That's not how their book lending works. There are a limited number of copies and they can only be checked out in a DRM-protected format. Unless you strip the DRM from them you cannot print them out.
I have a Steam Deck and was considering "upgrading" to something that has more power.
But then I wanted to play Torchlight 2, an action-rpg designed for mouse and keyboard that does not have controller support. I wasn't even going to try it, but saw that Runic Games had an input profile for it. The left stick controls your character like it supporter controllers, but it's all using the mouse. The touchpads work for precise targeting. And I'm able to use all 10 skill buttons using modifier keys and adding the back buttons. Plus I was able to easily adapt this to Diablo 3, a non-steam game without controller support.
If you want to be limited to games designed with controllers in mind, go for one of the alternatives. But if you want to be able to play mouse and keyboard games, there's nothing that competes with the Steam Deck.
I remember WaterFox but this is getting ridiculous.
I think he means tabs along the top like on a PC browser.
Not on Reddit or YouTube or anything else that serves ads from the same domain.
Yeah, that was my point.
I'm just wondering where the heck the PC port is. Not going to lie, I would buy it at full price if it were steam deck compatible.
I'm kind of an anti-purist. Give me an emulator with save states and rewind, a scalefx filter and whatever other nonsense. Add on the convenience of emulators and it's no contest for me.
This paid vs open source thing is silly. They are not antonyms. You can still charge for an open source app. But being open source would make it user auditable so that we know what they are doing with our data.
It is not.
Also are we going to talk about the fact that I've never heard anyone outside of the south pronounce pecan as "pee-can?"
It still is if you listen to alt country.