[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 22 points 1 year ago

EU commission, really. That's the only way

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 25 points 1 year ago

He's a cunt just like Johnson was a cunt and I'd have the same opinion if I were fucking blind. Skin colour means shit.

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Here's a fun one

Open up retroarch and apply the following as settings for a game:

  • adjustment filter to mirror the screen, I think it's in an image adjustment folder but can't check which one at the moment
  • swap left and right in the controls (in-game remap, not the menu controls)

Mirror mode! On any game! As long as you don't care about text, it's a fun way to add replay value. Great for platformers like Donkey Kong Country 2, Mario, etc.

If you really want a mindfuck, play a top down game like Zelda Link to the Past with the above but ALSO top down inverted too. I do that with the ALTTP randomizer sometimes.

Edit: hang on, I got Yoshi's Story at launch and I 100% remember the ultimate aim of the game is to actually get all the melons. It's not an alternative mode really, it's the actual goal for 100%. At least, it's how I played it in 1998.

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 31 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Um, what?

Elon Musk owns x.com, he launched it over twenty years ago. It split into what became PayPal, and then he bought it back.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/X.com

"X.com was an online bank co-founded by Elon Musk, Harris Fricker, Christopher Payne, and Ed Ho in 1999 in Palo Alto, California."

He bought the domain rights back in 2017.

Literally less than a minute on Google to find that, dude.

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 13 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I met Jeremy Clarkson - he was alright, very pleasant and funny

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 52 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

And it's fucking superglued in. You have to use a heat gun to even have a chance of removing it, and Valve have acknowledged they may change it in the future as right now it is admittedly ridiculous.

So yes but technically no. It is not immediately user serviceable.

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 27 points 1 year ago

It was 38°c the last time I went to Pisa (five years ago now, fuck) and that was utterly miserable at times. Can't even begin to imagine 10°c on top of that.

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 13 points 1 year ago

Forced to with work.

I utterly hate it. I don't have it on my personal setup or android mobile - been using Firefox for twenty years now, not gonna stop!

22
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml to c/gaming@lemmy.ml

I wrote a pretty long comment elsewhere regarding Xenoblade 3, which is pretty much my favourite game of all time in 30+ years of gaming. I guess it would be a cool idea for others to do the same - but don't just give a list, sell your favourite title to us!

So, Xenoblade 3 (Switch, although I now play it on my PC via Yuzu in 4k) is the final part of the RPG trilogy developed by Monolithsoft (Nintendo owned second party, responsible for the overworld tech in Zelda BOTW/TOTK). The director of the series is Tetsuya Takahashi, who is also the creator of Xenogears and Xenosaga (there are links to Blade, I won't spoil).

Xenoblade 3 shows what happens to the individual worlds of Xenoblade 1 and 2 once they collide. However the series is structured in such a way that you can arguably play them in any order and not miss out. There are of course twists and callbacks throughout to reward those who play them in order. The one absolute rule is for the two massive DLC expansions. Xenoblade 1 (Future Connected, play after 1), Xenoblade 2 (Torna - to be played after 2) and Xenoblade 3 (Future Redeemed - to be played only after playing EVERYTHING else as it wraps up the trilogy).

Xenoblade 2 put off a lot of people with it's anime-ness and big tidday girls (not me, but eh). Xenoblade 3...doesn't have that.

It's serious and is set in the midst of an eternal war between two nations. Each inhabitant of this world is born at age 10, trained as a soldier to fight, and then either die on the battlefield or live long enough to die at age 20 by force. Both nations rely on the life force of the other side to live - hence the war.

The story concerns a group of six, three each from opposing sides who aim to live longer than their artificially reduced lifespans - of the two main protagonists, one (Mio) has only three months remaining. This is the crux of the story, really.

best bet to see if you'd like it are these two videos I took. The first is the first 15 minutes of the game - it introduces the world, scenario, characters, and also introduces the gameplay part-by-part. NO SPOILERS in any of these, I promise.

https://youtu.be/7DtxCIM3XJQ

The battle system is gradually introduced throughout, at a pretty good pace (eg. chain attacks, transformations, combos, class changing). It ends up sometimes chaotic, but always fun. You can stay as a healer with a rifle, swap to a martial arts class and attack with your fists, or change to a tank class for each characters, for example. You also recruit computer playable heroes throughout the game who offer new classes and weapons.

Chain attacks are an entirely other thing, relying on measured logic and number skills. The other main draw is the story - this game takes some pretty dark turns. Your mileage may vary though, depending on your tolerance for cutscenes. There's still 100+ hours of actual gameplay easily.

and this is a short video showing the scale of the world (one of 9 massive regions - there's another desert, a canyon and a forest halfway up a mountain trail in this one. The sword in the distance holds a city at its peak. There's also an ocean that has a rocket powered boat to traverse, or you could just swim it), plus a short battle with 7 team members:

https://youtu.be/l5Fe_saXoxo

lastly I guess, if you're a dr who fan (who knows?), it may interest you that Jenna Coleman voices the Kevesi Queen.

anyhow the game is cool imo. I got the first Xenoblade a week before the UK launch date in August 2011 as I ran a Blockbuster at the time (Xenoblade was localised by Nintendo UK and came out here, Europe and Australia a mere year after Japan. NOA refused to launch it in America, until a petition forced their hand another year later). It blew me away, and the remastered Definitive Version is a classic. The fact that Nintendo UK localised it is why it has its unique UK focused VA throughout. The regions in the games are Welsh, Scottish, etc. It adds a huge amount of character that American voiced games lack imo.

Worth giving a shout out to Xenoblade X (outside of the trilogy's storyline), which still has the largest world of any game I've ever known, eternally stuck on the Wii U. That's a fucking mental game and I don't even know where to start with it. If you like Xenoblade, mech battles/flights and Attack on Titan's soundtrack (sawano), then it's the game for you.

anyhow back to Xenoblade 3, you may hate it who knows but... hopefully this does sell a few people on it.

Your turn

78
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml to c/gaming@beehaw.org

I wrote a pretty long comment elsewhere regarding Xenoblade 3, which is pretty much my favourite game of all time in 30+ years of gaming. I guess it would be a cool idea for others to do the same - but don't just give a list, sell your favourite title to us!

So, Xenoblade 3 (Switch, although I now play it on my PC via Yuzu in 4k) is the final part of the RPG trilogy developed by Monolithsoft (Nintendo owned second party, responsible for the overworld tech in Zelda BOTW/TOTK). The director of the series is Tetsuya Takahashi, who is also the creator of Xenogears and Xenosaga (there are links to Blade, I won't spoil). It shows what happens to the individual worlds of Xenoblade 1 and 2 once they collide. However the series is structured in such a way that you can arguably play them in any order and not miss out. There are of course twists and callbacks throughout to reward those who play them in order. The one absolute rule is for the two massive DLC expansions. Xenoblade 1 (Future Connected, play after 1), Xenoblade 2 (Torna - to be played after 2) and Xenoblade 3 (Future Redeemed - to be played only after playing EVERYTHING else as it wraps up the trilogy).

Xenoblade 2 put off a lot of people with it's anime-ness and big tidday girls (not me, but eh). Xenoblade 3...doesn't have that.

It's serious and is set in the midst of an eternal war between two nations. Each inhabitant of this world is born at age 10, trained as a soldier to fight, and then either die on the battlefield or live long enough to die at age 20 by force. Both nations rely on the life force of the other side to live - hence the war.

The story concerns two groups (three from either side) from opposing sides who join together with the aim to live longer than their artificially reduced lifespans - of the two main protagonists, one (Mio) has only three months remaining. This is the crux of the story, really.

best bet to see if you'd like it are these two videos I took. The first is the first 15 minutes of the game - it introduces the world, scenario, characters, and also introduces the gameplay part-by-part. NO SPOILERS in any of these, I promise.

https://youtu.be/7DtxCIM3XJQ

The battle system is gradually introduced throughout, at a pretty good pace (eg. chain attacks, transformations, combos, class changing). It ends up sometimes chaotic, but always fun. You can stay as a healer with a rifle, swap to a martial arts class and attack with your fists, or change to a tank class for each characters, for example. You also recruit computer playable heroes throughout the game who offer new classes and weapons.

Chain attacks are an entirely other thing, relying on measured logic and number skills. The other main draw is the story - this game takes some pretty dark turns. Your mileage may vary though, depending on your tolerance for cutscenes. There's still 100+ hours of actual gameplay easily and the sidequests and community supports are all actually well thought out.

and this is a short video showing the scale of the world (one of 9 massive regions - there's another desert, a canyon and a forest halfway up a mountain trail in this one. The sword in the distance holds a city at its peak. There's also an ocean that has a rocket powered boat to traverse, or you could just swim it), plus a short battle with 7 team members:

https://youtu.be/l5Fe_saXoxo

lastly I guess, if you're a dr who fan (who knows?), it may interest you that Jenna Coleman voices the Kevesi Queen.

anyhow the game is cool imo. I got the first Xenoblade a week before the UK launch date in August 2011 as I ran a Blockbuster at the time (Xenoblade was localised by Nintendo UK and came out here, Europe and Australia a mere year after Japan. NOA refused to launch it in America, until a petition forced their hand another year later). It blew me away, and the remastered Definitive Version is a classic. The fact that Nintendo UK localised it is why it has its unique UK focused VA throughout. The regions in the games are Welsh, Scottish, etc. It adds a huge amount of character that American voiced games lack imo.

Worth giving a shout out to Xenoblade X (outside of the trilogy's storyline), which still has the largest world of any game I've ever known, eternally stuck on the Wii U. That's a fucking mental game and I don't even know where to start with it. If you like Xenoblade, mech battles/flights and Attack on Titan's soundtrack (sawano), then it's the game for you.

anyhow back to Xenoblade 3, you may hate it who knows but... hopefully this does sell a few people on it.

Your turn

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 15 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

What? That's pretty insulting, really - your statement could be applied to any age. Generalisation isn't cool.

How many 70 year olds do you know? Because the ones I know are either still in work or fully active. Retirement age here in the UK is 67, are you saying those in full time work should be treated like children? My mum and dad are in that age group and Dad's set up his own Plex server for christ's sake.

The people I know who have the worst issues with social media and shit like that are half the age, and the less said about my daughter's age group and their tiktok addiction the better.

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 28 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Not on my 65" 8k OLED they aren't! You can absolutely tell the difference.

Smaller/low res screens though, sure.

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 14 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Thomas the Tank Engine on SNES. Me and my mates used to find it hilarious when high. Still do.

[-] richyawyingtmv@lemmy.ml 35 points 1 year ago

I have a few. And I'm not even that old (mid thirties)

  • People who talk on phone calls using airpods or similar look ridiculous in public, like they're utter lunatics talking to themselves or their imaginary friend.

  • people who view life through their mobile phones are unfortunate and sad. Like...why pay money to go see a gig if you're going to view it through your phone screen? I went to a wedding last week and I was one of the very few who was actually watching the procession with my own eyes rather through a camera app.

  • Not being on social media should be an accepted norm, not a fucking exception. This is an issue when dating, unbelievably.

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richyawyingtmv

joined 1 year ago