Addfwyn

joined 2 years ago
[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

I almost see it as the opposite.

AirBNB is fine if you are just looking for a place nearby tourist sites that you don't plan to spend much time at.

Hotels are great when you need the extra features, a concierge, laundry (I have never worked at a hotel that did not have laundry services and/or dry cleaning), restaurants, and the like.

Kitchen I could see being tricky, but if you need a kitchen I assume you might be doing more a long-term stay anyway, in which case a lot of hotels will have those options as well.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago

My hotel is a high-end dog friendly hotel, we don't require any additional cost for a guest bringing a room. Unless they order room service for their dog or something (yes, we have it).

We do need some additional paperwork, but nothing that most dog owners wouldn't already have on hand I think.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 7 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (4 children)

Since I work at one, I stay at hotels free (within my brand) so I can't say I have much experience with airbnb. I do feel they cater to very different markets though, I don't necessarily begrudge the existence of airbnb, even if they are kind of our competition.

OTAs on the other hand, can all get fucked.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 4 points 2 years ago

Not sure exactly how much money that constitutes, but assuming I somehow inherited a reasonably large sum of money, do mostly the same thing I am doing now.

Pay immediate cost of living expenses for myself and my partner. I don't have any expensive hobbies that I would need much more. I don't make a ton of money right now, yet it's still more than I can reasonably spend. After rent and food, like half my paycheque goes into the bank already. I am lucky to live in a country where I don't have to worry about an unexpected medical condition costing me millions.

The remaining would go towards charities/local political groups I am involved in. While not without precedence, it would be a strange look to be a stupidly wealthy socialist, and again the money would have no real use to me and would be better served elsewhere.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

I don't normally enjoy many walking sims, but something about the pacing and delivery of Firewatch nailed it for me. Didn't overstay its welcome and kept me interested enough in the story that I think I did the whole game in one or two sittings.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago

I love Cities Skylines, but I absolutely suck with traffic management. I know it's supposed to be the game's big challenge, but it's the one thing I really don't enjoy. Anytime I have tried to plan a city from the beginning with traffic in mind, I find myself not having nearly as much fun as when I just built stuff haphazardly.

I kind of just want a mod that abstracts out traffic (I know about TPM, but that isn't exactly what I want).

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Subnautica simultaneously my favourite "I like build base" game and horror game.

I really like the open-ended gameplay loop with a structured narrative. Had way more story than I expected going into it.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Terraria is one I should probably like, given that the other games there are among my favourite games ever. Just never could get more than an hour into it without just getting kind of lost. I get a house for me and the guide guy and then...am not sure what to do exactly.

Is it more action-adventure than I think? I just kind of want to build a town I think.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

It is demanding but the devs seem very dedicated to optimization. I have never read a dev blog post entirely about CPU optimization that sounded so excited about it. For an early access game, it really is super polished.

I haven't tried scaling to super late game production levels, but you can easily finish the non-repeatable techs before noticing any performance hitches.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 4 points 2 years ago

Horizon is a great game, it's probably one of my favourite game series of all time at this point. Zero Dawn hit all the storytelling tropes that I typically enjoy in games, and had amazing dynamic combat too. It reminded a bit of monster hunter with the preparation you went into big fights with, but also there was a degree of improvisation when stuff didn't go according to plan.

As someone who didn't think Zero Dawn needed a sequel at all, I actually really enjoyed Forbidden West. I think you'll be in for a good time when you get a chance to play it.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

Since you seem to basically be me, I would recommend Dyson Sphere Program if you haven't tried it yet. My favourite of the factory games, and they have their big combat update coming in soon too.

[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago

This is probably my second choice, I have actually never made it to the "endgame" of ONI despite that. Never actually lost a colony, but I just particularly like those first 50 cycles of scrapping things together the most.

I love the Klei art style, and the more engineering style approach to colony building is one I don't see that much.

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