Give Vintage Story a shot. It’s Minecraft as a survival game and much more than that.
Looks beautiful too.
Give Vintage Story a shot. It’s Minecraft as a survival game and much more than that.
Looks beautiful too.
If looking from top left to right my favourites are 3,4 and 6.
Man the original Bloodlines, even though I never got around finishing it, was such a unique game. Deb of the night, the city, the hotel mission, twins from that club, general atmosphere… an all around great game (I am aware of quality being sub par during the later parts of the game).
BL 2 looked janky as hell, to a point I think everyone was clear it would flop. I pretty much completely forgot about that game. Just read this morning that they’ve switched devs.
This depends on where you bought it. If on Steam, you just download it directly from Steam.
If on GOG, I do believe you will need Heroic launcher to actually be able to download the game to your Steam Deck.
Muscle memory, having the cursor / aim be an upredictable variable depending on the speed of the movement feels very wrong to me.
Floaty feeling, one of the things I try to do first with every Bethseda game is to try and force raw mouse input, otherwise it feels like I’m trying to control a mouse cursor that is sliding on ice.
I have not tried the RawAccel druver you’ve linked so can’t comment on that.
I can’t say that this wouldn’t help in some extreme buggy scenarios where the battery mgmt is not able to report / read the current actual battery status, but it would be the last thing I would try and do to resolve such issues.
EDIT: reading through the comments in the thread you linked, even OP recognizes that it did pretty much nothing but corrected a visual bug on the % of battery available.
Under no circumatances should you do that to a Lithium battery. That’s a relic from NiMH battery era and was done for specific reasons you can find online.
Fully draining your Lithium battery will shorten its lifespan. Many new devices have a way to even limit the max charge and keep the battery in the optimal 60-80% range.
Been using it for years now. Such a fantastic and straight to the point tool, that still has all of the functionality one might need.
CherryTree is one of those apps that is very likely never goong to be removed from my devices.
I was dual booting Windows / Linux on the same drive on my laptop for a while (before I got a separate drive for each of them), Steam Deck should be no different.
Good news is that it pretty much works flawlesly. Bad news is that Windows really liked to mess up Grub after almost each update. It requiring to manually reinstall / reconfigure it.
That was pretty much it from what I remember.
Looks fantastic. I need to get myself another mechanical keyboard down the line, had to sell the current one as I was not using it at all (due to a laptop becoming my main rig).
KDE + Latte dock is what I use. Very simple and minimalistic setup with no widgets.
Reminds me of clear PSX controllers, really nice sort of a retro look
Without spoiling anything, the atmosphere can get tense but it’s never a cheap jump scare type of thing. You’ll pretty much be more appreciative of all the “horror” details than you will be scared.
It’s so worth it, one of those games that sticks with you long after you’ve finished it.
Both ToME and Caves of Qud are amazing games. You can get ToME for free off the official website
look into some of the community made controller templates, as there are a lot of keybinds to cover it could be easier to use a template as a starting point.
Both ToME and Caves of Qud are amazing games. You can get ToME for free off the official website
look into some of the community made controller templates, as there are a lot of keybinds to cover it could be easier to use a template as a starting point.
Steam Deck using Linux puts it above anything else in the handheld category. It’s truly a device you yourself can do anything with, with no limitations or hard locks.
Not to mention the sw and hw support which both are excellent.
Realising that there is absolutely no way for me to, for instance, make a local backup of saves / settings, not even a way to access them on my Switch is a very sobering experience.
What’s not to like about a device sporting a 5 year old CPU paired with a 720p display and 4GB of RAM costing 2.2k usd?
I have both, got a Steam Deck a week ago. It’s a beast compared to Switch.
Feels like a much more quality device and with it being so open you can do anything you like on the software side, plus some of the HW seems much easier to replace / repair.
If I had to choose between a Steam Deck and Switch now, I’d go with Steam Deck without a second thought. You can even emulate all of Switch’s catalogue on the SD.
SOMA is one of those games I wish I could forget and play again for the very first time.
I feel like this gem of a game has pretty much been forgotten. Never expected to see someone mention it. Very atmospheric and one of my favorite walking simulator games.