- 0 Posts
- 18 Comments
Nariom@lemmy.worldto Open Source@lemmy.ml•I'm making a game to optimize learning mathematics - Super PracticaEnglish3·3 months agoYeah right off the bat:
- the menu is confusing, too much layers and clicks to get to the first level and I wasn’t even sure I was getting somewhere or what I was even doing
- once in a level I had no clue what was expected of me at first, I had to go to the “debug” to get some information, and even that wasn’t enough, I had to randomly figure out the rest
- drag and dropping units / blocks over and over is not engaging whatsoever
- it would be nice to be able to skip to more advanced topics if basic addition through grid counting isn’t something you need 25+ levels to understand
I quit after 6 levels. I would recommend to work on UI/UX. A tutorial would be nice too. And maybe don’t lock everything so the player have to do every single level to get to the next topic (I don’t even know if it’s the case, but 6 levels was too much already). Maybe open a few topics at the same time, with some progression required to get more?
Finally, I wouldn’t call that a game. I would be interested to get to more advanced topics to start learning or challenging myself, but when I want to play a game I wouldn’t go for that. From what I’ve seen of “learning games” those past 3 decades, they’re not fun, they’re not really games, they only pretend to to either attract parents to buy for their kids, or to lure people who like games (usually disappointing). Or they’re not really about learning, they’re games pretending to be educative. The making of a good game, and the making of a good learning tool, may be fundamentally too different to be compatible, or people are just bad at mixing them, save maybe rare exceptions.
Nariom@lemmy.worldto Open Source@lemmy.ml•I'm making a game to optimize learning mathematics - Super PracticaEnglish17·3 months agoIn my experience, game and learning don’t go together. Either it’s a game or it’s a learning tool. Calling it a game will deter anyone actually looking for a game. But I’ll try it you never know.
I once applied to an internship for a company doing job offers aggregation. During the interview they explained to me that the core of what they did was parsing (partial) html with regex. When I asked why they wouldn’t develop a custom parser, they replied to me that they were working on it, but that the internship wouldn’t focus on that. I was not disappointed when it didn’t get the job.
Nariom@lemmy.worldto Privacy@lemmy.ml•How do you filter ads and trackers outside of a browser while still using a VPN service?English2·1 year agoI don’t know a way to do it for a given system, at home you could plug a small computer to your router, like a raspberry or equivalent, set that as a dns, and run filtering on it.
Nariom@lemmy.worldto Memes@lemmy.ml•As if we need another reason to switch to GNU/LinuxEnglish12·1 year agoThe area isnt the same though.
What do they not understand in “other people spirituality and sexuality is none of your business”?
Tchernobyl
(source madri.fr)
That would be nice, if well done. Their survey gives me the impression they know nothing about Discworld and hope to get focus points from fans to sell more books. They also seem to have a few big licenses they are cashing in. Does anyone know their work and if it’s any good?
try a few years break on an mmorpg vs end game content
Nariom@lemmy.worldto Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•My 6-year old son just told me humans have 9 fingers, not 10English9·2 years agoby that logic finger 2 is worth 2, 3 worth 3 and so on? so you have 45 fingers?!!
Nariom@lemmy.worldto RPGMemes @ttrpg.network•DM phrases your players will LOVE!English211·2 years agoalways sprinkle them here and there for no reason as to dilute the actual danger
Nariom@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•People not from English-speaking countries, was it possible to watch cartoons in English subbed?English1·2 years agoBit late but I just remembered two interesting cases:
- some Japanese animes not intended for children but marketed to them in France ~30 years ago were sometimes not translated but dialogues were improvised to censor anything inappropriate
- in Switzerland they used to put subtitles in 3 languages resulting in a ridiculous proportion of the screen covered with text (maybe they still do idk)
Nariom@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•People not from English-speaking countries, was it possible to watch cartoons in English subbed?English2·2 years agoOh yeah they did something similar to japanese cartoons that were marketed to children a few decades ago. They completely made up dialogues because the original ones were too violent (but not intended for children), resulting in hilarious nonsense when you look back at it. There wasn’t much translation involved in the end.
Nariom@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•People not from English-speaking countries, was it possible to watch cartoons in English subbed?English6·2 years agoYes everything is voiced over, which I quickly grew tired of as an adult, you lose some in translation and voice acting. Most stuff on DVD is localized by default but you can select voice and subtitles languages. TV programs often have the option as well. Some theaters offer movies in their original language with subs, but it’s not commonplace. I didn’t watch anything on tv, dvd or at the theater for years tho.
What are we?