I’m the same. I play retro and indie titles on the Deck, and more modern and demanding games on the desktop.
I’m the same. I play retro and indie titles on the Deck, and more modern and demanding games on the desktop.
Don’t use Microsoft’s version. Use Vscodium! :)
I agree 100%! I just know that the average Joe doesn’t look at these things the same way we do. :/
I love this animation of Gabe! Thank you for sharing!
You can for sure! It’s just I wouldn’t go around recommending that to just any person because they then might get a little crazy with the freedom, brick their Steam deck install, and then try to say that the Deck is a POS.
Bad word of mouth is always a lot more damaging than spreading the good word that it’s a solid system.
For general gaming for sure! Retro gaming is even better on Linux! I am one of those that loves modding their games though, and the tools aren’t there just yet. With Nexus beginning beta for Linux support, I am hopeful that I will be able to switch over soon enough. :)
Windows has had winget for a while now. While not as good as Linux version, I think it’s fine enough for those who must still use Windows for their gaming. 🤔
Their mod managers were the ones I tried first, and then I tried MO2, and just didn’t get a feel for it so I stuck to manual modding until they revamped their own mod manager. I then tried the newer version out, and it just clicked for me.
I don’t blame you for sticking with what works now and has always worked though! :)
Hey! I don’t know when the last time you used Vortex, but is is SO much better now. They’ve even added mod collections that allow you to one click install a few to all the way to over 1000 mods (Looking at you Skyrim mod collections, Constellations and Gate to Sovngarde!) and have it ready to play as soon as it is done.
I have played Oblivion, Skyrim, and Stardew Valley with collections and not once had a collection not work! It’s crazy how good it is now!
I know some people don’t like Nexus for whatever reasons, but I give them so much credit for making modding easy enough that my friends could finally mod their games without going, “You sit here and go through pages and pages of mods? And that’s fun?” Or “That seems like too much stuff. I’d rather not mess with that…”.
I would love to hear your opinion if you do try it again! :)
Thanks for the in depth post! We definitely need more competition in the Sims-like area of indie games!
Hey, thank you for this! I don’t really understand GitHub all that much, especially when it comes to forking and hosting the repo myself!
I hate to bother, but do you have a good tutorial I can use to learn more about self hosting these types of pages? I’m sort of a “I’ve gotta see it all and do it all” type of gamer, so I’d love to be able to preserve these types of things for future replays after the game has entirely disappeared from my memory! (Why I’m currently doing this actually lol)
Again, thank you for the more updated fork! 😁
I was thinking the same! That’s pretty good all things considered!