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For sure, not sure if it’s possible to bypass that, but even if you get banned, you can still PCVR
For sure, not sure if it’s possible to bypass that, but even if you get banned, you can still PCVR
Not really, the “meta nonsense” is the entire operating system,
You can always just use it for PCVR, and never use the meta store. You can also just sideload apps.
i hope so. the setup of my quest 3 is so fast, literally seconds. Love taking it out to show friends.
Its more than pure price, the quest 3 is also higher resolution, stand alone, pancake lenses, wireless…
I have a quest 3, and absolutely love mine, use it both for wireless pcvr and standalone gaming.
if there was a “tip” option where 100% of the money went to the employees at the game developer, and not the company, then maybe.
But no, this will just be used to boost profits.
ahh, same.
Definitly find its a lot better than my old Q2… and i booted up my DK2, amazing how far the tech has come!
which headset do you have?
Game looks awsome, but a bit much for me in VR, i tend to play more adventure games (alyx, red matter, lone echo)
aww, A Fire Upon the Deep is high on my reread list! Still one of the more thought provoking books i’ve read
And it only took how many years of people saying “wow, this is a really bad idea”
I loved OW1, went and saw a couple OWL games live, put hundreds of hours in…
No interest in OW2.
“for the launch of our new, highly anticipated remaster, how many servers should we have, boss?”
“Three”
“Three thousand?”
“Nah, three”
Or at least instructions specific for that character.
Before: “greetings adventurer”
Now: “you are a guard in a small town, you started in this career from the age of 15, and are now 35, you have a wife and kid, and you a are not prone to taking risks…”
I’m very much a 1440p 144hz guy.
I’d like 4k, but would take this compromise for now.
I want my next screen to be 4k, 144hz oled
"Here’s what you can do in assassin’s Creed with your ship:
Sail Run around Climb the rigging Chat with your crew Dive into the ocean
Here’s what you can do with skull and Bones
Sail Not sail"
AAAA my ass
feels like i just got my 5600x, and yet the new CPUs absolutly run laps around it.
Is it just me, or after a period of stagnation, have CPU performance started really climbing again
Yea, I found about this yesterday and went “wow, that kinda sounds awsome”
Never heard about it before though
I definitely think that it was voted for as a “joke” vote
see, I’m genuinely OK with paid DLC, given the following:
A great example of this is DLC in Cities Skylines, where adding DLC which adds colleges, parks, or industrial districts, which are fun and nice to have, but not nessecary. Additionally, CS often went on deep sale, with a huge portion of the past DLC being only a couple bucks.
That said, No paid DLC > paid DLC
bad decisions, like making a truck that looks like… that…
Mozilla, the company behind Firefox and Thunderbird, has talked a lot in recent years about the unfair advantages that platforms give to their first-party web browsers. Platform Tilt is a new effort from Mozilla to show how Firefox and other third-party browsers stack up against Chrome on Android, Safari on iPhone, and other platform pairings.
Mozilla said in a blog post, “There’s a long history of companies leveraging their control of devices and operating systems to tilt the playing field in favor of their own browser. This tilt manifests in a variety of ways. For example: making it harder for a user to download and use a different browser, ignoring or resetting a user’s default browser preference, restricting capabilities to the first-party browser, or requiring the use of the first-party browser engine for third-party browsers.”
Mozilla is now outlining these “tilts” in a new “Platform Tilt” issue tracker database, while encouraging other web browsers to publish their concerns in a similar fashion. The main purpose is to call more attention to how platforms like iOS and Windows favor their own web browser over the competition, which is useful information in the various antitrust legal actions against Apple, Microsoft, and other big tech companies.
There are ten issues listed with Apple, including the Apple App Store forbiding third-party browser engines, no option to import browser data on iPhone and iPad from other web browsers, and difficult beta testing. On Android, Mozilla points out it can’t import browser data, some features open Chrome instead of the default web browser, and Google search results on Android are worse.
Mozilla also highlighted three issues with Microsoft. The process for setting the default browser on Windows is still difficult, and some Windows features forcibly open links in Edge instead of the default web browser. Microsoft also reverts the default browser to Edge during some Windows setup interactions. Most of those issues were recently made illegal by the European Union, but Microsoft is free to continue doing them in other regions, like the United States.
The new database is a bit like Mozilla’s WebCompat project, which documents the problems that popular websites have in Firefox and other less-popular web browsers. However, instead of specific sites creating a worse experience for Firefox users, Platform Tilt is about software platforms creating a worse experience.
You can check out the full Platform Tilt database at the source link below. It will likely continue to be updated as Mozilla sorts through its issue trackers.
i think if steam took 0%, the number of bugs in larger games would remain completly unchanged.
It might help the smaller devs, but not the big games.