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I am Tommy Vercetti
  • Honestly, I'm playing on my phone, and sure there is the occasional glitch, but actually still very much an enjoyable experience.

  • I am Tommy Vercetti
  • Tank racing is a fond memory of mine too. A friend had a modded PC copy in which you could increase the speed of vehicles too. The backwards tank shots could make you fly! Handling however was exactly how you would expect a canon powered flying tank to handle though...

  • I am Tommy Vercetti
  • Ooh nice. I'll definitely check it out.

  • I am Tommy Vercetti
  • No. Just a reflection of how deep I've gotten into it! 😂

  • I am Tommy Vercetti

    I played a fair bit of GTA Vice City back in the day round friends' houses, but never played all the way through. Mostly just ran people over, got as many stars as possible and died. Don't get me wrong... I had a blast... but recently thought I'd play through the whole thing.

    The game itself holds up amazingly well I think! I am loving cruising around the city, collecting income from businesses, buying new businesses, swapping clothes, spraying cars... committing a lot of grand theft auto. I was pleasantly shocked at how compelling it is to play. I'm playing on my phone with a Razer Kishi too, so I can get my fix anywhere!

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    You crazies actually trust the Sun to be there when you need it?! Ha!
  • Make the Sun Great Again! The moon is a lefty loser!

  • Do you correlate dates with times on a digital clock?
  • I always have a little chuckle at 13:37. It's one of those times that I irrationally feel I see more often than any other time, but it's just that I notice that specific set of numbers more than any other... or maybe I check the time at exactly the same point each day because my body clock is 1337!

  • Legend of Zelda
  • Link's Awakening was my first game on my Gameboy, so will always have a special place in my heart! Ocarina was my first N64 game too, and it blew my mind! Nostalgia plays some part in how I feel about those games, but both are still solid games to this day.

    BoTW and ToTK both managed to push the boundaries of gaming, and the sheer joy of discovery in both games makes them stand out. I do also love ALttP though, and in its own time it was just as revolutionary I reckon. I didn't play it until the 2000s though.

  • I'm finally putting out a demo after 4 years of development on my indie game.
  • Very nice. Good video too. I like hearing the origin story if the game. And to your point about not wanting to show your code... ugly code is beautiful code really. Anything I write is akin to modelling with clay... using hammers. But if it does the job (especially any smooth UX bits) and resource availability is not particularly critical then all good. Seeing that process play out through code structure is cool though. Much more interesting than some ultra optimised minimalist code. When it comes to a game, I think a slightly chaotic code base actually lends some artistic effect that bleeds through the actual visual/aural/haptic interfaces. Game looks fun though, is what I'm getting at. Make sure to post a link to the demo when it arrives!

  • Is the combined knowledge of humanity safer than it has ever been?
  • The concern about digital media compatibility and longevity is definitely valid. But even in the unlikely event that all electronics simultaneously went kaput, the knowledge to recreate working systems, as well as the materials, are still going to be there. Also, the average person has more knowledge than even just 200 years ago, not too mention the fact there is still more print media around than then too.

    Yes our current global data footprint could take a massive hit, and would feel like a huge step back, but it's still going to be comparatively huge compared to any other time in history. Not so much going back to the stone age as going back to the 1980s.

    Information his always degraded over time. Some being lost, some being made obsolete, some evolving (like culture). I think given our short term digital experience as a species we just find it a bit of existential crisis to view our digital data as having a shelf life too.

  • What is the stupidest school rule you've ever had to deal with?
  • Snowball throwing was banned because a nephew of a friend of a friend of a teacher was supposedly blinded by one. Same school had an assembly that informed us that listening to heavy metal would make us want to kill our friends.

  • thank god they translated it
  • Fat tube severing Mum tea

  • Maybe we are late in the universe, perhaps universe used to be a lively and vibrant place homing millions of civilizations. Now, we stand as the last remnants, hence, possibly the most advanced.
  • Newtonian physics was universal until general relativity. I think it's a bit premature to declare we have fully unravelled how the universe operates.

    EDIT: Posted too early due to child attack! That's the real universal law... whenever you're using your phone your kids jump you.

  • Any good April Fools jokes out there?
  • For an IRL example... I explained April Fools Day to my 4 year old kid this morning for the first time. His first instinct was to wrap a piece of Lego in foil and have me write CHOC on it, then leave it outside the bedroom door for my wife (who was having a lie in). I think he gets it!

  • Still my Favorite 'Easter' Joke.
  • Egg-cellent! I opened with "Who wants to hear a seasonally relevant joke?" and the first reply was "Only if it's blasphemous."

  • Proton Pass now supports passkeys on all devices and plans: Beating Bitwarden to mobile devices
  • People are perfectly within their rights to be rubbed up the wrong way.

    Find another way to try and bring people to your point of view

    Thanks for your great example of condescension for clarity. A little unsolicited feedback though... other people, unaware of your virtuous intent, might view it as a petty attempt to belittle a stranger on the internet. Other than that, a solid comment. B+

    ... that's condescending.

  • Still my Favorite 'Easter' Joke.
  • Thank you! I'll be breaking this one out at the in-laws in about an hour

  • How are musicians supposed to survive on $0.00173 per stream?
  • Ah Morcheba! Now that's a band I've not heard in a while!

    Another album feature I enjoy is the "bonus" track at the end after an absurd length of silence. 1977 by Ash comes to mind. Nothing like going to sleep with an album on to be suddenly woken up by drunk people puking.

    As well as transitional tracks, I love it when tracks genuinely feel like they exist as part of something larger. Whether through transitions within the tracks (Nonegon Infinity by King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard takes this to the extreme) or by essentially turning the album into one long almost operatic piece (like Colours by Between the Buried and Me).

  • Somewhere to ask and answer Google Workspace questions on Lemmy?

    I have no particular love for Google as a company in its current form, but I've got to admit that as an ecosystem of tools (particularly for work) they get a lot right. I'm new to the fediverse, but one thing I liked about the forum-that-should-not-be-named were the strong communities around sharing knowledge relating to Google Workspace. Does such a community, even a small one, exist anywhere out here?

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