They still haven’t formally announced that development on KSP2 has stopped right? They didnt even announce the studio shutdown. Yet it’s still on sale on Steam…
They still haven’t formally announced that development on KSP2 has stopped right? They didnt even announce the studio shutdown. Yet it’s still on sale on Steam…
If you feel like you need/want software from AUR you should check out Distrobox. It can run any distro on top of your installation using Docker under the hood, but it tightly integrates into your system so with little effort you can run AUR programs from your launcher as if they were natively installed on your Mint.
It’s also (still) available on Android and iOS.
That’s how it’s done here as well. A USB modem attached to a raspberry pi (or just any pc) which answers the dial up connection from the Dreamcast, routing it through broadband.
I love projects like this and I have connected my Dreamcast, but never when I went to play has anyone actually been online. (anyone can check who’s playing online with their Dreamcast here: https://dreamcast.online/now/ )
Alternatively: cheap second hand RAM.
Some people enjoy living in pain and suffering.
Cool project. The description here reads to and from Dreamcast VMU, but from what I’ve read on the Github page it’s only to get them onto the Dreamcast, and not from. I’m still looking for a way to backup my physical VMU and to be able to continue playing on emulators.
There’s a separate quota for email storage and cloud storage.
I have started using Mailbox.org since about a year with several custom domains. Its around 3 €/$ per month for the basic tier which also includes some cloud storage and an online office suite (of which neither I use). I’ve been happy with it.
I’d consider an optical drive emulator like GDEMU so you can store your entire collection on an SD card. This ensures your physical collection lasts longer and loading times are shorter as well.
So much for the “Red Dead Redemption isn’t big enough for PC” reason they gave for not porting it back in the day.
Oh nice, I’ll have to go check that out. Thank you Nintendo for making me aware of this!
Oh man, Battlezone: the Red Odyssey was one of my first true gaming moments and I loved it so much. It was my most favorite game for a very long time. It was believed for a while thar the source code got lost and it therefore wouldn’t become available as DLC for Battlezone 98 Redux, but I guess the developers either found it or remade it from scratch since DLC has been available for some time now.
I bought Battlezone 1 some time after experiencing Red Odyssey and I was sure it had background music though. It was one of the very few boxed games I bought and remembered it had an awesome looking manual. In 1999, Battlezone II: Combat Commander was released and I don’t think it had a story but only a skirmish RTS/FPS mode. I didn’t like it that much.
Battlezone Gold Edition (2017) has nothing to with the above series I think, and seems more like a spinoff of the 1980’s Battlezone. I’ve seen this game once before but totally forgot it existed until seeing it now. Battlezone Combat Commander (2018) is a remake of Battlezone II (1999).
On a slightly different note, around the same time, Machines made by Acclaim got released which was an RTS where you could control any unit as an FPS. The name is quite unfortunate since Googling information about it is difficult. If you like Battlezone then then you might like this one as well.
You can find most if not all episodes on YouTube as well. I don’t think there are any high quality versions around anyway.
At launch the PS3 was one of the cheapest Blu-ray players available.
According to the specs the dimensions are 397x208x342 mm, so 22cm wide seems ok.
Agreed, this has been my experience as well. I tried switching to full time Linux multiple times. I had already used it on my laptop for years but on my desktop I kept going back to Windows because things on Windows just worked the way I wanted and thought that for some things there weren’t any Linux alternatives.
That was until two years ago I challenged myself to only use Linux for a month. I’ve been using Linux on my desktop ever since and only use Windows now and then to play a single game that doesn’t work on Linux due to anti cheat.
So uhm, they made a mobile port of a pc/console port of a mobile port of the original pc/console games?