TotesIllegit

joined 1 year ago
[–] TotesIllegit@pathfinder.social 37 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Yes. Former presidents do not lose their benefits if they're convicted of crimes and sent to prison; changing that would take an act of Congress, and there's probably not enough political will or support to curtail the executive branch in such a way.

If he's actually given a prison sentence and not home confinement, though, I feel that they'd likely hold him in a military prison- for his own safety, to keep an eye on him to make sure he doesn't keep committing crimes or attempt to flee, and to dissuade jailbreak attempts by outside actors.

It kept getting delayed so the release really caught me by surprise!

[–] TotesIllegit@pathfinder.social 4 points 1 year ago (3 children)

It's on Steam, and it's very short compared to a lot of games so long as you're not too rusty with the controls.

[–] TotesIllegit@pathfinder.social 8 points 1 year ago (5 children)

I waffle between preferring Jet Set Radio cell shading and hand-drawn pixels on any given day.

I feel that sometimes realistic graphics are what a game needs- like some simulators or horror titles going for that form in immersion. We're not quite over the uncanny valley in AAA titles, and pushing the boundaries of real-time rendering technology can lead to improvements in efficiency of existing processes.

Other times, pushing the boundaries of realism can lead to new game mechanics. Take Counter-Strike 2 and their smoke grenades: they look more realistic and shooting through them disturbs only a portion of the cloud.

I do miss working mirrors in games, though.

[–] TotesIllegit@pathfinder.social 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Once the encryption schemes are broken, it's not just posterity, but every malicious actor with access to encryption-breaking tech will have a field day.

I don't mind a large collection of data about me being made available to historians, I just mind that happening with my contemporaries.

[–] TotesIllegit@pathfinder.social 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

A better comparison is with studio-owned movie theaters, which eventually led to the United States' Paramount Antitrust Consent Decree (which was the law of the land for movies until the DOJ killed this ruling in 2020.)

I don't feel that studios should get to have their own streaming services much like how I don't feel movie studios should be allowed to run their own theaters.

For all of its faults, cable had a ton of competition between studios on the same distribution system, often with multiple channels with the same focus by entirely different studios. With current streaming services, ther are more accounts to keep track of, completely different (and often lackluster) UX between each streaming service which can make navigating a pain, and instead of competing with new content it can be just as- if not more- viable to buy up as much pop culture video content as possible and centralize it behind one studio-owned streaming services' paywall. (Looking at you, Disney.)

If streaming services weren't allowed to have their own studios, we'd probably have a better streaming landscape than we currently do.

Yes, but Senate approval for higher promotions is supposed to function as a check on the presidents' military powers. I'm by no means an expert, but I think the idea is that having the Senate vote to approve or deny promotions of a certain level or above keeps the president from installing a bunch of loyal followers to key positions and then dissolving the other branches of government through threat or use of his new personal military force.

It sounds like a fuel explosion was caused by a fire that started across the street and spread.

This reminds me of the internet discussions around Avatar: The Last Airbender years back and whether it counted as anime or not.

To piggyback on this, I used to play Counter-Strike 1.5 (and later 1.6) a lot. There were servers that ran scripts to automatically chuck people into the air and deal them damage (often called a slap) if they didn't change coordinates on the map for too long. Some would just auto-kick players for doing so. The anti-camper hate was common.

The server I frequented was far more lenient, but camping that prolonged the round(since dead players could only watch, and the rounds were 5 minutes long to make walking and crouching more viable) was generally frowned upon if they weren't outnumbered or defending an objective.

[–] TotesIllegit@pathfinder.social 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Fair, but from back when I played a ton on my 360, a large number of a games' achievements were progression-based, sometimes entirely. That being said, tracking optional challenges within the save game itself can also be helpful in some instances.

For example, if there are challenges that require you to not use special weapons at all, and then you violate the challenge requirements, it could be grayed out to signify that the player locked themselves out of anything related to completing that challenge in that playthrough.

Resident Evil 4: Remake already does this to a degree, though my thought is that it would be most helpful in long rpgs, where it may not be clear after loading where you are in story or what you have and haven't done if the save hadn't been touched in months.

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