

Cloud saves are experimental on Heroic but in my experience they mostly work.
Achievements are something I never gave a shit about, but I think they should be working with the same upload.


Cloud saves are experimental on Heroic but in my experience they mostly work.
Achievements are something I never gave a shit about, but I think they should be working with the same upload.


I use Heroic Games Launcher and have no reason to complain.


Last year I played 56 Polish games on Steam.
This year I switched to Linux and to playing on GoG (a Polish company) exclusively.
Now this acquisition, still by a Pole, happens and it only sounds good to me.
One more round of Zubrowka for everyone!


I loved the game.
I understand the use that was made did not in the least affect the final product.
I don’t think they should have a disclaimer on Steam.
I think they screwed up big time if the indie game awards rules could have been interpreted as requiring no use of AI at any stage in production.
Also, I dont really understand the point of saying it afterwards and I fear that may in itself mean that they are promoting the use of AI in game dev.
What I think is very good is that people are (over?)reacting like this: I would like to have devs perceiving the use of AI as fucking poison.


The real issue is not whether we are going to be force-fed this features or not, but the fact that a foundation with limited resources is going to spend any sizable amount of them developing a solution its users are not interested in.
Waiting for Ladybird at this point.


I play ONLY non-Steam since August and had no problems by using Heroic Launcher.


I am a wanna-be coding data analyst who has decided to start directly in Codeberg, more because of anti-US than anti-AI sentiment.
I have 2 questions for everyone more experienced than me and in general more knowledgeable of the market dynamics:
Why, is it bad?


You have on the typical rose-tinted glasses many wear when thinking about Denmark and Scandinavia in general.
Greetings,
An Italian who lived in Scandinavia 13 years and is trying hard to escape before Denmark hits a recession.


I remember the Italian TV commercial for that.


A sarcasm they actually thought about and already acted upon directly.


Semaglutide and insulin.


Peter Hummelgård is a man of Palantir, whose software solution Gotham, in a customized version, is in use since years by the Danish Internal Intelligence and Police.


As far as I remember the only fascists who stopped causing problems were not the ones who were deposed. They were the dead ones.


There is literally a demanded exemption for politicians and military/police.


Living in Denmark, I have tried bringing things up about chat control in the office and outside, and Danes’ reaction come in 2 flavors:
It is really the same reaction.
Also, I am surprised by how many people here learn from me that the Danish police is working with Palantir.
But Denmark is a place where the main issue right now that there are local elections is that there will be a way too high percentage of foreigners voting, mostly because the number of Danes going to vote have been dwindling for some time.
I guess chat control and Palantir are technologies built for the kind of people who don’t trust the “foreign neighbor who is into politics”.


I never bought a tablet for myself, but I am looking at the Volla tablet with Ubuntu Touch. Same reason.


If you are 58 meters tall it’s a breeze to walk that much. Please relate to the rest of us!


There are several tipping points that are worth calculating abd having a proper measurements of the levers in one’s body allows for proper ranking of the possible movements/exercises.
But yeah, there are general rules one can look at, like when you see Phelps with a 2 meters arm aperture that makes him very fit for swimming.
I am mostly attracted by their art direction in sci-fi and lovecraftian titles.
Having names such as Beksinski and Lem in their culture I feel plays a huge role.
Also, look at Polish movie posters. They had real pop avant-garde as late as the 1980s.