Not really. It was released in November/December of 2006.
No, I mean it won’t run at all.
My machine is a laptop with a nvida 960m for a GPU. Game wouldn’t even start.
Elden Ring.
I’ve bought it on sale knowing my PC can’t run it. As soon as I finally update it that’s the first game I’m gonna install.
You know why that is? Because we fucking did something about it
God is dead and we killed him
Yes, you can run Linux in a VM.
But also: you should be able to access your Windows partition from Linux, as it supports NTFS and FAT filesystems, and view the files there.
What I do is I have one partition with Windows, one with Linux, and a third one (with an NTFS file system) for the files I need to access from both.
Agreed. Just crushed a pizza and the crust was awesomely good
I fell in love with Spice and Wolf. I can’t explain it but for me it has the same comfort vibe as Frieren.
They’re in on collecting data, like every other company
Are we the same person?
I basically only play with the mouse and bird characters
I mostly play quick games, trying to come up with new combos and strategies
I find myself playing more and more Backpack Hero
The next song is called… Shooting microplastics from my cock
The hype train is absolutely dangerous.
The anticipation for HL3 would be terribly high, and so would be the expectations of millions of lovers of the franchise, making sure anything other than a perfect game would be met with lots of negative reactions.
And it’s not just about a single game either. A bad HL3 could end up tarnishing the legacy of the other titles, forever ruining what is now a beloved franchise. Remember what happened to Game of Thrones? Who would ever risk something like that happening? Or, speaking of games, look at how much goodwill Bethesda burned with the release of Starfield.
I agree the price is pretty high for what it is, but I wonder how much adding a headphone jack would actually affect it.
I bought the Fairphone 5 and yeah, I miss not having the jack and I see no reason to take it out
I heard that person actively contributed for something like 2 years, providing actually useful contributions, to gain the level of trust needed to plant that backdoor. Feels a bit too much to chalk it up to boredom.
As for the second part, that’s an interesting question. Are there lots of backdoors and we just happened to notice this one, or are backdoors very rare exactly because we’d have found them out soon like in this case?
Windows licenses AFAIK are already rarely bought on their own. The vast majority of users get one by having it bundled to a new device they purchase.
It’s been a while since I’ve played it but it is fun. I might just have to install it again