How do you know if you like them if you haven't tried them 😋?
alehel
We'll, excuse me 🤣...
I don't tag them with anything.
I think this is what the commenter above is getting at. You say you want to play the game, but “dnf” means “did not finish” which alludes closer to just checking it off a list.
My list is basically my library. I only buy games if I want to play them (I don't bother redeeming free games if I don't intend to play it). That said, just because I want to play a game doesn't guarantee I end up enjoying it. The great perhaps is one such game. Thought it was for me, didn't enjoy it, so won't bother finishing it.
My backlog consists of games I've bought because I want to play them. But because there's always something on offer I end up buying more than I can get through. So this will be a way to stop myself spending money when I already have enough games to get me through to the end of this year. If I find I'm not enjoying one of them, I'll mark it "dnf" and hide it from my library. So I've absolutely no plan to play a game if it turns out to not be any fun.
Well, that's just silly.
Honestly, keeping half is pretty good.
Bought this a few weeks ago. Although I enjoyed the way you navigate (a bit like original Myst), I have no idea what the story was supposed to be.
It's also very short.
I have an S21 and even I think I should be able to last that long as long as I get an official battery replacement done in a year or two. I've had it 2 1/2 years and still haven't really noticed any degredation in battery performance. Wondering if todays batteries hold up better than the older models. My S7 battery became unusable after a couple of years.
That's what I was thinking 🤣. I've had mine 2 1/2 years now. Another 4 years might be pushing my luck, but if I get an official batter replacement in a year or two, it should be able to survive.
This will likely also see a rise in cheap knockoff batteries catching fire. It’s not unprecedented, and people are like “a battery is a battery”. Well, they aren’t.
If those batteries are being sold in the EU they would still have to meet EU requirements. This might be an issue if people go to buy them from places like aliexpress or something like that though.
That said, phones were available for years and years with replaceable batteries. Don't think I ever really heard of any of them catching fire before the Note 7 issues, and those were related to the phone not giving the batteries enough room to expand/contract, wasn't it?
The no tools part seems a bit extreme. So a manufacturer can't use a few standard screws to keep things in place?
Isn't this a GDPR requirement if enough time passes without account activity?