So you want Epson to provide you with a separately application which runs in the background to tell you when to update? Why split the responsibility?
So you want Epson to provide you with a separately application which runs in the background to tell you when to update? Why split the responsibility?
I’m suspicious. WoW added quality to crafting recently and it kind of sucks. This looks like a much more thoughtful approach, but I’m still skeptical that it will actually be fun and not a headache.
The only game I’ve played where encumbrance is interesting is Death Stranding. In everything else it’s just a nuisance.
Death Stranding makes the player think about how to walk over difficult terrain with a large amount of cargo on their back without losing their balance and falling down. Most games allow you to run as far and recklessly as you want without having to worry about falling, so it was interesting to actually have to work at it, at least before you unlock various modes of transportation.
Officials immediately safed the Gemini North telescope and stowed the massive instrument.
While it’s good to be cautious, it’s wild that hardware would be exposed to external actors in any way.
While I do enjoy cheesing fights in BG3, I’ve run into a few which seemed impossible if I didn’t find a way to cheese it, which is kind of a bummer. Shoving the big bad off a cliff should be a strategy, but shouldn’t be the only one.
I enjoyed the ship battles in Assassin’s Creed 4 way more than the platforming and main story. I probably spent twice as much time at sea as I did on land.
No leaks necessary; there are a number of open-source LLM’s available:
https://github.com/Hannibal046/Awesome-LLM#open-llm
The key differentiator between these and proprietary offerings will always be the training data. Large amounts of high-quality data will be more difficult for an individual or a small team to source. If lawsuits like this one block ingestion of otherwise publicly-available data, we could have a future where copyright holders charge AI builders for access to their data. If that happens, “knowledge” could become exclusive to various AI platforms much the same way popular shows or movies are exclusive to streaming platforms.
I group up with strangers for group content in World of Warcraft, but not very often. I mostly play the game (and others) solo.
Diablo 4 retails for $70. If you spent less than that on PoE, I’d say you’re getting a good deal.
why do you have to pay extra to play online in 2023, anyways?
The one-time cost of a game isn’t going to cover the ongoing costs of hosting the servers hosting the game.
There’s an amazing amount of conversation about how this person is supposedly a racist with no evidence to support it. Am I missing something?
There’s one dialogue in the Githyanki creche where your entire party is instantly killed if you choose the “wrong” option. There’s nothing to indicate that the choice will lead to that outcome. I’m not aware of any other dialogues like that, however.