There’s a documentary about having free will to create your own fate and determine your own future. It’s called Terminator 2 Judgment Day.
Anyway, the whole thing goes: The future’s not set. There’s no fate but what we make for ourselves.
There’s a documentary about having free will to create your own fate and determine your own future. It’s called Terminator 2 Judgment Day.
Anyway, the whole thing goes: The future’s not set. There’s no fate but what we make for ourselves.
Orange Pi has been working with Manjaro on a steam deck clone (with touchpads). Make Zotac bought/licenced their design?
I think I’ve played the opening scene a dozen times. I know it’s gonna be good, but I never go back to playing it.
Labwc over the lxqt environment
It’s not the most durable, but when I think hardwood and antique I think shellac.
Yeah. I got a steam controller when it launched, and I was all in on finally being able to do adventure games on the couch.
It’s a genre I didn’t think of be able to play unless it was a modern game with console design in mind, except I play mostly 90s games. For me the trackpads are essential.
Hatris just when I feel like killing some time.
I started my first Terraria game since the covid lockdowns. Just wanted to show off something fun to my daughter, but then I got lost in it for a few hours.
I don’t know what you’re talking about now. The point being made was that using steam input to make a joystick emulate mouse is not a good experience for point and click adventure games compared to trackpads.
Steam controller made these games fun to play from the couch again, and steam deck made them fun to play handheld.
“Getting along” with joystick to mouse emulation might work to move a cursor, but it’s not good. That’s why many games types that were traditionally PC exclusives have new control schemes when there is a console port. Because mousing with a joystick is not a good time, it is just “making it work”.
There’s a blast from the past. But WineHQ was never a good or reliable database for this purpose, you were always better off just trying the software and moving to a native alternative if it didn’t work than lean on this for decent information.
I’ve seen how well that works😬. But I guess different people have different definitions of playable. Someone else said touchscreen is just as good as mouse🙄.
I bought that netbook, I actually have it sitting on the floor over here in a pile of e waste that won’t turn on anymore.
But I bought it with the intent to install Crunchbang which I ran on it until it died.
I thought it’s like where it gives you a few lines of reasoning like “text is too small”, “doesn’t show universal prompts” or whatever.
One I’ve always had in the back of my head, because low barrier of entry, is painter.
House painting.
Hocus Pocus and Realms of Chaos I played a lot, they were good fun for a while.
I didn’t play Jazz Jackrabbit 2 until not long ago. I didn’t like it as much as I remember liking Jazz 1 way back.
I also played the hell out of Duke Nukum 1. I loved it. But I know it’s not great and there’s not much to it.
What about Ninja Rabbit? I barely remember it aside from crashing so much.
Valve says a Deck Verified game will only ever have a SteamOS compatibility rating that is the same or better
What about point and click games? It can’t be the same or better without trackpads?
Run from terminal and see what went wrong.
If you’re using a launcher with built in logger, refer to that (I’ve seen one on lutris, not Bottles, unsure about heroic).
This will cost like $30 and you might not need to buy blades for years and years.
Double Dragon 1 and 2 have terrible slow down issues. This isn’t a bad port, this is from the original games. It can get nearly unplayable at certain points.
Double Dragon 3 is just not very good. The Mega Drive port runs a little bit better than the arcade though.