Yeah that could be interesting if they do something similar. I really want to love this game
Physics nerd. Currently studying some quantum gravity adjacent stuff in QFT
They/them
Yeah that could be interesting if they do something similar. I really want to love this game
I hope you’re right, but explaining mysterious cosmic things seems to have a history of ruining scifi.
Also just like, starfield never gave me a reason to care about any of that besides it simply being the main quest line.
Pretty much any halo has the best menu music to me (I haven’t played 5 though).
There’s a lot of variety between them all too
Thanks for posting this OP, it actually means a lot to see someone talking about this.
I’ve been very lucky in that my pain has responded really well to medication, but I’ll never forget how absolutely awful it felt to be physically unable to play the games I love. I hope we continue to push for accessible features in games more and more, this is a great hobby and when you’re trapped at home it can have an enormous impact on your quality of life. Even just the social aspect of gaming is a huge benefit.
To be completely fair, a lot of the world already existed with the cyberpunk ttrpg, but this is an incredible point.
I’m starting to become disturbed by how amazingly well starfield makes everyone think about what exactly makes other games feel amazing. I wouldn’t have even considered the culture present in cyberpunk, because it feels so real and natural.
Starfield is like, the hazy silhouette of a real civilisation. There are buildings and people in them, and sometimes the people go to different buildings. That’s a perfect description of the real world right? 100% immersion
Yeah but I can’t lug my tower around on a train, now can I?
Cheers, I’ll give it a go, though I suspect I’ve already done it. I believe I’ve read the rant you’re talking about too
I have a personal server, mostly acting as a NAS but with some web hosting as well. For whatever reason, it randomly freezes until you manually power cycle it, it happens really often, like every 20 minutes.
Turns out it’s due to some weird interaction between debian and older ryzen CPUs, if the CPU isn’t busy it just dies. Solution? A Minecraft server, with no one on it, it keeps the CPU just busy enough to keep it alive. I’ve had it running for months at a time with no issues.
I have the second one on that list, and while I’ve got an ROG ally rather than a steam deck, I can tell you it performs quite well. I’m pretty sure these are often recommended for the deck for all the same reasons.
Load times are a little slower for bigger games, but that’s usually just when starting the game up.
I just thought it was a neat fact. Don’t go assuming things like that
I speak an extremely small amount and I have absolutely no clue what’s going on, I love it.
The best part is that phytoestrogen does next to nothing to humans, you need mammalian estrogen instead. You know where you find lots of that? Cows milk
Well, data just doesn’t really flow at the speed of light. It’s a really really complicated thing to discuss in terms of physical circuits because the true picture involves considering how the EM field evolves. Electrons in a circuit move at extremely slow speeds, ~millimeters per second.
The good news is you don’t need to send information particularly fast to send it through time. Generally in physics, we build time travel systems by creating extremely curved spacetime that contains paths to the past, theoretically you could send light through such a path to transmit information back in time. As someone already mentioned, you generally need negative mass to construct these.
If you have negative mass there are three options I’m aware of:
If you want to send information into the distant future, you could get really fancy and scatter some light off of a black hole or something.