To be honest. About where i expected it considering all the parts have been royally fucked price wise by ai companies and their dick riders. For a console-pc type of thing. Its interesting. I don't want it since i have a pc already.
This whole do or don't have to play games to be fans debate always boils down to people reducing gaming to "fandom" and making it evident all they care about is the social component and fashionability of being able to "wear" a game. Poser culture has grown into a blight.
Too many online people in the recent game discourse are the most pathetic posers I've ever seen. I was thinking of replying to some explaining but the further i read on, the more obviously lazy and excuse driven it became.
Play the fucking games and become a proper fan ffs.
videogames are an interactive art form, they are made to be interacted with, even story driven games like walking sims and visual novels are better experienced playing it cuz the point is FOR YOU TO INTERACT WITH THE GAME
thats why it was made as a game not a movie 😭😭
Tbh what actually makes me mad about the "can you call yourself a fan of a game you've never played" discourse is really just that people want to be part of a fandom more than they care about the thing itself, and I think that's kind of an awful way to approach art
Your experience of a game is through the eyes of someone else and your opinions end up getting formed by their perspective rather than your own. You're essentially reading a book through cliffnotes and can end up missing story beats or gameplay elements than if you play yourself
Actual Burning of Alexandria moment.
This will also lead to thousands of plugins and scripts being permanently lost.
This will directly lead to RPG Maker games becoming worse and less interesting, and the software harder to use and less feature-rich.
I miss the days when being anonymous was seen as a good thing.
Shit talking that is an immediate red flag and should signal to avoid people like this and avoid giving them any views/attention.
"La gente debería tener limitada el agua a 50 o 100 litros de agua, no deberían poder lavar su coche ni llenar una piscina, hay que empezar a pensar en el agua como recurso".
Este es Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, nuevo presidente del Fondo Monetario Internacional, quién fue director ejecutivo del Grupo Nestlé y afirmó que el agua no es un derecho humano, sino un recurso con el que especular.
"El agua como un producto alimenticio como cualquier otro, debería tener un valor comercial. Declarar el agua como derecho humano universal es algo extremista".
Este capitalista sin escrúpulos que quiere limitar el uso del agua para la población es una de las 300 personas más ricas de Suiza, con una fortuna superior a 450 millones de francos suizos... pero te dice que la gente debería poder lavar el coche mientras él cena en un jacuzzi con champagne.