Fun arcade bullet hell survivors (think vampire survivors) type game. Dodge bullets, and survive as long as you can.
Also by double speak games, and open source gridland is a variant on the match 3 style. During the day phase, you accrue and store resources, and build stuff. During the night phase, you fight.
Open source idle game, but not quite. It eventually expands beyond watching numbers go up, into a sort of roguelike, where you can wander the world and collect stuff. And die. Die a lot.
A Dark Room was where I first saw the @ symbol used to represent the player character.
Aw yeah! This is where my knowledge of absurdly good but extremely niche games comes in. I think I'll make multiple replies to this comment.
Think enter the gungeon combined with superhot, but simplified a lot. It's a turn based bullet hell, and an excellent arcade game playable in the browser.
EDIT: I'd also like to take this oppurtunity to talk about flashpoint. Flashpoint is a massive archive of basically every flash game and animation, and you can even play them again.
However, in addition to flash projects, I also noticed that flashpoint also archives HTML/HTML5 games... but only a subset of them. Although flashpoint's primary purpose still is as a flash archive, it can also be used as a curated list of HTML5 games.
Here is a website that lets you search the flashpoint database
You might be able to run the latest KDE or gnome in a distrobox podman or docker container:
https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox/blob/main/docs/posts/run_latest_gnome_kde_on_distrobox.md
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic_Maps
Repositoryorganicmaps on GitHub
Unironically, wikipedia is pretty good for getting official links to projects/websites. It's not a guarantee, but it's a lot betted than just googling it,
https://moonpiedumplings.github.io/playground/ape-experiments/
Trying to figure out portable executables for an upcoming cybersecurity competition.
I dunno what's most appropriate for email, but I often joke:
Isn't open source kinda like a cult?
It's a not a cult I swear! Just switch to free software, and free yourself!
I've also heard my friend say something along the lines of:
Free software, free culture, free people
Or maybe it was free world or free trade? I can't remember.
Although, for slogans like this, I might go with something that has more of an immediate effect, like shilling an adblocker.
Or the ever so simple:
Anyway, I partially agree with the other poster, but I think a one sentence quip at the end of an email is unobtrusive enough that it gets a pass. Of course, it depends on your specific workplace and how strict they are, but I would assume most workplaces have a little space for humanity.
@moonpiedumplings
@programming.dev