Ubuntu because it requires the least amount of hack fixes to get working.
And snap has vastly simplified software installation.
That's rather optimistic. I'm pretty sure it's daily. Although, perhaps it's only once a month that it gets upvoted
This is the catch 22 of PC gaming. On the one hand you've got people complaining that the latest games require high end hardware to run on release day - and simultaneously at the other end of the spectrum people are complaining that supporting low end hardware is dragging a game down?!
Full price? I've had over a week of gameplay for just a £1 Game Pass trial. Usually I tire of games after just 3 days or 30 hours or so for me and I'm sure many other casual gamers it's great value.
Enscape provide real-time photorealistic VR rendering for architectural software ( https://enscape3d.com/features/architectural-virtual-reality/) so with some conversion of the geometry from unity the only missing link is interactivity.
I've never understood 4k. Surely it's better to play high settings on a QHD screen than medium on 4k?
This was why I favoured console gaming over PC. Having a standardised hardware always meant you don't have the heart ache of a game not performing well. With the introduction of the Steam Deck hopefully that will become the new baseline for future games.
I'd actual prefer they avoided going for photo realism, it always tends to fall short. The art style they've developed works really well - realistic detail and form but with a plastic sheen and strongly saturated colours.
Conversely: I've also noticed that reddit style profile links are formatted when they probably shouldn't be: u/spez
@StudioLE
@programming.dev