

People get addicted to drugs, alcohol, and gambling too; that doesn’t make it good for them.
Moved over from Reddit after the API debacle. Primary account history:
@[email protected] (2023) @[email protected] (2023–26) @[email protected] (2026–)


People get addicted to drugs, alcohol, and gambling too; that doesn’t make it good for them.


Racing games are personally not my thing, but thanks for your original contributions to the Threadiverse; it’s refreshing to see hobbyist posts on the platform. 👍


Be the change you want to see; if you’re into FNAF, find or create a community for it, post regular FNAF news as it comes out, and I’m sure you’ll find at least a few people interested in it. With enough people, others might start contributing too.


Nobody’s enforcing it so who gives a shit?
Because once people accept age-gating for any and all websites, enforcement (i.e. age verification) becomes a much easier sell to the average person who doesn’t care about their privacy.
A game that amounts to a graphically enhanced N64 game shouldn’t cost $50.
Edit: Buying games at inflated prices emboldens Nintendo to raise them further; if this were a new game they’d be pricing it at $70 or $80.


And at the very least, they shouldn’t be paying the fascists running it $2,000 a year to be there.
My favorite is Triple Klondike (the downloadable Steam version of this website was sadly delisted).


Inexpensive Bluetooth controller options are available to solve that problem too, though I was just suggestion the basics.


Depending on what you’d want to emulate, emulators can be very efficient on low-end hardware (i.e. gpSP for GBA).


Cartridge re-releases for the Neo Geo AES+ are $90, so clearly they’re trying to capture a market segment otherwise being served by emulation.


It’s not a dilemma if supporting SNK means supporting Saudi human rights abuses. Just emulate the ROMs; dilemma solved.


How creative of them, finding ways to enshittify an already shitty product.


Anything other than a commitment to allow hassle-free third-party app installations without the presence of Google Play Services is a distraction from the most meaningful change in Android 17.


I hate that I have just a shitty quality picture of a picture of that moment.
I’d personally still rather have the authentic moment captured than an AI-polished version of it.


It seems like 2026 is the year that Google’s other platforms will embrace the 64-bit era. Android TV and Google TV will require 64-bit app versions from August, and the company has now announced similar plans for Wear OS.


Also, there is enough open source code available that I would hope Anthropic doesn’t feel the need to train their models on potentially litigious code base.
The problem with this statement is twofold. Firstly, it is unrealistic to assume that leading AI companies are staying entirely above board in terms of code licensing. With how widespread AI is, this makes it all the harder for developers to enforce their licenses when many developers inevitably violate their terms without knowing.
Even if that code is open source, licensing terms typically require attribution that an AI is unlikely to provide for every segment of code cobbled together. When the developers that had their code taken and reused are unable to know who reused it, it is disingenuous to work under a ‘take first, ask later (if found out)’ mentality.


Unfortunately that also wouldn’t satisfy the requirements put in place by several operating system level age verification laws.


The device in the picture is a ROG Ally, not a Steam Deck. Without trackpads it’s a lot less useful, in my opinion.
App stores shouldn’t have to register at all. If nothing is done about Google’s plans to require developer registration to release apps, then their monopoly will be stronger than ever.
Unofficial updates; somewhat of a misleading title.