And in the end “reality” is just excitations in quantum fields. And you “perceive” mostly electromagnetic forces.
And in the end “reality” is just excitations in quantum fields. And you “perceive” mostly electromagnetic forces.
I think this law is already going in the right direction. If something can be downloaded to have it indefinitely (like what GOG offers) it is all right. Sure, you have to provide the physical medium yourself, but without the law (or nice stores) you wouldn’t even have the chance.
And even physical media has often been DRM encumbered. Remember the Sony Rootkit? So I prefer offering a permanent DRM free download I have to backup myself.
I do have a 4k display. On my weakest machine.
Correct. But I find that often these scripts are over engineered and opinionated. So I’d start with just the dependencies and go from there.
Debian is not great for gaming. At least not if you have somewhat current hardware. Other distributions have much more up to date drivers and software.
And in my experience getting a game to run in a virtual machine is much harder than on bare metal.
That said, to answer your questions, you can find Lutris’ install scripts on lutris.net. ie https://lutris.net/games/outer-wilds/. You can select to view the scripts. For dependencies you’re looking for the task with the name winetricks.
- task:
app: arial vcrun2019 d3dcompiler_43 d3dcompiler_47 d3dx9 win7
arch: win64
description: Installing dependencies
name: winetricks
prefix: $GAMEDIR
There after app you find all the dependencies it installs.
You can also search for the games on https://protondb.com it will show you reports by users on how a game runs and what configuration changes they had to make to get a game running. It’s Steam-centric so you will only get games that are on Steam and on Steam most stuff is automated so you won’t always see the dependencies needed as Steam has already installed them. https://www.protondb.com/app/753640?device=any
I mean, Nintendo believed in them, until that failed.
Note that he didn’t say that Nintendo is going in a different direction.
I just checked, you can install lxqt without using the commandline in OpenSUSE. And I didn’t check but from what I gathered you can probably select it to be installed when you install the OS.
But I honestly think copying and pasting one command is way easier than figuring out which buttons to click in what order.
What do you mean with “without commandline”? Every Linux distribution has a commandline. And I’m pretty sure you can configure Arch or Gentoo in such a way that you’ll never have to use the commandline.
But maybe OpenSUSE Tumbleweed is what you’re looking for. It has GUI tools for every administrative task. But it’s also a rolling release distro that constantly gets new packages. On installation you can select which desktop environment you want.
Third one definitely had blood and fatalities. With a Konami Code you could unlock one button fatalities. Good times. Unless you had increased the time to enter a fatality and did a stage fatality on a stage without one. Then you had to wait a looooong time for the opponent to fall over.
True. Half Life 1 was awful in German. All the marines were robots. And when you shot a friendly human character they sat down on the ground shaking their head.
Same thing was done in Counter Strike when it went commercial, making it really hard to know whether someone is crouching or dead out of the game.
Patches to put the blood back into games were immensely popular. You’d often find them on the same sites you’d find cracks on.
And of course the effect all the censorship had was that having the latest and greatest most brutal game was more important than having a fun game. You were the king of the schoolyard if you could give the other kids Blood.
I desperately wanted to have this game but it was basically impossible to get in Germany. I was lucky to have Mortal Kombat Trilogy.
If you’re looking for the best bang for your buck nothing beats assembling it yourself. A pre-built is always much more expensive to pay for assembly.
“Just distribute the server” isn’t a requirement. It has never been a requirement. Who said that’s a requirement?
It’s just a possible solution. And to me it seems to be the easiest since that is the exact way it used to be done.
What exactly publishers will have to do depends entirely on if the campaign is successful and how the resulting laws are written. And may be as simple as an expiration date on all future game sales.
Yeah, they did handle it correctly. All things considered. Even in an utopian future where the stopkillinggames.com campaign is successful. Personally I would still prefer to keep all games alive.
Even if it’s an absolute shit game.
This game could be a great resource about what not to do.
What do you mean by “common part”? Kohl is just cabbage. Rotkohl is red cabbage. Because it’s cabbage that is red.
Now you’ve made me hungry.
Kohl does not mean leaf in German.
I’d say the general blow against emulators is relevant.