Sid Meier’s Pirates! There are so few actually good pirate games.
Sid Meier’s Pirates! There are so few actually good pirate games.
True, but even through Steam, you’re still dealing with Ubi’s launcher and Denuvo, so it’s just adding another layer on top.
I wanted to play this, but not enough to interact with their launcher and Denuvo.
You should not be getting promotional emails if you opt out, so something is wrong with your account/settings specifically. Contact them or filter your emails.
I tried this a while back, and it couldn’t correctly identify anything. Presumably this will improve once they get IGDB implementation done.
Hell yeah. I went with Kubuntu because I figured it would be easy for a beginner to troubleshoot eventual issues, given the amount of asked-and-answered Ubuntu queries online.
If you’re coming from Windows, something that runs KDE Plasma will feel very familiar.
Inaccuracies, both historical and caused by a general lack of research. Stolen assets that they have no right to use, some of which could be considered culturally insensitive. Differences in the English and Japanese “apology” letter which make it seem like they’re disregarding the Japanese, or attempting to turn the rest of the world against them. General lack of polish.
You can buy third party joycons that make it a lot more comfortable. The originals are tiny and make my hands hurt.
I really doubt they’ve got an IP lock in place; just set up a Family and invite your siblings and in-laws.
A lot of toothless game bloggers afraid of biting the hand that feeds.
You do hit notes, but not all of them. The “dots” just need to be lined up, whereas “bars” require a button press as well.
I’d had this game on my wishlist for quite a while, and I also picked it up during this sale. Among rhythm games that aren’t based around specific peripherals, i find this one of the most tight, well-playing ones, and I’d encourage anyone with even a little interest to check out the demo.
No chance. There could be a few exceptions, but there’s no shot that would have any amount of widespread adoption.
The potential legislation would be specific to the EU, but that doesn’t really matter; this market is large enough that it would directly affect other markets. Either the games are patched for all territories or others will make the EU-specific build available. One option generates positive press, the other negative, and any difference in cost would be negligible.
There’s also the argument of preserving art.
From a Steam review:
The game was advertised as having 40 new levels, which at first glance is sounds engaging and interesting, until you find out most of those levels are programmer/beta/alpha stages. It’s not entirely new content, but rather going through iterations until you arrive at the level as it is today. While interesting, it does feel disingenuous to advertise this as a new level. When I hear braid has a new level, I think “There’s one more puzzle piece”, but that’s not the case. You are not rewarded with anything in game, but instead receive some occasionally insightful commentary. In total, there are around 14 actual, new puzzles.
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There usually aren’t many complaints of something being woke if the product is actually good. I think the main takeaway is that nobody wants to be lectured, and told they are wrong for having a different opinion, and amateurish writing can easily come across as preachy or being a self-insert.