https://www.youtube.com/@elecblush Musician, Gamer, IT specialist
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- 12 Comments
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•China's internet is upset that a knock-off of its darling video game, 'Black Myth: Wukong,' is listed on Nintendo's storeEnglish
1·1 year agoI am chill. :) No need for either of us to read spite into the others comments. Text is bad at communicating tone :)
I guess my comment was meant more in general, not at you specifically (though I understand it being in a reply of course feels that way)
I am sorry my comment came of as hostile or combative
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•China's internet is upset that a knock-off of its darling video game, 'Black Myth: Wukong,' is listed on Nintendo's storeEnglish
2·1 year agoOh absolutely, I was mainly targeting the notion that the way “legit” companies distribute the profits is somehow more fair.
If anything these markets show what the actual cost of production is, so it shows how much profit could have been distributed to those actually producing the goods. (Including designers, factory workers etc)
A lot more people could have sustainable incomes instead of CEOs getting their third yacht…
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•China's internet is upset that a knock-off of its darling video game, 'Black Myth: Wukong,' is listed on Nintendo's storeEnglish
2·1 year agoLook, it’s a funny and ironic turn of events and my comment mainly tried to expand upon why this evokes this emotional response from some people.
Also, I don’t think most Americans identify with the shady practices of corporations either, so equating a undoubtedly shady history on copyright with the stance of all Chinese people everywhere is a bit… 🤔
As others have mentioned it’s also not accidental that the outrage is at the Nintendo store specifically. There is a lot of bad blood between the Chinese and the Japanese.
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•China's internet is upset that a knock-off of its darling video game, 'Black Myth: Wukong,' is listed on Nintendo's storeEnglish
2·1 year agoYea, better word indeed :)
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•China's internet is upset that a knock-off of its darling video game, 'Black Myth: Wukong,' is listed on Nintendo's storeEnglish
242·1 year agoYes, because that is where all the profit goes in Western companies, and not the CEO, upper management and stockholders…
You are not wrong in assuming that exploited labor is being under compensated, but different models of labor exploitation aside, people actually making value are not the people reaping the benefits.
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•China's internet is upset that a knock-off of its darling video game, 'Black Myth: Wukong,' is listed on Nintendo's storeEnglish
12·1 year agoAs if random internet outrage ever cared about getting the fundamental details correct, when there is rage to be had.
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•China's internet is upset that a knock-off of its darling video game, 'Black Myth: Wukong,' is listed on Nintendo's storeEnglish
502·1 year agoI think the cultural theme of the game is more reason for the “anger” than the gameplay formula.
Its based on the most famous Chinese mythological story / fairytale about the Monkey King Wukong.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_King
I have not deep dived into it, but I think it’s a treasured and well known story in China, and I assume a lot of Chinese people are proud of their mythology being a successful story outside of China as well.
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.ml•Windows 10 only has a year of support: 12 months left to keep Copilot off your desktop or learn Linux
3·1 year agoVirtual environments are really not viable for music production. Latency and other inconsistensies makes it a no-go.
High level Music production requires very low audio and input latency in addition to consistent and 100% accurate sound reproduction.
A virtual environment is a wildcard here that I at least would not bother trying to make work. (Not saying it can’t be done, just saying it would potentially be a big headache and extremely conditioned on spesific hardware, drivers and configuration settings.)
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Android@lemdro.id•Google has more than doubled Play Store's app price limit to $1,000English
282·2 years agoI mean a pianotuneR (as in a guy that tunes your piano) is pretty expensive.
These apps seem to be marketed as tools for professional piano tuners. And looking just at the screenshots it looks like it has a lot of tools and features outside of just showing the correct pitch.
If tuning pianos is your profession, paying 999$ once and writing it off as a business expense isn’t that far fetched.
(Better be a bloody useful tool though ;) )
Electricblush@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.ml•VPN by Google One is shutting down for good
2·2 years agoIt’s not the guy in the trenchcoat next to you you need to worry about.
It’s the fact that some unknown entity owns/has set up the WiFi.
Anyone working with complex network setup and admin will tell you how much you can abuse owning the network a user is connected to.
The network guys at work never use public WiFi, not hotels or anything. Neither do I, even with my much more limited knowledge of network administration.

Yea my immediate thought was, this is the “your Grandma is on Facebook”-moment for YouTube.