- Joined
- Dec 6, 2017
Gabe is basically trying to emulate (lol) the 2006 "wii would like to play" commercials, but the fact everyone is huffing into a mask, there is no property invasion and no cool song to accompany it makes it completely deflated:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Gabe is basically trying to emulate (lol) the 2006 "wii would like to play" commercials, but the fact everyone is huffing into a mask, there is no property invasion and no cool song to accompany it makes it completely deflated:
Oh nooooo I can't play the skinner box on the go, now Valve will surely go underView attachment 3032933
Bungie does not like the deck lmao.
>Players who attempt to bypass Destiny 2 incompatibility will be met with a game banView attachment 3032933
Bungie does not like the deck lmao.
Bungie must have SD Derangement Syndrome (like some users here)>Players who attempt to bypass Destiny 2 incompatibility will be met with a game ban
What kind of faggot shit is that?
View attachment 3032933
Bungie does not like the deck lmao.
We're going to have an alternative once Billy Gatekeeper tightens the screws on Windows 11.
There's kind of a problem though.Notice the "...unless Windows is installed ..." line, it is not Deck what they hate, it is Linux they have a problem with. This is why Valve's efforts with the Deck are important, they want game developers and the public in general to break away from Microsoft's iron grip OS monopoly in the PC gaming space. That is the true goal of the Deck: the hardware is not end, it is the means by which Valve is introducing a new audience to Linux for the first time, even people that have no intention of buying a Deck are noticing this.
It is no secret that Windows has grown ever more bloated, intrusive and Microsoft's domineering attitude towards attaining user data and metrics on this regard just keep getting worse. Valve's entire viability and relevance is at stake if they have to rely on the OS of a company that also wants to become the default marketplace for the purchase of PC games. This is why Proton exists and why Steam OS 3.0 will be made available as a downloadable distribution for PC. Valve's goal is to make Linux a viable, even preferable option for PC gaming in the future.
Fuck Destiny 2. I'd rather play any Russian grind game (EFT, WOT, WT) than play nuBungie's gay ass Halo-wannabe (and I'd fucking argue that comparing them to D2 is an insult to any of them since they have some form of replayability). D2 is a shit investment skinned as a "game", where content can disappear like in a shitty bank, while forcing to continuously pay up for new content that is basically reskinned garbage, with lore that is taken straight from other sources of fiction like the Vex being shittier versions of nuHalo's Prometheans and a payment system that would make R6S's system look tame in comparison. It is basically LARPing as a F2P game but it is a subscription-based game in reality + some lootbox garbage with the Eververse.View attachment 3032933
Bungie does not like the deck lmao.
Surprise surprise, Linux users thinking they got the upper hand with Linux when they're just puppets to the Microshit machine. The PC system war already lost and Linux is just an open-source alternative that MS secretly has its' monkey paw in.There's kind of a problem though.
The standardized stable API for games on Linux IS THE WINDOWS API.
Linux has window system, library linking and sound related shit you have to tangle with if you want to port games natively. Proton et al is a big deal but it's still at the whims of M$.
I mean if referring to the D2 stuff with Windows. I can see why.Lol the Deck cult get so mad every time over the smallest things.
The issue for a lot of these companies is they like to call their drm "anti-cheat" software. In some instances, it serves both purposes, but there are a lot of games that are broken in proton right now because the anti-cheat software is basically a rootkit, and Linux isn't as much the gaping whore that Windows is.I mean if referring to the D2 stuff with Windows. I can see why.
Having something not be supported is fine. Most people realise that they're buying a PC rather than a console, and as such, there's going to be cases where something just won't run for a multitude of reasons. If it was just "it can't run" or "it will not run because it may compromise anti-cheat or something else", then it'd be fine.
Going out of your way to deliberately sabotage your product is shitty though. Especially considering that it's not a matter of piracy or console-exclusivity. A PC is a PC, why should game developers give a shit what type of PC it is or what OS you run (outside of specific reasons like an OS which somehow gets around multiplayer security)
Going out of your way to deliberately sabotage your product is shitty though. Especially considering that it's not a matter of piracy or console-exclusivity. A PC is a PC, why should game developers give a shit what type of PC it is or what OS you run (outside of specific reasons like an OS which somehow gets around multiplayer security)
This is why you should never support a company that actively goes out of their way to treat the customer like a piece of shit. Anti-cheat software, especially DENUVO, is anti-consumer. DRM in general is anti-consumer. Banning people for trying to find work-arounds for different hardware to play your game is anti-consumer.The issue for a lot of these companies is they like to call their drm "anti-cheat" software. In some instances, it serves both purposes, but there are a lot of games that are broken in proton right now because the anti-cheat software is basically a rootkit, and Linux isn't as much the gaping whore that Windows is.
Well of course, the steam deck is small.Lol the Deck cult get so mad every time over the smallest things.
Can't say I agree with anti-cheat software in general being anti-consumer. It's basically a necessity for some games in order to maintain the online component since otherwise you just end up having the whole thing ruined by hackers (I think that's what happened with Titanfall). But in general yeah, these games should only be doing what is necessary in that department and no more.Anti-cheat software, especially DENUVO, is anti-consumer. DRM in general is anti-consumer.
Some weird guy ddosed players in Titanfall. DRM does absolutely nothing to protect you.Can't say I agree with anti-cheat software in general being anti-consumer. It's basically a necessity for some games in order to maintain the online component since otherwise you just end up having the whole thing ruined by hackers (I think that's what happened with Titanfall).
Qemu has gotten really good at virtualizing Windows recently though (I'm talking <5% loss of performance here). If you have an octa-core and an AMD card you can just sandbox that motherfucker and use it only when there's something proton cannot run without any substancial differences in performance.Been using linux daily since 2014, still recommend windows for gaming unless you deliberately go out of your way to buy games that work on linux/proton
I'm glad the Linux market is increasing. Windows 10 and 11 are buggy pieces of shit and I want an alternative.View attachment 3034514
View attachment 3034517
Daily reminder that Nintendo and Bungie (and by extension Sony) are limp wristed faggots.
Notice the "...unless Windows is installed ..." line, it is not Deck what they hate, it is Linux they have a problem with. This is why Valve's efforts with the Deck are important, they want game developers and the public in general to break away from Microsoft's iron grip OS monopoly in the PC gaming space. That is the true goal of the Deck: the hardware is not end, it is the means by which Valve is introducing a new audience to Linux for the first time, even people that have no intention of buying a Deck are noticing this.
It is no secret that Windows has grown ever more bloated, intrusive and Microsoft's domineering attitude towards attaining user data and metrics on this regard just keep getting worse. Valve's entire viability and relevance is at stake if they have to rely on the OS of a company that also wants to become the default marketplace for the purchase of PC games. This is why Proton exists and why Steam OS 3.0 will be made available as a downloadable distribution for PC. Valve's goal is to make Linux a viable, even preferable option for PC gaming in the future.