Thrashy

joined 2 years ago
[–] Thrashy 64 points 2 years ago (10 children)

I work in architecture, a field that is also notorious for long hours, excessive crunch time, and mediocre pay. Real-time 3D graphics have started to become important to the design process over the last several years, and at a previous firm I met a 3D vis guy who'd transitioned into my industry from a job at a game developer, "because the hours and pay are so much better." It boggled my mind that conditions could be so much worse in game dev that my own field would be an improvement.

[–] Thrashy 14 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

In Florida, the alternative is a (very expensive) state-funded program that acts as an insurer of last resort. With so many insurance firms cutting their losses and leaving the market, though, I suspect that program is about to be severely overloaded, while many Floridians also find their homes suddenly unaffordable. If there's going to be a solution, it's going to have to come from the state, but given that the party in power there is still firmly committed to pretending climate change is a hoax, I wouldn't hold my breath. My guess is that there's going to be a lot of migration away from Florida and other Republican-dominated coastal states as issues with cost and availability of insurance force homeowners to make some hard financial decisions.

[–] Thrashy 3 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Priorities will always shift as we move though the different seasons of life, and for sure the launch of a big marquee title that I'm interested in doesn't have the same drama it did, now that I've lived though a couple-few decades of them. I have to say, though, that I still love the experience of being transported to a fantasy setting, or exploring a strange new world with friends, or testing my skill against other players. I'm looking forward to when I can introduce the hobby to my kid, and share that joy with him.

[–] Thrashy 8 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

If people want to live in a fully-automated luxury space communist utopia where everyone is free from want and able to make and release games for free as passion projects, that's great, and a worthy goal to work towards, but promoting piracy on principle without concern for how developers will be supported during their work in the context of our current capitalist society is somewhere between naive at best and self-serving rationalization at worst.

[–] Thrashy 3 points 2 years ago

We'll need some major spin to control the PR fallout of this leek!

[–] Thrashy 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I hit a difficulty wall in the Wrecker's Cave and never picked the game back up. So far BG3 has been more forgiving, but Larian games don't suffer fools gladly.

[–] Thrashy 6 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Also that example of Tomb Raider is really disingenuous, the level of fidelity in the environments is night and day between the two as well as the quality of animation. In your example the only real thing you can tell is the skin shaders, which are not even close between the two, SotTR really sells that you are looking at real people, something the 2013 game approached but never really achieved IMO.

I've noticed this a lot in comparisons claiming to show that graphics quality has regressed (either over time, or from an earlier demo reel of the same game), where the person trying to make the point cherry-picks drastically different lighting or atmospheric scenarios that put the later image in a bad light. Like, no crap Lara looks better in the 2013 image, she's lit from an angle that highlights her facial features and inexplicably wearing makeup while in the midst of a jungle adventure. The Shadow of the Tomb Raider image, by comparison, is of a dirty-faced Lara pulling a face while being lit from an unflattering angle by campfire. Compositionally, of course the first image is prettier -- but as you point out, the lack of effective subsurface scattering in the Tomb Raider 2013 skin shader is painfully apparent versus SofTR. The newer image is more realistic, even if it's not as flattering.

[–] Thrashy 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Yeah, you guys have the Winter War and Continuation War relatively fresh in cultural memory, which probably limits the reach of Russian propaganda. Over here, we remember the Soviet Union primarily as our Cold War rival, and neither side of that conflict came out of it with clean hands. For a certain kind of person, the sins of the American CIA and State Department during the Cold War don't just reflect badly on our government; they somehow also make the Soviet Union, and therefore Russia as its successor state, the Good Guys of the last century of global geopolitics.

[–] Thrashy 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

When I read her thread, the first thing that came to mind was that in addition to whatever labor rights claims she could have, there's a clear potential claim of promissory estoppel with regard to her move back to Canada and some of the statements made about how LMG would support her independent efforts.

[–] Thrashy 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (3 children)

There's a certain kind of reactionary-left personality that I think is more common in parts of the west that used to be colonial powers, where if you're far enough along the political spectrum that the mainstream parties all look to you like different variations on fascism, you're particularly vulnerable to messaging from geopolitical enemies of your own country for the simple reason that they're opposed to the political structure you're also opposed to. Here in the US I've run into a few such people, and it's also clear that Russia's soft-power operations have made efforts to cultivate relationships with the American left wing (people like Jill Stein and others in the Green Party). It's pretty obvious, though, that they've had less success than they have on the right. It takes a particular kind of useful idiot to think, as a anti-colonial socialist or communist, that an oligarchic, expansionist, and socially-repressive right-wing autocracy is actually in your political corner.

[–] Thrashy 4 points 2 years ago

At the moment, the voting-age American public seems to be split into pretty even thirds, with one third being slavering fascists, one third being generally opposed to the first third, and a final third who are either totally apathetic or steadfastly refuse to acknowledge any difference between the other two thirds.

[–] Thrashy 4 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Yeah, I'm not optimistic that a KBI under the leadership of Kris "K" Kobach is going to be in much hurry to investigate small town police corruption at the behest of a fundraiser for another MAGA nutjob.

Thigh who knows, maybe ol' Kris is too busy virtue signaling his blood-and-soil, anti-immigrant values to the xenophobes that make up his primary constituency to actually dirty his hands with the work of being attorney-general. Wouldn't be the first time he was too busy trying to get on TV to do his job.

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