Varlus

joined 1 year ago
[–] Varlus@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

As an artist who grew up when those exact same arguments were happening, I've always found it odd people went with the "AI is bad because it's not art" argument. Instead of focusing on something like real people losing their jobs because of it. Which is such more legitimate reasons to hate how AI art is currently being used vs "b-but all you did was type prompts! You didn't spend years learning like a REAL artist!" as if early photography/digital art wasn't given the exact same criticism of "The tech does everything for you"

[–] Varlus@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Not the other guy but piracy isn't an automatic loss of sale. I've bought plenty of things I originally wouldn't have, because piracy was my "skimming the book" before buying. Not being able to pirate is like seeing the plastic wrapped book and going "I'll just look for something else then, I don't want to waste my money on something I'm not sure I'll like".

If someone has decided to pirate something, they had already decided it wasn't worth buying to begin with, they were already a "lost" sale.

[–] Varlus@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

I've only grabbed two games from the site, the files seemed harmless but quality was lacking. One game consistently black screened across different pcs/OS I had, and the other was missing DLC/expansions that the site claimed to have bundled with the download. I'd double check if any specific communities based around whatever games has anything to say about the site, and acknowledge the possibility of something malicious slipping through if broken/missing files can.

[–] Varlus@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

Just two, one I first signed up with and decided was a mistake, and then the one I currently use. I'll probably make a third for nsfw eventually but that's low on the list while I'm still settling in

[–] Varlus@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

TES Oblivion and Sonic Adventure 2. SA2 was a childhood favorite I got very good at, and the extra mission, game modes, and pet sim aspects makes it fairly re-playable without having to start a new game file. Oblivion is just whacky and fun, and if you know how to exploit mechanics you can get up to some pretty crazy stuff in a matter a minutes after starting the game. While grinding skills could be seen as... Well a grind, it's a grind I personally enjoy. Both games let me dive straight into what I'm feeling like doing, and reward mastery (even if one of them is cheese mastery).