Those are often categorized as
Legend of Zelda, The
Those are often categorized as
Legend of Zelda, The
Star Control 2
This is “NoStupidQuestions”, not “AnythingGoes”, lol
People will click whatever’s stopping them from the dopamine hit of adding a game they’re probably not going to play to their library.
It’d be even harder to stop someone who actually WANTS to play the game they’re paying for! Lol
The music on the CD is copyrighted, but you’re free to use the Bass Boost feature or whatever on the thing you’re playing the music from
Do they need “buy” or “purchase”? All they need is “pay”, and nobody would notice.
That was the one action I took on Twitter after creating an account before my account got banned.
I needed to create an account to check a local source for updates. So I did. I also decided to look around on Twitter to see what I was “missing”. Saw a bunch of Musk stuff and instantly knew I didn’t want to see any of it. So I blocked him.
In a few weeks, when I clicked a Twitter link, it said my account had been banned for suspicious activity. It had a secure password and this was its second log-in ever (no posts, comments, reactions, etc).
I can’t imagine trying to play FO2 like an FPS, in that case…lol
FO2 is closer to a tactical RPG/SRPG, isn’t it? Isometric perspective and all?
I like Launchbox, but the entries are generally built around having a, uh…“digital collection”.
But I like it because you don’t have to worry about GameFAQs shutting down or changing what they offer. Launchbox is a desktop app (and a more-limited mobile app) that allows you to save your collection’s metadata locally. Then just back it up to the cloud from there!
It also supports Steam and other digital storefronts.
Check it out! It’s completely free, and optionally upgradeable with either a subscription or a lifetime purchase. Completely usable for free though.
Or learn to hide better.
Or pick up boxing.
No, loud volumes are one of the things I mentioned explicitly that cause pain inherently.
You should be using hearing protection when using loud tools or attending concerts.
There are so many kinds of difficulty that this is hard to answer.
There’s fake difficulty, where the game is just being cheap. Some games are hard because their mechanics or controls are just janky.
Some games are easy to lock yourself out of the ending and not know it. Try the game from the start again!
There’s genuinely difficult games, but any time a game is difficult in a “fair” sense, there are people on the internet who’ll beat it with a guitar controller, or blindfolded, or without any power ups.
If you want a game that not many people could beat…I don’t think many people could beat Bokosuka Wars today…
The Stampede?
I hardly ever beat Level 2…aka. the platformer version of “I Just Can’t Wait To Be King”.
And Level 3 has some annoyingly tough jumps too. I think The Stampede is level 4?
The only way most of us ever played the second half of the game is level select…
For anyone looking to play Super Mario Sunshine and wants to consider 100%, there’s “Blue Coin Tracker”.
Not only can you check off what you’ve found, but it’s got screenshots, descriptions, and strategies to help you find it. Even links to YouTube clips if you’re still stuck!
It’s invaluable. The blue coins are pretty evil in that game.
It’s generally not, though certain types of stimuli can cause pain through their own merit either directly or indirectly.
Bright lights that cause prolonged squinting, loud sounds (obviously), etc.
I recently learned that touch can also cause pain. Like just general touching that results in overstimulation that feels like pain. That’s not common.
I imagine it’s kind of overloading the tickle and itchy pathways or something, which feels painful?..
The post title was an entire thought in the form of a question. It invited people to come and share their opinions.
Not to mention that in many clients, the title is presented first before the post body. So someone could come up with their answer after reading everything initially presented to them about this post.
Also, skimming is a useful thing that people do, lol
I think that random encounters can be done well, but they’re often not done well.
I like that they can be a way to give feelings of attrition when travelling through long areas.
I actually had more fun with FO3 when I fought battles like an FPS instead of like an RPG with VATS or whatever.
During a virtual meeting isn’t an employee’s free time…even if their mic is supposed to be off. Lol