the logs you'd find on a corpse in a final fantasy game
even if the games suck they can still be an important social connection
my parents never let me watch any of the "bad" tv that all the other kids were watching and this made it even harder for me to connect and make friends
and it also meant I never got the opportunity to decide to understand and experience for myself why these shows were bad
same can probably be said for the shitty mobile games tbh
maybe they're more predatory than all that advertising directed at kids via tv back in my day but idk by how much really if you're actively teaching your kids about what predatory practices look like
they have to learn, better for them to understand how to fight this stuff when they're younger rather than when they get in over their heads gambling on counterstrike skins as teenagers
I understand that a rather large portion of the active players of FFXIV are subbed mainly so that they can participate in the mod-supported ERP community. Yoshida is also the director of that game so I'm pretty sure he knows precisely how futile this request is.
he's known for ages and had this one in his back pocket just waiting for the moment when you finally come out
some kids call their father "daddy" smh
the enemy placement isn't exactly amazing in vanilla but it is atrocious in scholar of the first sin. which one did you play?
"I CASt pissed off angel that's going to whoop your ass"
we're all forced to work within the system, normies do so without questioning it
Although I have my grievences with Valve for other reasons I do have to commend them for their efforts to make linux a way more viable gaming platform than I ever could have imagined. I think a full 2/3rds of my steam library is playable on linux, which is pretty good considering that's not something I considered when buying them.
I know it's possible to rip nebula videos with yt-dlp but I don't know of any sites hosting them
I use nano on my servers because the default configuration can be used by pretty much anyone, even if I had to explain it to someone over the phone. And hopefully you rarely if ever have to make sophisticated changes to files on servers that would benefit from vim's model.
If you do need to do consistent heavy-duty file editing on a server, rmate is really nice for that: https://github.com/aurora/rmate
But honestly both of these strategies are dated and I don't use either of them professionally. These days it's all immutable infrastructure: I use my local editor to make build scripts for immutable server images that there's no point in editing files on running instances because none of the changes will be persisted.
darkest dungeon?