sequels backed by huge publishers with tons of cash.

BG3 is a Dungeons and Dragons franchise title; a franchise which recently received a massively successful film, a huge boost in popularity during a pandemic, and a boost in cultural relevance in Strange Things.

Helldivers 2 fits the claim a bit better, but it is still a sequel to a well received, well selling title. The extraction shooter genre is also exceedingly popular right now, and the fact that it has Games as a Service bullshit built in says that publishers weren’t as hands-off as the article implies.

So the more realistic take-away from this is that good games with huge budgets for development AND marketing in reasonably popular genres can make a ton of money.

Which isn’t saying much. And it certainly doesn’t look like a sudden jackpot.


My all time favorite MMO. I got to play in the beta, and made so many stupid characters all through it and City of Villains’ lifespans.

I haven’t revisited it since it was ended and revived. Almost afraid to, since it was such a bit part of an era of my life, and nostalgia usually depresses the hell out of me.




This proposal doesn’t solve any of the issues in your second paragraph, and I wholly agree with you that those should be solved. Those would be much easier to regulate, as truth in advertising is kind of important.

The first paragraph probably feels good to think about, but right now, you don’t have any right to any of that. Perhaps start there if it’s important to you to change things?


It feels like developing the problem space through examples and situations would be better than trying to think of preferred solutions and working backwards.

It might also be a decent exercise for someone to go through this separately from a consumer protections policy perspective vs a culture preservation perspective, which you mention.

For instance, if the law only applied to corporations that continue to exist past the end of the product, that would be a reasonable consumer protection, but would miss most games that disappear to time from a preservation perspective.

And if preservation is the issue you want to solve, then is this the highest priority in gaming? Maybe this could be solved through a non-profit funding the transitions of server code to the hands of the consumers, or through reverse engineering efforts to rebuild servers for games that have shuttered.

But yeah, it would be nice for this problem to go away, I just hope that attempts at regulating it don’t have bad unintended consequences.


I have literally worked at a game company startup that ran out of money and shut down abruptly.

And have you not been paying attention to the news lately? Game companies are shutting down weekly.


So those things are added risks and costs that will have to be factored into deciding which games to fund and which to not.

So it will reduce the number of multiplayer games that get made.

I am a single player gamer so I selfishly am Ok with that, but less Ok with it being handled in a way that could have other unintended consequences.

As an aside, I don’t know how these petitions work, but would it be helpful to give concrete examples of software that has had this happen and what your perceived solution to it could be?


  • relase the server software to allow players host them themselves
  • patch the game to not require company’s server (even if not all features would be functional)
  • allow people to create their own servers after official ones are dead (think private MMO servers)

Your petition doesn’t allow for the second option (exactly how much functionality is allowed to be missing?), fyi, but let’s ignore it for the moment.

Let’s take a not uncommon case that causes games to shutdown: a company that ran out of money.

How do you do any of these things legally without paying your now jobless employees?

You need to either release the servers at the same time as the game, which has cost associated with it, or you need to hold funds up front to handle paying for the costs on the backend (i.e you need to pay an insurance premium).


This petition is worded in such a way that it almost feels like lying.

Most games that shut down aren’t doing so because they had an arbitrary ping home that breaks them, it’s because hosting servers is fundamentally part of the game’s multiplayer-oriented experience.

You’re trying to use the former to backdoor in a way to force the latter to give you all of its server code.

Assuming this law were to go forward with even the most rigorous knowledge of the problem-space, and an intentional push to require multiplayer or server-based games to give you their server code after the game is shut down, all that will do is increase the risk involved in creating any multiplayer games.

Most likely this will reduce the quality and variety of games that get created going forward, which would ironically make preservation much easier.


You are trying to fill in sections of colors that are touching, either in a straight line or a grid of blocks. The numbers are how many blocks are filled by that line or grid for that color.

It ends up being a mostly mindless but relaxing game.


What aspects weren’t for you?

I had a similar journey but I spent more time with it and I found that it is very almost for me! I just wish there was more time and reason to explore the depths and less in-between (cut scenes, especially).

But it’s a great game regardless!



Usually this doesn’t break the mods that fix bugs. That’s almost always data changes.

It is actually impossible for any company to maintain compatibility with mods when those mods use executable injection techniques like skse for skyrim. A recompile of their source without any changes could break compatibility in that scenario.


Which ultimately is good for us all despite the setback for the modders when it happens.


We’re downvoting you because you didn’t read the article or the other comments which makes yours look foolish.


That sounds like how I remember FF7 being.

Is this game a clone? It’s definitely a clone. It’s not a clone. It’s maybe a clone. Is it a clone?

That’s FF7.


Exactly!

People are expecting this to take people’a jobs so they’re picking apart the tech instead of paying attention.

Making an NPC be run by AI most likely will require more writing than it does now, but the end result will be worth it for games that strive for immersion.


Ok. So call me when it’s ready.

I am unimpressed by the nonsense articles like these coming out about early tech.

You won’t convince me that AI can’t exceed “taking an arrow to a knee” quality dialogue repeated over and over, and that shit is still the best immersion we’ve got!



“Well, in regions where it is permissible, yes we should lower that age.”

Roblox is saying they don’t consider it to be exploiting minors, and Fortnite is saying they will only exploit minors where it’s legal!


Here’s how you solve this problem. Don’t monetize user generated content.

Thank you for attending my TED talk.





I feel like glass was accidentally very beneficial for the industry.

It both drastically increased the general public’s consciousness and awareness of the industry around AR/VR and then set the bar so low as to be trivial to exceed. People who mocked it know that bad AR with privacy concerns is not good, but when they try acceptable VR they are blown away by it.

It’s mostly just the lack of the “killer app” equivalent that is holding us back.


I know we are on lemmy so corporations are bad and capitalism is bad and so on and so forth…

But there is not one aspect of my life that hasn’t been improved upon greatly by one or more tech companies over the course of my life.

There are new problems that I never would have expected to deal with that have come up as a side effect of this improvement, but it’s way too reductive to imply that tech companies haven’t changed the world for the better as well.


It feels more like the Onion reposting the same article about mass shootings with nothing but the date changed.

Every time there’s another layoff announced we should turn to someone else at Larian and ask their opinion.


This year is definitely worse.

I don’t expect it to get better until the fed lowers rates. Tech requires basically free money to make progress, and games requires free money and exploitation of young idealists.


It’s always been a shitshow. I remember when activision laid me off… I bought my first car with the severance and moved industries!

That was well over a decade ago!


But they said I wouldn’t have to tip if they got rid of the humans!


How the car is going to buzz into my building, take the elevator, and deliver to my front door is beyond me. Technology is amazing!


That makes sense, thank you for explaining.

Now they just re-release the game over and over again and we buy that!