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Bug725 joined the community
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MicrowaveMon joined the community
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I finished Greedfall. After that one big bug, it was bugfree. I enjoyed it. The writing improves over the curse of the game. It felt a bit awkward in the beginning, as if it needed to figure out what the social position of your character is - npcs were acting as if random guard and your character were equals, making me long for a reply of "You seem to mistake this for a democracy. Oh, you don't know what a democracy is? It is the system in which your opinion and consent theoretically matters." They managed to give the impression of choices that matter well. Spiders' best game hands down.
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joaommendes.1993 started following Do More Harm - Niles Stuck
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joaommendes.1993 joined the community
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Theonlygarby replied to MrBrown's topic in Computer and Console
When i was very young clippy tried to correct something i spelt incorrectly to the "N" word. I didn't know what it meant but I knew it was bad and told my dad. Clippy is a racist -
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Wormerine replied to MrBrown's topic in Computer and Console
Would make sense. Tim prefers making new IP. As much as I would love Arcanum2, I somewhat doubt it would be what would bring him back from half retirement. Maybe he is turning his space sim toy into a game? -
Bas snijders joined the community
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New Zealand is all set to continue her unbeaten (since 1982!) run at football world cups by humbling Egypt, Iran and Belgium.
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Zoraptor replied to MrBrown's topic in Computer and Console
People say that sort of thing when it actually is the obvious guess all the time. Tim Cain is not going to come back and announce that he's there for NV2 (or BG4/ KOTOR3/ Fury3d2/ Halo RPG/ Minesweeper RPG or whatever else people might think) because that's what you have marketing for; plus of course you get the free benefit of the rumour mill. If it is NV2 there's an obvious tie in event coming up which would garner far more media attention than Tim Cain. (IMO there's a pretty strong- as much as circumstantial an be strong- body of evidence that it is for a Fallout title. It certainly should be, circumstantially. Wouldn't bet the house on it though to be sure) -
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Hurlshort replied to MrBrown's topic in Computer and Console
Clippy RPG confirmed - Today
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Ripley Riley started following Next patch
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Do we have a rough ETA for the next patch?
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Batool joined the community
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Badkitty5202 joined the community
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Mlongo1123 started following Peep.r crashing game
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Lexx replied to MrBrown's topic in Computer and Console
In his video he said don't even guess, you won't guess right. So it's probably some new IP. -
Mlongo1123 joined the community
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mdf19998 joined the community
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At first I wondered why there's a draw for the first round, since the remainder are all random anyway. But now it makes sense: the first round draw determines the possible opponents after leaving the group stage. I don't see an obvious group of death this time; maybe the closest is group L, with picks in the top three of pots 2-4.
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Our President won his first participation trophy. He must be very proud.
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The TV and Streaming Thread: That's Entertainment!
Sarex replied to LadyCrimson's topic in Way Off-Topic
HBO in to Netflix now... WB got sold to Netflix. So we now have the Marvel/Disney vs DC/Netflix. -
Sierra Security joined the community
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Anthonydep joined the community
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Sarex replied to MrBrown's topic in Computer and Console
So they got a shot at Fallout from MS. -
I did see that, I have a different antivirus so it's disabled for me by default, but I did try with that antivirus turned off and it made no difference. I tried turning off UAC and it made no difference. The strange thing is that it did work, but it stopped like a week ago and I started noticing issues with other apps. I would probably need to restore to a previous point or start uninstalling windows updates. Either way I will do a fresh install once my new SSD arrives from the cheap shores of US Amazon and will see if that resolves it. I knew it was a bad idea to install over Windows 10 pro, but then again it did work for a bit.
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Hurlshort replied to MrBrown's topic in Computer and Console
Mines of Moria released DLC that adds NPC's to the game. This is a big addition, as the game is a pretty great survival builder, but pretty lonely in the dark with just you and the orcs. Now we have people to drink with. -
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Pidesco replied to MrBrown's topic in Computer and Console
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The only issue I've ever run into with LTSC was with the old versions e.g. LTSC 2019 being feature-outdated for a couple of newer games, which is what necessitated me upgrading to LTSC 2021. But they would just straight up not run - otherwise, no problems I can think of, it's pretty much just Windows 10 but a little lighter and a little less annoying. However, I have not ever used Edge and I have not played Anno 117, so I cannot comment on those. You could try temporarily disabling UAC entirely (i.e. everything is run as admin all the time always) to see if it resolves the Anno 117 saving issue. Admin permissions can be a little flaky with Windows: in theory, an application you start as admin should also open other stuff as admin (e.g. in the event of running secondary executables), but somehow it doesn't always necessarily work out that way. Someone also posted having a similar issue with the game, and it actually ended up being the fault of Windows Defender:
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it's legal(ish) and has been sop for years. is US fed law as well as UNCLOS and specific international agreements which give (enough) legal justification for drug inspections o' vessels on the high seas such that complaints o' lack o' jurisdiction has failed as a defense o' drug traffickers in both US and international courts time and again. also, ... The administration's lethal approach marks a huge shift from the traditional maritime interdictions the U.S. has long done. Those operations involve the U.S. Coast Guard intercepting a drug boat at sea, boarding the vessel, seizing the narcotics, arresting the crew and bringing them back to the U.S. to face prosecution. The U.S. Coast Guard works off information gathered from U.S. law enforcement and intelligence community sources. The U.S. military, meanwhile, has a hand in detection, monitoring and coordination. "We used to call it a self-licking ice cream cone," said one former FBI official who worked transnational crime and maritime interdictions. "You stop a boat, you get the bad guys, you use the leverage of prosecuting them to turn them into cooperators." Investigators would use those cooperators to intercept more drug boats, arrest more low-level traffickers, leverage some of them into cooperators to get more intelligence. This way, over time, the former FBI official said, investigators have been able to work their way up to cartel leadership. Even when the people detained on a boat didn't have information that helped in a prosecution, they often had tidbits that helped illuminate the cartel network, which American officials then use for intelligence purposes. "Forgetting the philosophy of whether killing people is right or wrong, when you kill them you can't talk to them. When you grab them, you can," one former senior DOJ official said. The information that leads to an interdiction comes from human sources as well as what's known as signals intelligence, or electronic surveillance. Current and former officials said in interviews that that information is generally accurate and reliable. It allows the Coast Guard, for example, to put a cutter at a precise location of a drug boat in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, which is roughly the size of the continental United States. The current and former officials said the intelligence isn't always 100% accurate. Sometimes the vessel the Coast Guard intercepts is a resupply boat carrying food and fuel for the traffickers, not the actual drugs. Still, the intelligence that allows the Coast Guard to be in the right place is often built upon a piece of information provided by a human source, which then allows the U.S. government to put its vast electronic spying powers to good use. These officials said blowing up boats instead of interdicting them will have a compound effect over time on the quality of intelligence. With the lethal strikes, the U.S. is no longer gathering phones and other electronics off of crew arrested on the high seas, nor is the U.S. questioning the low-level drug runners about who and what they know about the broader trafficking network. "You need something to tell you where to look," the former DOJ official said. "If you're killing all these people, you just dried up the human intelligence." ... again, the coast guard has been stopping, searching and questioning those on the suspected drug boats for many years, typical with the cooperation o' south american, caribbean and european nations, 'cause particular in the case o' venezuelan drugs (cocaine) the drugs is more likely bound to end up in caribbean and euro nations than the US. often the drug boats is destroyed by the coast guard, but only after the people and drugs is removed from the vessels. in spite o' the fact the boats is being stopped often many thousands o' miles remote from the US, the drug interdictions has ordinary been the task o' the coast guard, although the overall efficacy o' the operations has been... suspect. ... As the intelligence dwindles, the U.S. government's understanding of the cartels, their money laundering networks, supply chains and business strategies will start to go dark. In the past, the OCDETF-led interdiction model intercepted around 4% to 6% of known maritime cocaine shipments annually on non-commercial vessels. In fiscal year 2023, for example, the rate was 3.71%, according to a Department of Homeland Security watchdog report from February. This fall, the Trump administration shuttered OCDETF, and transferred its cases to new Homeland Security Task Forces jointly run by the FBI and Homeland Security Investigations. For those who spent years working on combating drug cartels, there's deep skepticism that the Trump administration's new policy of military strikes will be prevent more drugs from reaching America. "All this strategy is doing is killing people and the same amount of drugs is getting into the U.S.," the former senior DOJ official said. "You didn't save anybody or increase the number of people you're saving in the U.S. It's extraordinarily shortsighted and I don't think it gets you the goal you want." ... the recent shift in policy and practice appears on its face to be performative. at least if there were some kinda compelling argument or evidence that blowing up drug boats headed for trinidad and tobago is saving american lives, you could see a rationale for engaging in lethal interdictions, but that ain't the case. recall, the US sent people to cecot w/o due process. explanation for cecot efforts were that tren de aragua is not just a terrorist organization, but is an active para-military group active involved in the downfall o' the US. if trump had been successful, he coulda' sent anybody he disliked to cecot or someplace similar, 'cause sans due process, explanations and justifications is replaced with faith in the administration. the boat strikes is an effort to do something similar to cecot and is arguable worse 'cause as bad as cecot is, summary executions means there is no way to correct mistakes. trump doesn't provide proof before the maritime murders take place and the justification for the killings is that narco terrorists is involved in what amounts to military actions directed at the US. the double-tap clap trap is a kinda red herring 'cause it ignores the complete lack o' legitimacy o' the boat strikes. am bothered by the focus on the double-tap accusations because doing so means you are already pretending as if the people being murdered on suspected drug boats is analogous to enemy sailors who is fighting a war with the US, a claim which is transparent false and... stoopid. if rando fisherman working for drug cartels in venezuela may be subject to summary executions 'cause drugs are bad and americans die because of drugs, then try and imagine who else and where else trump could do murder w/o needing proof o' any kinda crime. the only thing slowing down the administration's authoritarian efforts is their utter incompetence... a fact which is not near as reassuring as we would hope. HA! Good Fun!
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Im on PC, XBOX Ultimate. My Game Also is crashing within a couple minutes of the start and is unplayable. I have not left the base area to see if that works. Game ran fine before update. I can play using Cloud Play, I completely reinstalled game, same result. I am using nVidia RTX 3070 Laptop GPU. Is there a way to revert the update so its playable until fix?
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Monk subclass
Okkes replied to Pezpoz's topic in Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire General Discussion (NO SPOILERS)
Most annoying thing with Nalpazca is arcane dampener... You get lose all your buffs AND get drug crush. Imo its not worth it. If you have good healing support in party go with Helwalker. -
Horses in particular took 3 hours. Otherwise, I was on AL last week (still have a few days to spend until 2026) and Black Geyser was of reasonable length (~35h for the first playthrough, 8h? for the second) to play. I also WFH 3 days per week and it is glorious as it cuts down ~130 minutes of commute per day. I would not try to play anything Ubisoft-like and currently just listening to the other gamer in the household playing Rogue Trader. I like Owlcat, but the turn-based combat and their density of encounters fill me with dread. So, might try in a year.
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SkyRocker started following The All Things Political Topic - SNAFU edition
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Nvidia dropped driver support for the 9xx and 10xx series with the latest branch of drivers.
