xan1242

joined 6 months ago
[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 24 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Yeah enabling remote debugging because the dev thought it made it easier is a pretty big oof.

But this is just strike one. It's a one man show, after all, so cutting them some slack is warranted when it comes to this specific topic.

Nevertheless, your concerns aren't unfounded. This project needs more contributors to be able to keep up. (Thorium is basically in the same boat)

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 2 weeks ago

Trucy would be trying her hardest to get him to buy this

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 weeks ago

Shame that PES/WE not only got renamed to eFootball, but also sufferred from the post-Kojima PTSD at Konami.

It recently caught up to DDR and it's slowly catching up to Yu-Gi-Oh as well (if it didn't already).

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 4 weeks ago

MTG poops and Yugipoops never get old

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I used to play Duel Links and shortly Master Duel after it came out. I don't anymore but hopefully this will help.

If I was going back to the game, I'd go to look for budget deck lists and seeing what ranks up easily. Most of the community is on Discord and Reddit, as well as YouTube (yugitubers and alike) so I'd go and look there. (Not to mention Dkayed's website, https://masterduelmeta.com and looking at the decks that topped, you'll be surprised it's sometimes not all meta stuff)

I'd also go look for some easy farming methods. These usually come in a form of a current event (IIRC in MD there are these "festivals" for each card type, such as Synchro Festival). These events are usually a very easy way to gain a lot of gems for not much playing.

It is what it is. TCG paper Yu-Gi-Oh is even more expensive than MD.

DL is arguably cheaper but it's been a long time since I last played (2021).

EDIT: Oh and before I forget - there will always be Dueling Book as a free alternative. This is a manual simulator, not an automated one, and allows you to use any card you want with custom rules.

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 1 month ago

BOUNS ROUND

hur hur hur

NYOOM

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 month ago

I'm surprised nobody thought of the demoscene twisters

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 1 month ago

Unfortunately not really.

The problem is that the artstyle is usually thrown out the window with these kinds of mods. They all end up looking very similar because of the amount of work you have to put in to make it look acceptable.

Not to mention, the hacky nature of RTX Remix is very limiting and the implementation is not very good to begin with (and very hard to use as a result).

I hadn't caught up with NVIDIA's RTX Remix SDK stuff but I plan on taking a look at this myself and do a more in-depth render integration with something (be it the Remix DXVK fork itself or something like UE5). I mod BlackBox NFS games extensively and I plan on cooking something up that is technically better than anything before.

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 points 2 months ago

You're mostly correct. People here don't take Windows praise lightly.

NT is probably the best part about Windows. If you're gonna complain about Windows, the kernel is the last thing to complain about.

As you've said, there are things that are still better about NT to this day;

  • OOM conditions are way better - system continues to run mostly fine after emergency swapping memory pages into the page file. No crashes, just a freeze until the OS swaps stuff out. No data is usually lost due to this. Apps continue to run and you have the chance to save and reboot your machine.
  • The driver architecture, as you've alluded to, is much more flexible. No need to rebuild a DKMS module every time the kernel updates. The drivers are self-contained and best of all - backwards compatible. You can still use XP 64-bit drivers on modern Windows (if you ever need to)
  • Process scheduling is very good for anything equal to or lower than 64 CPU threads. Windows at its core can multitask pretty good on one thread and that scales up to a certain point.

Most of NT stigma comes from NTFS (which has its own share of problems) and the bugcheck screens that people kept seeing (which weren't even mostly MS' fault to begin with, that was on the driver vendors).

Mark Russinovich has some of his old talks up on his YT channel and one of them compares Linux (2.6 at the time) to NT and goes into great detail. Most of the points made there still applies to this day.

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 2 months ago

Not to mention - this isn't necessarily the correct place for Windows anyway. That is exactly why they standardized stuff around Vista.

Plus - what about apps that store an ungodly amount data in there? Personally, I only keep the OS and basic app data (such as configs and cache) on the partition and nothing else.

Then something like Minecraft comes along and it's like "humpty dumpty I'm crapping a lumpty" and stores all its data in ".minecraft" right there in your user directory.

Then you gotta symlink stuff around and it becomes a mess...

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 months ago

OP did say he tried to use SRWE but, nevertheless, looks like forcing windowed mode was the correct answer!

[–] xan1242@lemmy.dbzer0.com 14 points 2 months ago (1 children)

No, it cannot be!

Someone is using Unreal Engine 5 to play Unreal?

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