I think most people aren’t even aware of the different forms of DRM and whether or not their games use them. For the majority of players, there’s no discernible impact to their experience so they have no reason to question any of it.
I think most people aren’t even aware of the different forms of DRM and whether or not their games use them. For the majority of players, there’s no discernible impact to their experience so they have no reason to question any of it.
Nobody’s teaching these companies any lessons. They keep using Denuvo because it works, and the games keep selling because the number of people actually bothered by it is pretty small.
Steam Deck verification includes things like text being legible and buttons showing up correctly in prompts and mapping, etc. For example, Civilization VI has a Linux native version but is not verified because some game text is too small, and it might require some typing using the virtual keyboard which may not pop up automatically when required.
On desktop, you can copy/paste images into the textbox.
It was fun but a bit shallow. It had some fun bits and pieces of media like the fake ads, but the game was very easy and pretty short. I finished it in about 12 hours taking my time. There are a few things that I missed, but the game didn’t really inspire me to spend the time and effort to find everything or to replay it. Maybevone day when I’ve forgotten all about it.
I’d say if they expand on the concept and build a little more depth into the game, the sequel could be intetesting.
Try turning off display scaling in your desktop settings. It did a similar thing for me, where the game would display at 1440 but acted like the mouse was on a 1080 screen.
Unless I’m looking at it wrong, it’s not print in place, it needs to be glued together. It looks like a 2-piece set for either side. To be printed in one piece, it would require non-removable supports.
The transcript is typed by a stenographer, so good luck reading it anyway.
Look into the local tree law before you do anything stupid. It could cost you a ton of money, and possibly criminal charges depending on where you live.
Try Proton-GE 9.7, it should work fine.
In addition to that, it uses GPS, WiFi, and Bluetooth signals to pinpoint your location very precisely, and can use that to calculate the distances you travel and the number of steps it takes you to get there.
It can also put all of these data points together to tell things like your height and weight. It can only guesstimate things like your heart rate based on your age and BMI, but smartwatches these days have actual heart rate monitors, and pulse and oxygen meters built-in and can share that data with your phone.
Still winning gold medals in gymnastics at 27, when most gymnasts of that age have retired from the sport.
Is this really what’s considered a “great feature?”
Why do I need everyone to know I’m playing on my Steam Deck? I mean it’s not bad, but it seems more like a footnote than a feature.
Yes, this is it. I have a 1080p monitor and a 1440p monitor of the same size. Without scaling it does weird things when moving between monitors. It defaults to system scaling.
The proton version I use doesn’t seem to make a difference. I’ve tried GE and some regular versions and nothing changes.
No, if I go windowed, it detects a lower resolution.
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This is in Wayland. I can’t log in under X11, it just keeps kicking me back to the login screen unless I use Wayland.
You’re describing Guylaine and Ghislaine which are just two completely different names.
Empress is the cracker.