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Yes, this is my go to nowadays for all my family and friends. Atomic makes it harder for them to break it and everything just works out of the box.
Yes, this is my go to nowadays for all my family and friends. Atomic makes it harder for them to break it and everything just works out of the box.
I run Bazzite, which is Fedora Atomic, that hibernates just fine. In fact, so far it’s the only one that does. Arch and Mint both would never come back from sleep.
It’s just the worst. I hate doing UI. A UX expert would be very high on my wish list of people to work with, lol.
As for reading list, right now it’s really just a big pile of things, not much order. There’s a lot of recommended reading in this book too that’ll get added I’m sure. You can look at my big mess of a github repo:
https://github.com/GrapeSodaGames/learn/
There’s a million issues in there with book suggestions, as well as my notes in the closed issues. I am planning to put up a little website to contain my knowledge for future reference. I’m really trying to create a habit to Learn In Public so I’m gonna put everything I do up there in that github org. Feedback and contributions of course welcome.
Yeah for sure. I’m about a third of the way through “The Art of Game Design: A Book Of Lenses” and it has proven to be a very useful book full of actionable tools to help get the creative juices flowing. The titular “Lenses” each consist of a few questions to ask yourself as you make decisions about your game. Some neat examples:
Lens 007: The Lens of Endogenous Value A game’s success hinges on the players’ willingness to pretend it is important. To use this lens, think about your players’ feelings about items, objects, and scoring in your game. Ask these questions:
- What is valuable to the players in my game?
- How can I make it more valuable to them?
- What is the relationship between value in the game and the players’ motivations?
Remember, the value of the items and score in the game is a direct reflection of how much the players care about succeeding in your game. By thinking about what the players really care about and why, you can often get insights about how your game can improve.
LENS 009: The Lens of the Elemental Tetrad To use this lens, take stock of what your game is truly made of. Consider each element separately and then all of them together as a whole. Ask yourself these questions:
- Is my game design using elements of all four types?
- Could my design be improved by enhancing elements in one or more of the categories?
- Are the four elements in harmony, reinforcing each other and working together toward a common theme?
LENS 015: The Lens of the Eight Filters To use this lens, you must consider the many constraints your design must satisfy. You can only call your design finished when it can pass through all eight filters without requiring a change. Ask yourself these key questions:
- Artistic Impulse (“Does this feel right to me?”)
- Demographics (“Will the intended audience like it?”)
- Experience Design (“Is this well designed?”)
- Innovation (“Is this novel?”)
- Business and Marketing (“Will it be profitable?”)
- Engineering(“Is it technically possible?”)
- Social/Community (“Does it meet our social and community goals?”)
- Playtesting (“Do the playtesters like it?”)
In some situations, there may be still more filters; for example, an educational game will also have to answer questions like “Does this game teach what it is supposed to?” If your design requires more filters, don’t neglect them.
The author has worked on a number of experiences for Disney that he relays as well, creating bespoke hardware and incredibly immersive short experiences. His emphasis on cross-domain knowledge and attention to detail in all aspects really appeals to me.
I’ve had to take a little break, got some life stuff going on, but I’m hoping to finish this book by the end of the month.
What games are you playing? I have not encountered anything so far that has needed more than proton-ge, and even then it’s only a couple of games that don’t just work out of the box. I guess I primarily play indie games though, nothing that would have like anti-cheat which I understand is a hurdle.
Check out Bazzite, it’s basically that. I’ve been using it on my desktop for gaming and development for a month or so now and it’s been great.
I have a PinePhone Pro and if the battery would last longer than a few hours, it would totally work as a daily driver. Fast enough and can do everything I need it to do, but 3-4 hour battery life. If someone can figure that part out, I think it’ll be good enough for at least early adopters.
It’s not bad. I haven’t dug too much into it but it’s got the pokemon feel and I’ve enjoyed what I played of it.
Getting my Pinephone Pro up and running, and getting away from Google forever, finally. Also I’m gonna make the jump from Arch to either Gentoo and/or Guix, I think.
This is a stupid take. You’re tired of the people who own and use a platform controlling that platform to represent their morals? If you want a platform to host bigotry, you should make one. They often do so well. Just because someone has something to stupid say doesn’t mean others have to tolerate it in their home or place of business.
Because that’s the speech they like the most.
Seriously, this should be illegal. Every game blasts you with full volume and no way to turn it down until later. Then the reasonable setting is like 10%. I’m in the habit of taking my headphones off when I start a new game.
Pretty sure Hyprland will do this. I have seen it make some stupid small windows
Yeah Hyprland is great and very easy. Just make sure you have kitty installed or change the default config to use your preferred terminal and getting set up shouldn’t take long. The Hyprland docs also have tons of recommendations for other good software.
I think you overestimate how much they care about doing illegal things. They will try it, and if someone can prove it’s illegal, they’ll pay a minor fine and stop, maybe. Otherwise they’ll get away with it. That’s how corps look at laws.
My favorite game of all time. Second is Portal 2.
Zsh is just bash with plugins and stuff, so regular bash scripts work. fish, as I understand, uses its own language.
That’s actually a pretty good reason. Currently I own my work environments but that won’t always be the case, I’m sure.
Huh. Might be hardware and I got lucky. I do agree that hibernate on Linux is mostly terrible, though I have had plenty of issues with it in Windows too. I think hibernate mostly just sucks