In case people come at me, since people get really worked up about these games, I’m not saying it was a bad video game. Just explaining why the first one was a really special game to me, but the second just fell flat for me.
In case people come at me, since people get really worked up about these games, I’m not saying it was a bad video game. Just explaining why the first one was a really special game to me, but the second just fell flat for me.
For me, it felt like the first game had something original to say and did it really, really well, but the second’s story was just another “revenge: dig two graves” story, with the bonus that Ellie murders a million people before the game decides that revenge doesn’t solve anything. It felt like the game missed its own point for the sake of the gameplay—gameplay that didn’t feel original to me like the first game did.
Comparing the second to the first one, where I felt like the game introduced NPCs that didn’t have simple scripted one-liners … when I killed someone, holy shit, I felt bad about it. That person had a family, and even though it may have been justified, murder still felt bad. I thought the first game was really good at making a point that killing a person is very different than killing a monster.
The second game didn’t seem to introduce anything new, and on top of that, the main plot’s message was in conflict with the practical genocide Ellie was committing on her way.
Holy hell, we have early access phone apps now?
Something worth considering with client side rendering, is the idea that the user may not be able to tell the difference between “still rendering” and “done”, making me want that final “order of correctness” flow to have a branch for client side rendering that includes a “maybe?” in case there’s a server connection somewhere that’s slow or broken.
I’m sure I’m getting too pedantic because this post isn’t about best practices for implementing it, and I’m currently bitter about a tool I have to use that does it poorly, having no difference between “fetching information” (aka, still rendering), “no information to fetch” (aka, done rendering), and “connection broken, please refresh” (aka, reboot the server, AGAIN).
I’m sure this would be like arguing which season of Game of Thrones was the turning point, but for me, I see it as the_donald in 201(5?). Not because of the politics, but because it laid bare that the algorithm was something that could be abused by those who knew how, and the changes reddit put in place to deal with it just crushed the organic feel, and I don’t think it ever recovered for me.
There’s a long standing joke to “thin your paints!”
Check out this guy’s post about it: https://ageofminiatures.com/thin-your-paints/ and you can see some of the changes that it offers.
It also doesn’t look like you’ve applied a wash yet, and doing that is a really simple way to add an incredible amount of detail–or, I guess, it makes the details of the model really pop by adding shade to all the little nooks and crannies. Those two models both look like they will show huge benefits from a good wash.
The striping you did on that first one is really cool. If you’ve got the hand to paint those spots without blurry lines or your hand shaking everywhere, I think you’re on a great path for painting minis.
I’ll also say that it’s funny to me to see how some people are trying to duplicate some subreddits. I’ll see a ton of posts show up from a single person just copying over a bunch of the top posts from an existing subreddit. Not sure if they’re trying to jumpstart the community, back up the old subreddit, take over the new thing … or maybe karma is a thing in Lemmy and they’re after that?
Is karma a thing on Lemmy?
Yeah, this really feels like the old days when you’d find all sorts of cool, interesting and unexpected content online. I’m not looking forward to people figuring out how to game the system and ruin it for everyone, but so far it’s just cool to burst out of the bubble I’ve been in for so long.
When you say end-to-end encrypted, what are you referring to?
What’s the intent for this tool that isn’t solved via TLS?
Also, just as an aside, but this is kind of funny given the context: