PS2 achieved a level of dominance we’re unlikely to see again. An enormous leap over the previous generation, and had practically no competition for years. Seeing something like GTA3 for the first time was mind-blowing.
PS2 achieved a level of dominance we’re unlikely to see again. An enormous leap over the previous generation, and had practically no competition for years. Seeing something like GTA3 for the first time was mind-blowing.
If only they’d carried on with that idea.
Gwent.
I didn’t like the standalone version, but the in-game one had just the right level of puzzle to keep me at it.
Living like a pauper for a few years and paying the mortgage off early.
Also not joining the rat race, and buying new shiny shit for the sake of it.
It was the same on Reddit as well.
PC gamers supposedly everywhere, meanwhile you can barely buy a decent GPU for the price of a PS5.
I think Witcher 1 actually did it better.
The gameplay is a tough sell though.
Which it almost never is.
Any data as simple as that is unlikely to reach a number of rows likely to cause an issue with performance.
When navigating a tree structure.
Processing files and folders, expression parsing, that kind of thing.
I’ve no idea why the factorial example is so popular, because it’s one of the worst use cases for it. Still, I guess it can teach a new programmer what a stack overflow is.
I’m sure the last few Ubisoft games I got from Steam all installed UPlay before letting me run them anyway…
I’m not buying it because £45 is not a budget price for what feels like an indie game experience. I can wait for a sale on that, or more likely for it to go to PSN Extra. Still got plenty on my backlog.