![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/535ffec0-59f7-4677-b385-effaff9e6c9e.jpeg)
![](https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/045a2049-eb61-4960-88ba-97e7f1ffbf31.jpeg)
Yes. Learn what makes them more money. The limited password sharing crackdown world, so they rolled it out worldwide, for example.
Yes. Learn what makes them more money. The limited password sharing crackdown world, so they rolled it out worldwide, for example.
But how does the EGS exist?
Because they are able to subsidize it with investor as well as Fortnite money. I doubt it’s turned a profit for them.
Wouldn’t exactly call that “viable competition”
I’m saying that the banks, who appear to be struggling, would like you to save your money by putting it in their system. So they may use it.
I’m not making any other judgement.
That said, no clue where the person I replied to got their apparent quote from, as it does not appear in the article itself.
Please save, and put your money in the bank.
Microsoft is having its IBM moment
I believe the issue moreso is the lack of (funding for) maintenance.
A heatwave like this will exacerbate smaller issues, which could’ve been prevented.
No, it didn’t. I only thought about the “anti gravity” bit
Isn’t the PS4 version also bedrock?
Which would mean they’re updating/optimising bedrock for the PS5
I mean, cool idea, but that would severely limit the available choices for types of firearms.
“iT’s NoT nAtUrAL”
Ah yes, very interesting results when the “experiment” was rigged:
The participants in the experiment, who were male college students, didn’t just organically become abusive guards, reporter Ben Blum wrote in Medium. Rather, Philip Zimbardo, who led the experiment and is now a professor emeritus of psychology at Stanford University, encouraged the guards to act “tough,” according to newfound audio from the Stanford archive.
https://www.livescience.com/62832-stanford-prison-experiment-flawed.html
Disastrous, unoptimized launch. Paid DLC whilst the game was still full of performance issues (DLC which was later made free, after outcry. But their hand was shown).
Probably much more, but those are the two big things I remember.
TL;DR:
Team GB long claimed Lloyd Hildebrand’s silver medal, but because the British citizen competed under French colors, his win is now being credited to France.
Some additional info:
The International Olympic Committee agreed this week to reassign credit for Lloyd Hildebrand’s silver medal in the men’s cycling 25 km race at the 1900 Olympics from Britain to France.
[…]
A French historian recently raised Hildebrand’s case to the International Olympic Committee, saying the athlete lived nearly his entire life in France and was closely tied to a sports club there – and not to one in Britain.
Non Google amp link: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53212685
Save for the odd disconnect, the mod was pretty good when I used it with two friends.
Of course it’s a whimper, Timmy wants you to buy your mom an iPhone to chat.
Yeah. And consider the verification process games have to go through on consoles, probably easier to do it all in one big update.
Warframe is kinda cool in that regard, almost all content remains accessible… in some form or another. Save for a rare few time limited events, all quests and such have remained accessible.
The one major caveat to that is “prime” versions of weapons and frames, you will have to get into player trading if you want certain ones and don’t want to wait for the rotating “unvaulting”. But, thanks to that unvaulting, most primes aren’t ridiculously expensive to trade for. Even when you get back into the game years later and are missing a bunch (me).
There’s a completely free battle pass-like system too, but that also will return items from previous passes.
There’s a lot of systems… one issue of keeping so much around I guess. There are more technicalities, some weapons become less viable with time and power creep, yet a new mod or update may revitalise them! Same goes for the frames themselves, the devs have gone back and reworked older ones to bring them up to par with more modern ones.
By then it’ll be unfortunately too late, with laws and policies that might take decades to undo.