HER0

joined 2 years ago
[–] HER0 6 points 1 month ago

In case it is helpful: Big Picture Mode does show non-Steam games. Go to the library and there is a tab for them. They'll also show in the recent games list on the home page.

[–] HER0 1 points 2 months ago

I feel like this is an improvement over previous iterations. Gaming time is often stigmatized, and this makes it easier for some to share their Steam Replay with friends.

[–] HER0 2 points 3 months ago

I played this all day yesterday with a bunch of friends. Safe to say that I'm enjoying the update!

[–] HER0 1 points 3 months ago

Recent conversations with friends had me playing Star Fox 64 earlier last week, which has been very nostalgic.

Over the weekend, I was surprised to have a couple friends who I thought would never want to play an Arma title show interest in playing Arma Reforger with a group of friends I play with. I got to play a bunch with one of those newly-interested friends yesterday, and was super pleased that she enjoyed it.

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submitted 3 months ago by HER0 to c/gaming
[–] HER0 2 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Sometimes I chill after work by driving around the Nurburgring in a touring car in Automobilista 2.

Alternately, for more driving games:

  1. Art of Rally has a free roam mode, which is pretty chill.
  2. I've been playing Sledders, a snowmobile game. It is super early in early access, but it can be fun to just roam around (and learn how to drive a snowmobile).
[–] HER0 1 points 4 months ago

Seems like it is just some cosmetics? Seems like many items you get by interacting with NPCs and others are somehow paid, but I haven't looked at how that works.

[–] HER0 3 points 4 months ago (3 children)

I see a bunch of mentions of Journey. Recently, I've been playing Sky: Children of the Light for the first time, which is made by the same devs. It is beautiful, and feels like a spiritual successor to Journey, to me. It is also free to play, so it is easy to recommend trying it out.

[–] HER0 8 points 4 months ago

I feel like it is best, in racing games, if either:

  1. Everyone agrees that racing dirty is okay, like in more combat racing type games.
  2. The game has systems to discourage contact or intentionally ruining others' races. Some more serious games have safety rating and such.

Otherwise you get some who want to have a fair race and others who think that all racing must be dirty, and it isn't fun when these collide (literally).

[–] HER0 2 points 4 months ago

I also got Archon V. Checked my ranked matches after, and a lot of them had Ascendents in them.

[–] HER0 20 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I personally buy games almost exclusively on Steam after realizing how much Valve pumps money into open source/Linux gaming, and this is yet another thing on the list. Cool stuff!

[–] HER0 4 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

I am not a fan of horror games all that much, and Half-Life Alyx is not one, but the horror elements are stronger than previous titles and I still haven't finished the game because of that. The game is incredible, but I just can't get past the scary parts.

[–] HER0 1 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

This has improved further in recent years, so you probably weren't seeing how it is now.

It may be different in other regions, but I see significantly less toxicity in Dota 2 compared to Counter-Strike, the only other big competitive game I have enough time in to compare it to. Though my CS experience was longer ago, and they could have improved things there, too.

 

Friendly Linux Players, or FLiP, is a gaming community I run. The last time I posted about this on Reddit, the reception was pretty negative, which I think may be because it was viewed as "too woke." I don't imagine will be a problem here on Beehaw, but hopefully this post falls within the intended spirit of the server.

I co-founded FLiP years ago, primarily motivated by the fact that no other specifically-inclusive Linux gaming community existed at the time, that I was aware of. Earlier this year, I created a bot which allows anyone to schedule a gaming event. Since then, we've had a lot more participation in the community, and I have been telling people about us publicly for the first times.

If this sounds interesting to you (even if you don't play on Linux), and you can abide by our Code of Conduct, details on the community can be found on the home page of our website. Of particular interest may be the events page, which lists upcoming events and how to join them.

If you still want to read more, we did a Q&A session with GitLab:

Building a more inclusive gaming community with GitLab

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