Also a special mention of a game that isn't out yet, but that I am extremely looking forward to: Junxions seems to be the traffic engineering game that I was hoping for in Cities Skylines but didn't get.
Some neat games that you may not have heard of:
Flotsam - The world has drowned, and everything is underwater. Your task is to help a handful of Drifters build a floating town around a tugboat, using scrap you find in the water and on what remains of the land, and then rescue others.
Project Hospital - A very satisfying-to-play hospital building and management game, with quite a bit more depth than most games in the 'hospital tycoon' genre, and a rather unusual artstyle.
Airport CEO - Design and run your own airport. Gameplay mechanics are more or less what you would expect from a game of this type, but the building system just felt so *nice* to work with that I keep coming back to it, even though there isn't a lot of variation in things to build. Also lets you schedule the flights yourself.
Software Inc. - You build up a software (and hardware!) company in the early days of home computing, with a frankly absurd amount of simulation depth and mechanics. Also a very satisfying building system - it feels a bit like The Sims, but far more responsive.
Galacticare - Also a hospital management game, with more shallow gameplay this time; but also with a lot of soul and funny writing!
STATIONflow - You're responsible for laying out a metro station in the most efficient configuration. Surprisingly challenging!
SimCasino - Again a management game, a casino this time. But with a lot more content and gameplay than you might expect, and a building system that feels quite good.
Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop - It's like a service manual simulator; you are a spaceship mechanic, and you'll have to carefully consult an extensive in-game manual to complete your repairs correctly and in time. Funny writing, neat and very tactile gameplay, time pressure optional, though note that there is a roguelite mechanic that a lot of people seem to dislike the implementation of.
CW-boost: uspol, journalism
Dat is nog eens een mooi boerenprotest https://norden.social/@michel42/113935405802138499
Not unsurprisingly, in my experience this mindset also strongly correlates with "not recognizing *any* non-code work as a type of contribution", as applied to documentation, design/graphics fixes, community management, and so on.
Reading up on the comments to that complaint about stalebots, and once again finding that there is a significant amount of people who do not recognize carefully-filed and detailed issues as a type of contribution, because it's not a code patch.
I have Opinions about this mindset and none of them are positive.
I brought my CO2 sensor prototype to #FOSDEM!
In K.3.401 (a tightly-packed dev room with closed windows), I measured a CO2 concentration of over 3000 ppm.
For reference: Outside air is currently ~420 ppm, and a common suggestion is to ventilate rooms to <= 1000 ppm.
uspol positive
If things feel hopeless, please visit the FedNews subreddit for some reassurance. These folks are not rolling over, they’re not resigning, they’re standing together. Here’s just one thread: https://www.reddit.com/r/fednews/comments/1ifdcp7/from_your_genderqueer_coworker_dont_quit_over_the/
Valuable lessons for those in #FOSS who tinker for fun and have a vast collection of gadgets
> Repairing stuff, however, is neither new nor that radical concept for me. In developing countries, repair is just a way to extend an object’s life. Repair is not necessarily seen as a political act, although it can and has been; it is another service that someone might offer as a non-expensive alternative to buying new. Here, technicians for all kinds of tech are abundant, at least in major city centers; and so having one’s broken stuff repaired will not break bank.
Hi everybody! We've been inactive for a while, so it's maybe time for a reintroduction. HUP is a fully #openaccess university press. We publish high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarly literature, particularly in the #humanities and #socialsciences. All our publications are freely available on our website at: https://hup.fi/site/
We are looking forward to learning more about the #Fediverse!
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
- No alt text (request) = no boost.
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- DMs are open.
- Flirting welcome, but be explicit if you want something out of it!
- The devil doesn't need an advocate; no combative arguing in my mentions.
Sometimes horny on main (behind CW), very much into kink (bondage, freeuse, CNC, and other stuff), and believe it or not, very much a submissive bottom :p
My spoons are limited, so I may not always have the energy to respond to messages.
Strong views about abolishing oppression, hierarchy, agency, and self-governance - but I also trust people by default and give them room to grow, unless they give me reason not to. That all also applies to technology and how it's built.