I do a lot of digital art. I draw sometimes, but my motorskills leave a lot to be desired (I draw with my wrist, not my arm, and I have shaky hands); so if I'm doing anything more than sketching, I need to draw in Procreate so I can keep retrying each line until it looks how I want.
Because of this, I usually stick to vector art, which is much cleaner regardless of motor skills. I lucked out and bought Illustrator when it was CS6 and not Creative Cloud, so I'm still using that and will likely continue to use it forever (I hate consumer SaaS with a passion).
I saw a thread about this article on Twitter recently, and I thought it was an interesting take that Hollywood can't actually afford to wait out the strike since they are all on a quarterly deadline (profit wise). If they run out of content, their earnings will dip and it would only take a few months to look really bad for the CEOs.
Here's the thread in question if you want to read it yourself
For the users who run custom ROMs: do you typically run them on your device fresh out of the box, or do you typically wait until OS updates are no longer supported and swap then?
It's very interesting to see console games moving to mobile more and more (especially as phones get more powerful). I am curious if more game devs will plan on that as they design a game from the ground up, especially since designing for the Switch means the processing power is already limited somewhat (though the control scheme would certainly be an issue to a degree).
Bugsnax is a fun and engaging game that doesn't (to my recollection) have a ton of fast paced elements, so a mobile port would be quite at home (even with mobile controls), though I suppose I would've preferred to see the resources going into this port go into a new game from Young Horses since I really enjoyed Bugsnax.
This is largely off-topic; but for anyone who is interested in playing Hogwarts Legacy without supporting JK Rowling, I would highly recommend checking out your local library.
If your library carries videogames, it is highly beneficial to support your library AND it doesn't directly support JK Rowling, so it is helpful on two fronts.
Me and some of my friends from college wanted to reconnect and we wound up wanting to play since online games too, but two of us only had Macs (which don't have many supported games) and one of us didn't have any console.
This meant that our options were limited, but we came up with a couple of solid (in my opinion) options:
One of the rules I liked from the /r/games community was one of the rules you mentioned here: "Use the same titles as the article itself." I think all the rules you mentioned here are definitely good ground rules as well.
Personally, I would also like to see people adopting the body portion of Lemmy posts to summarize the article, or quote a meaty part of the article; but that could also be used for misleading purposes, so I'm not sure if that's a good idea without some level of oversight.
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