angrytoadnoises

joined 1 year ago
[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 4 months ago

If you join an official public server, there's an extremely high chance you'll join with cheater bots that spawn endless, aimbotting snipers. It's less of a problem on community servers as they're actively moderated by players, but official servers have to rely on vote kicking a fresh cheater bot every few minutes.

This is all done by some script kiddy group who apparently want to highlight Valve's deprecated support. Basically ruin the game until Valve fixes the game. There's also some measure of farming ingame item drops to sell for money, I think.

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 16 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Honestly, I don't believe save TF2 will get anywhere. Valve is clearly uninterested in supporting the game, and who could fault them? It's an old game, and games don't need to be supported just because people play them.

The real problem Valve is playing with is that TF2 is still monetized. They should not be selling microtransactions for a game this broken. If they weren't selling microtransactions, they would be entirely in their right to kill all official support and leave the game to community servers.

My main concern is that Valve will calculate this over the bad PR they're receiving, and rather than do anything to curb the bot problem, simply kill their support for TF2. I would be okay with this. I think most people wanting to #SaveTF2 won't be.

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 7 months ago

Ah yes, in-game currency is fiction. That's why it costs real money, and publishers mandate developers lock down the game as much as possible to ensure no one circumvents the 'fiction.' The mind boggling profits they bring must also be fictional.

Fuck, I hate GaaS.

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 11 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Haha, online games licensing sucks. It's almost as if, when we discovered we could distribute media freely and infinitely by digital means, we should have restructured how media and licensing works for these products. but we didn't, and now we have bizarre situations where publishers try to delete their own games from existence rather than spend some upkeep for music licensing

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 8 months ago

'Cuz you ain't been doin nothin', if you ain't been called a red, if you've marched or agitated, then you're bound to hear it said...

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 10 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (3 children)

HogLeg's success is pretty crazy if you think about it. Ignoring the sales we've looking at today, take yourself back to the launch of HogLeg. It kept up pace with Fallout 4 in terms of active players and achievement completion rates. This is huge to me. They're both singleplayer RPGs, so they're both vying for the same type of audience.

But.

Fallout 4 was a hugely anticipated sequel to one of the most renowned series in all of gaming. Harry Potter had almost no presence in gaming beyond nostalgic shovel ware titles.

Fallout 4 was developed by gaming darlings, a company known for producing huge open worlds with strong volumes of content. HogLeg was developed by shovelware developers with no major releases in their history.

Fallout 4 is a first person looter shooter, one of the most ubiquitous and successful genres out there. HogLeg is an action roleplaying game, still admittedly a safe genre but doesn't have the genre conventions that makes it possible for anyone with FPS experience to pick up a Fallout.

And finally, Fallout 4 targeted gamers. It's a gamer's game, you know? It's for lore nerds and RPG fans and tacticool nuts and all the rest. HogLeg was for Harry Potter fans. It needed to drag fans across media types to secure a big enough audience.

I truly, truly did not expect HogLeg to find the success it has. And to be honest, it's quite a mid game! It's a visual accomplishment and adherence to the universe means that it's a treat for any Harry Potter nerds, but the rest of the game is as close as generic as it could get.

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 10 points 8 months ago

I never really 'clicked' with working until I worked from home. Like, this entire huge part of me, my connection to my labor, was just not present. When I started working from home I got it. Like yeah, I'm still doing mindless corpo shit tasks and I'm completely alienated from the results of my labor, but I at least know how it feels to sit down, work hard, and feel satisfied after.

In the office, I was just coping with too much anxiety, dread, and frustration.

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 8 points 8 months ago

people will never stop blaming communism for the faults of capitalism, just ever

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 7 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

We put ourselves down the path of endless speculation and jumping at shadows if we just automatically assume any and all data provided by China is outright falsehoods. There are people in China employed to track these statistics and there is material benefits to having these statistics available to the public. There's even incentive for this information to be true.

If the information simply coming from China is enough to dismiss them as China spreading their agenda, then the same could earnestly be argued for any other country on Earth. This kind of logic is the same logic QAnon types use to immediately dismiss evidence.

"The vaccine is causing people to die in huge numbers. What do you mean you disagree? I've seen it, and my family has seen it. Those statistics saying otherwise? Let me guess, they're provided by the vaccine companies?"

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 8 months ago

Yeah AI is incredibly cool and I wish I could get excited for an actual amazing advancement in technology instead of fearing it. People will sooner imagine a life where all artists are dying on the street instead of a life where capital doesn't dictate our every move, and that paints a very depressing image.

[–] angrytoadnoises@lemmygrad.ml 14 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Hah. That's quite the discovery. I can only imagine translating a book cover at work propelled only by sheer curiosity.

Don't do anything. It's work, there's probably more awful shit than an incel reading a shitty book going on. Mind your own and don't cause any drama, I say.

Unless you are looking for a fight. I don't blame you if you do, I love giving incels the what-for. But it's objectively going to raise more problems than it solves I think.

 

👀👀

view more: next ›