Browser of things

7.1K posts

Browser of things

Browser of things

@browser_things

가입일 Eylül 2022
44 팔로잉28 팔로워
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@PaulTassi @Chaoswulf1 How could they have got to this point with such non standard controls and no rebinding. It's an incomprehensible design decision
English
0
0
1
329
Paul Tassi
Paul Tassi@PaulTassi·
@Chaoswulf1 Again, I’m saying I understand that position, it’s just unfortunate. My guess is rebinding is imminent
English
4
0
49
2.9K
Paul Tassi
Paul Tassi@PaulTassi·
I understand people bouncing off the first few hours of Crimson Desert. I also hate the whole “it takes ten hours to get good” issue with many games, I just hope people can push through and experience what I have. I’m still playing a ton, so much more to do
English
117
16
865
31.5K
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@Wargamingdad21 How do you get to this point as a developer and have controls that no one actually likes..I understand bugs on day 1 you can't test every scenario but this feels a deliberate decision to make a divisive game?
English
0
0
2
85
Wargamingdad
Wargamingdad@Wargamingdad21·
Reviews are not looking good. Players are not liking the controls. I have played a few hours and I understand players frustration. I have said it before gamers don't want to play for 50+ hours for the game to get good, learning controls included. Me personally I'm enjoying the game and want to master these wonky controls. #crimsondesert
Wargamingdad tweet media
English
4
2
29
1.7K
MR B.E 🇬🇧
MR B.E 🇬🇧@British_Enjoyer·
@albieamankona Ofc I lean with wanting religion to be a more private matter too, I'm an atheist. But this is a Christian country, so it shouldn't be controversial that it takes precedence over other faiths. It is core to the traditions, culture and values of our country.
English
3
0
25
892
Albie
Albie@albieamankona·
This is un-British nonsense. Churches should not enjoy special privileges to hold mass prayer in public spaces while other faiths are restricted. The British instinct is straightforward: either everyone is allowed, or no one is. In truth, I suspect most of the public would prefer the latter. In the UK, faith has traditionally been treated as a private matter. Overt public displays of religion tend to sit uneasily with that cultural norm. I say this as a practising Christian. Few things irritate me more than street preachers with loudspeakers turning public spaces into platforms for performance rather than reflection. My church, the Church of England, should stay out of it.
Danny Kruger@danny__kruger

Nick Timothy and Nigel Farage are right, and Sadiq Khan and Keir Starmer are wrong. Small groups of people, of whatever religion, praying in public places is fine. And as a Christian country we should allow a special privilege for churches to lead services in our national spaces, like the Palm Sunday celebration that happens in Trafalgar Square. What we don't want is mass ritual observances intended to claim the civic realm for another religion, or assert the domination of another culture over our own Christian traditions. What happens in our national spaces is not neutral. People use Trafalgar Square, for celebrations and demonstrations, to make a point about the kind of country they want us to be. The Palm Sunday pageant reminds us of who we are - not as individuals (many or most of us don't identify as Christians at all) but as a national community, with the roots of our institutions in the ground of the Bible and our most solemn communal moments, from coronations to funerals, mediated through the liturgies of the Church. A mass Adhan held there, or in any town square, is making a different point: that Britain is not a Christian country, and that - inshallah - one day it shall be Muslim. This is unacceptable to the British public and indeed incompatible with our constitution. As ever with these debates, the issue is partly one of kind and partly one of degree. There is an issue with Islam itself as a religion which in most interpretations does not admit of pluralism or freedom of conscience, and therefore is inherently aggrandising, including over territory. But with a bit of confidence and a bit of toleration we could handle that - if it were not for the issue of degree. It is the scale of Islam in Britain, and the ambition of its leaders for greater scale, that makes the problem. The numbers of people who assembled for the adhan in Trafalgar Square, clearly and openly claiming the territory for a faith with no connection (indeed, with strong doctrinal disagreement) with the model of Western liberal democracy that Britain has developed and exported to the world - that is the problem. The numbers, whether everyone there understood it this way or not (and I suspect many did), convey an explicit threat to the foundations of our country. Being relaxed about other people's religion is a good thing, a very British thing. I don't mind modern druids dancing around Stonehenge in my constituency (arguably, though the historicity is tenuous, they have a claim to the place). I don't mind small groups of Hindus or Buddhists or Muslims demonstrating the reality of Britain's religious toleration by worshiping in Trafalgar Square. But let's not kid ourselves about this adhan, or pretend that we're just seeing another harmless expression of Britain's religious diversity. We are seeing an abuse of liberalism, led by people who are not themselves liberal; or - let us imagine they are acting in good faith - who are themselves deceived about what they are doing. It should not happen again. And it would be good to hear the Church of England say so.

English
76
13
108
37.2K
Eamonn Moran
Eamonn Moran@Eamonnmoran·
@simongerman600 @Frances_Coppola An interesting point no body talks about much is the population explosion in Ireland just before the famine. The population nearly doubled in 50 years. An incredible jump. What caused that? Was it Potatoes? Was there improvements in mortality? I’m Irish and I have no idea.
English
7
1
2
1.4K
Simon Kuestenmacher
Simon Kuestenmacher@simongerman600·
Ireland’s population chart remains a wild one to look at. The country has still not recovered from the Great Famine (1845-52).
Simon Kuestenmacher tweet media
English
148
520
5K
225.5K
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@xShephardx How do they get to this point with an unusual control system where the best thing defenders can say is 'controls aren't important' or 'you can just learn them'
English
0
0
0
54
𝕾𝖍𝖆𝖉𝖔𝖜𝕳𝖊𝖆𝖗𝖙 🖤🗡️
I think i seen enough, im going to drop Crimson Desert for now, i actually really like it but im gonna wait in the hope they add a character creator and the option to change the controls at least, not a bad game but something im definitely in no rush to play at its current state.
𝕾𝖍𝖆𝖉𝖔𝖜𝕳𝖊𝖆𝖗𝖙 🖤🗡️@xShephardx

Here are my first impressions of Crimson Desert. +The World is gorgeous and lived in +Exploration is fun and addicting +The game is whimsical and fantastical +\-Combat takes time to click +\-Some quests are fun, some are not -Kliff has the personality of a Cliff -Controls

English
18
1
89
15K
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@VodkaGreece I agree but design re gameplay controls mechanics etc is so important. Eg why have obscure controller mappings how does that make a game better. You can say 'but you can learn the new mappings' but it's poor design..
English
0
0
0
119
VodkaGreece
VodkaGreece@VodkaGreece·
Gamers are quick to shit on games that are just money grabbing or a genuine slop fest to try and warrant a £70 price tag and rightly so (I’m one of them) But seeing the ambition from Pearl Abyss for Crimson Desert is refreshing, their attention to detail and pure scope of the world is genuinely insane👏
English
5
3
70
5.5K
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@cjsnowdon I assume the big lesson is we went through an overly lengthy process decided to build it then instead of building it we went through the process again etc
English
0
0
0
30
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@Dr_W_E_Bulmer It's probably appropriate that people whose morals come from a space fairy think we are ruled by Louis XIV
English
0
0
0
21
Both sides of the Tweed
Both sides of the Tweed@Dr_W_E_Bulmer·
Forget Bagehot, Dicey and Jennings. Constitutional conventions aren't real, apparently. By the same logic, the king could appoint Count Binface as Prime Minister and declare war on Andorra. I hope we are starting to see the scale and depth of the UK's constitutional crisis.
Dr. Calum Miller@DrCalumMiller

The claim that British monarchs "must" give royal assent to bills passed by Parliament is crypto-republican nonsense. Queen Anne did so in 1708. No constitutional crisis. No collapse of Parliament, democracy, or the country. Nothing substantive has changed since then. 🧵

English
3
4
13
1.3K
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@DisIdealist Absolutely..increasingly think it's there as an excuse to get dragged reluctantly into middle eastern wars
English
0
0
1
91
DisappointedIdealist
DisappointedIdealist@DisIdealist·
The open and frank conversation needed is inside the UK. Why do we have these huge, expensive military bases in Cyprus? Why is the UK in the eastern med? It’s not 1925. We’re not an empire any more. We’ve no need to guard Suez. Why are we spending money to be there at all?
Lewis Goodall@lewis_goodall

Cyprus PM on future of British bases: “When this unfortunate situation in the Middle East is over, we need to have an open and frank conversation about the status and future of the British bases in Cyprus,”

English
13
39
262
16.6K
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@oliver_drk If it takes 120 hours plus to finish then the dev needs to send review code out more than 2 weeks in advance or accept scoring of an uncompleted game
English
0
0
0
10
Oliver Darko
Oliver Darko@oliver_drk·
Crimson Desert is much anticipated and IGN needs those clicks. Personally I'm still not a fan of these "review in progress" scores for offline singleplayer games. If you're not ready then maybe don't slap a provisionally core on it.
Oliver Darko tweet mediaOliver Darko tweet media
English
7
2
27
2.5K
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@JaqueMc1990 @TheCartelDel but you want a review not for the score but for the description. At this stage most of us know what we like and dont like. I dont like long boss battles that you cant skip, i prefer gameplay to cutscenes etc. A review helps me know if this for me..
English
0
0
0
6
JaqueMc1990
JaqueMc1990@JaqueMc1990·
@TheCartelDel Much to my suprise, people for some reason still allow subjective reviews to rule what they try / can enjoy. But there's an entire sub culture in gaming that take review scores to be the gospel, and won't even touch something unless it achieves some arbitrary metric. Bizzare.
English
2
0
1
234
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@TheCartelDel but a problem is you have to spend 50 quid to play it.. so its good to know in advance whetehr you might enjoy it.. We used to have demos of course!
English
0
0
0
32
Care Not Killing Scotland
Ruth Maguire: “Are we going to be a country where the state funds dying but hospice care relies on charity?”
English
23
294
1.4K
31.2K
Synth Potato🥔
Synth Potato🥔@SynthPotato·
The next gigantic open world RPG for 2026 is going to Fable This is definitely one of my most anticipated games of the year, the life simulator aspects of it with being able to affect every single NPC's life seemed mindblowing. Fingers crossed it ends up a fantastic game!
Synth Potato🥔 tweet mediaSynth Potato🥔 tweet mediaSynth Potato🥔 tweet media
English
141
120
2.5K
116.9K
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@comittoxcell @TheEggman64 I do not care about scores but reading the actual review tells me what it would be like to play and it dies seem to have a number of my less favourite design decisions eg long boss battles you have to replay.
English
0
0
2
15
Jeff Rosepapa
Jeff Rosepapa@comittoxcell·
@TheEggman64 Help me understand why 63 reviews on Metacritic gave the game an 80-100 but 29 reviews gave it 45-78 & people are canceling reserves saying told you so? Yeah, the avg. score is 78 but the avg. of favorable scores is about 75%… 3/4 of the reviews liked the game.
English
1
0
0
31
Laurie
Laurie@TheEggman64·
Oh dear. This is just one review for Crimson Desert, but even still it’s a painful read; “the dialogue, characters, and story are laughably bad”, and “hindered at almost every turn by jankiness and puzzling design choices”. ign.com/articles/crims…
Laurie tweet media
English
64
4
72
28.1K
Browser of things
Browser of things@browser_things·
@TimVanDijck @TheEggman64 I don't care about scores. I care about finding out before buying and as said above some of my big red flags keep coming up. It just doesn't sound fun to play
English
0
0
1
7
Tim ☮️
Tim ☮️@TimVanDijck·
@TheEggman64 You cherry-picked the review tough. The average sits around 79 (which is probably still lower than most expect).
English
2
0
1
1.2K
Graham P ☮️
Graham P ☮️@gwpurnell·
(Possibly) my last word on Liam McArthur's bill. If the sponsors saw themselves as compassionate, why didn't they embrace safeguards that would reduce the danger of wrongful medical deaths or coercion? Why didn't they care about making it the safest legislation of it's kind? /1
English
5
10
79
1.8K
Luke Tryl
Luke Tryl@LukeTryl·
Would say the two most successful 21st Century UK social issue campaigns: Pro gay marriage (big shift in attitudes in short space of time) Anti Assisted Dying (even against public in principle consensus, and shifting elites during process) What have I missed (am sure loads!)?
English
26
10
102
36.3K
skywalker
skywalker@LouShack·
@Hossylass @browser_things @gwpurnell That's a really interesting concept. Can you tell me the safeguards for women in the Abortion Act, you know to protect them from abuse and coercion from the father?
English
1
0
0
22