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Joined 5 months ago
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Cake day: February 20th, 2025

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  • It’s a fun little game, especially for the Steam Deck. Finding the right synergy so your backpack can deal max damage is very nice. Unfortunately, as time progresses and more and more items get unlocked, it gets harder to find any synergy as there are too many items not working together. Still, fun game where the ultimate goal is to build up your village with goods you bring home after every dungeon run.


  • Linux and Windows are probably just equally as difficult to use to the average user. Might as well go Linux with less obnoxious features like copilot and recall. My dad was a Windows user for many many years, but he still knew zilch about how to solve problems in Windows. The average user would need to google anyway, no matter which OS.

    And with the right distro (Linux Mint for example) you would have zero interactions with the terminal. Everything’s done via the GUI, just like Windows.

    I’ve had to interact with weird things in Windows lately which I had to google up like ‘open the run programs and type in srvcmngmt.msc’ or whatever that was again. Something that apparently couldn’t have been done via the GUI. Great job!

    For the record I am still mainly a Windows user.


  • Windows 10 is about to be end-of-life this October. You probably think ‘just update your OS to Windows 11’, but many computers are deemed unfit for Windows 11 by Microsoft.

    In order to move on to Windows 11, many people, and I do really mean a ridiculously large amount of people would need to buy a new computer or laptop. In the meantime their old systems are still fit for everyday use, so there is quite a lot of e-waste coming up.

    Instead of just dumping the old computers you can just put Linux on them and continue using them. Linux costs nothing, just time. So if you don’t have specialized software which absolutely must have Windows, you might as well just switch to Linux and keep using your old systems which are still perfectly fine for your everyday needs.


    My old gaming laptop that I still use right now is from 2018. It does have the TPM 2.0 chip that Windows 11 requires, but its CPU is like just one generation too old for it. So, what do I do? When Windows 10 stops getting its updates, throw it away? Naw man, Linux will work. You can even game on Linux just fine as the Steam Deck has proven already, so I’ll just switch my sweet laptop over to Linux and continue using it as usual.











  • I’ve tried out the demo now. It is not too bad. I realize some limitations might be because this is a demo and not the full game. Still, it’s a bit slow going. I’ve seen the Red Dark, and I’ve escaped the planet, so I did the full questing available in the demo.

    What I liked about (modded) Minecraft is the crazy-ass automation stuff, I’m not seeing much of that here if any. This one’s really more like an adventure with a set goal I think? I hope it really has more automation in the full game otherwise you’re waiting a long time for stuff to process.

    I have to admit this game did play smoothly, so that’s a big plus. Didn’t feel buggy at all or anything. Just needed a little bit of figuring out the UI and such but that’s a given with any new game.