[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 2 points 2 weeks ago

Thanks everyone! I think this will be the solution I go with.

29

I’ve recently been working on de-Googling and part of that has been setting up an email with my custom domain. This mostly works great, but one issue I’ve noticed is email validation on some websites detect this email address as invalid. For instance, if I have the domain [name].rocks with the email [name]@[name].rocks (with [name] being a placeholder for my name) my email cannot be used to register with the Ventra app (for getting mobile train tickets) I believe because any site that has an extension with more than four characters is detected as invalid.

I understand this is a validation issue on the end of the app dev / website, but I was wondering if people had suggestions for workarounds when they encounter this? Setting up other custom emails with forwarding? Thanks!

[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 9 points 6 months ago

Thanks y’all, I gotta watch that

[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 10 points 6 months ago

Where is this character from?

[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 3 points 8 months ago

I sync obsidian with my self hosted owncloud instance.

[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 4 points 8 months ago

This game is so good. Would highly recommend.

[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 1 points 11 months ago

Tried a different client (Voyager) that did seem to have the ability to DM, so we’ll see if that works!

[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 1 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I’m not sure how to DM people on my Lemmy client Thunder but I might be interested depending on the deets! I’m located in Florida.

[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 2 points 1 year ago

Yeah, I believe you just pay the price for the food, but it’s not an extra charge on top of that for dining at the top of the tower or visiting the observation deck while there. There is a minimum charger per person for food though. From their website: https://www.cntower.ca/plan-your-visit/tickets-and-hours/tickets

“ 360 guests must spend a minimum of $75 on food per person (minimum spend is $40 for children 4 to 12) which includes elevation to the restaurant and access to the CN Tower's observation levels following your meal. ”

[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 2 points 1 year ago

You can go to the restaurant at the top, which also allows you to get a nice view (and is not that much more expensive than just the observation deck).

[-] XenoWarden@midwest.social 5 points 1 year ago

I’d recommend starting with a very small-scoped project that has some of the features you want to learn. Some images, some choices, branching dialog trees, resources, etc. depending on what it is you care about, pick a couple of things to focus on and make it very small scale. It’s easy to get overwhelmed, so having a small working prototype of something beginning to end (esp. something you can put together in days to weeks, rather than more time) is good for learning and something you can be proud of and look back on without getting overwhelmed with over designing and never finishing. I’d also recommend treating the project as the first in a long line of cool games you can make, instead of your magnum opus—again, trying to be a perfectionist with your first game can be very overwhelming and lead to you eventually giving up instead of getting your first game done. You can always go bigger later.

If it’s programming itself you are intimidated by, you might want to look into Twine or other interactive fiction tools to start off with—these should allow you to easily make choice based stories without having to worry about learning a bunch of coding off the bat.

Most of learning is just picking something you want to do, and finding other peoples examples of doing it and seeing how they do it—whether it’s showing unique sprites or implementing an inventory. Through this you make incremental progress learning. Don’t be afraid to search for examples and troubleshooting.

(Most of this is generic advice, sorry if it comes across as too basic but not sure what level your at — a lot of this is the same advice I give to my starting game design students. But coming from someone who is in game dev now and does programming every day, most of my learning is just searching “how to do X in Y [language/game engine] and learning to dissect stack overflow, examples, and documentation, plus following starter guides for new tools/projects in unfamiliar with). I’m not sure if there are more structured lessons or tutorials out there for the kind of game dev you are interested, but that could be worth looking into and following if you are easily overwhelmed or feel like you need more structure.

Good luck!

XenoWarden

joined 1 year ago