Also fouc@lemm.ee
Great and fun co-op, but it’s long term investment.
It’s relatively a lot, maybe midpoint wasn’t entirely accurate, but I’d say 25ish at a casual pace. As I said I was just about to give up myself but I was pleasantly surprised in the end. Fantastic game.
I felt RDR2 had extremely slow start, but after the midpoint the game opened up and it evolved into an excellent experience. Well-written, well-acted. Glad I kept going even though I had the same initial reaction.
Probably a good incentive to sell Game Passes, at £8/mo you can play for 7 months before you reach retail price.
Surprisingly good! Didn’t expect the story to unfold that way from what’s essentially a puzzle game
Finally! I’ve been resisting buying the EA for too long. I’ll be happy even if it’s just DOS in a Forgotten Realms setting.
Can’t really talk about AMD but NVIDIA are at a position to drop every other model except for the x90 without major repercussions. Hell they can even go full enterprise selling these A1000 at a ridiculous profit margin. For NVIDIA at this point the gaming GPU market is just a “good to have”. Artificial segmentation in VRAM aside the chips are just too good to service the consumer market so they might as well sell them for silly money. They don’t particularly care about selling the gaming GPUs because they aren’t losing anything not doing so
Use something that supports CalDAV and use a sync app (DAVx5 for Android, for example). This will need a computer that hosts the calendar, something globally accessible running radicale or a similar caldav/carddav server. If you can’t host it yourself email services typically also provide CalDAV access. GMail used to provide CalDAV endpoints, not sure if they still do. Fastmail provide CalDAV calendars, but it’s not free.
It’s a dependency of a lot of things, including git, lxc, GNU autotools. Check the Required By on the Archlinux repo.