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2 yr. ago
  • Linda Cubed Again, for the Playstation 1. It's a Japanese RPG released in 1997, with an English fan translation released last year (after 10 years of work!)

    I was surprised by some of the systems implemented in the game: a working bank system, some locations change over time, dynamic weather with effects on the environment (i.e. rainfall can flood lower levels of caves), and more.

    There's a youtube video that goes over the story, but overall I'd say it's a pretty solid pokemon-like that deserves more attention. I should mention that the game is pretty dark and features a lot of taboos. The github link describes them in a content warning section, in case you want to try it for yourself

  • Don't read the comments in the linked article. Biggest mistake of my life

  • Does anyone have a list of acceptable post-coitus activities? I wouldn't know, as I'm just a delicious meal you see.

  • I remember suggesting Lemmy to mods of a popular subreddit, during the API Shutdown 2 years ago

    They told me they had no idea how to even use it and would rather just use Discord. I check a couple months ago and they still exist on Reddit...

  • A couple times in Linda Cubed Again. The game's next objectives are told to you by characters, or through the in-game voicemail system.

    However, there is no "current quest" screen so if you take a break from the game, you can easily forget where you left off.

    Also, it doesn't help that the game was only released in Japan (and fan translated only recently) so there's not a lot of walkthroughs you can follow.

  • MusicBrainz Picard

    It's a GUI tool that gives you the ability to tag songs in bulk. It uses the MusicBrainz database to provide relevant metadata, and also provides user plugins (like the Last.fm plugin I mentioned)

    I get my songs in batches (through Bandcamp and youtube-dlp) every couple of months, so GUI is fine for me.

    However, I'm seeing a CLI alternative called https://beets.io/ ? Apparently it is a CLI tool that also queries the MusicBrainz database (or Beatport, or Discogs), and apparently integrates well with Lidarr. I never tried it, however.

  • Not entirely automatic, but I found that Navidrome (at least when you use a third party client like Feishen or Symfonium) has smart playlists. I use that to write some simple queries like:

    By genre:

    • Ambient
    • Downtempo

    By listening habits:

    • All Favorites
    • Rediscover Old Favorites
    • Last 100 Songs Played
    • Never Listened To
    • Top 100 Songs

    and so on.

    Obviously, the genre smart playlists assume your music has Genres tags. I use Picard (with the Last.fm genre plugin) for that.

  • Ripping a tag from a pillow that says "Under Penalty of Law: Not to be Removed By Anyone but the Consumer"

  • At first I was like "haha look at the funny hobo cop, no pants".

    By hour 70 I decided to finally read Chomsky, 11/10 can recommend.

  • Not me I'm cool 😎

  • Rockstar's site, so it's official.

    ...but it would be hilarious if a Rockstar intern misheard that during a meeting and posted it anyways. 0% chance of that happening, however

  • For now, until the organic apes are replaced by computer apes

  • Fair enough

    Edit: Not sure if you'll see this, but I agree with your viewpoint. I wonder if it's the initial presentation (post lacking context) that causes mass downvoting? Without it, it looks like spam (although I don't think this post is).

  • I remember having fun playing the demo, but felt the humor was too Taika Waititi-ish for my tastes.

    Glad to see it's out, of course.

  • They are so precious 🥹

  • Take this down nephew

  • I found https://radicle.xyz/ but I've never used this technology before. Maybe someone can shed some light?

  • 196 @lemmy.blahaj.zone
    ChickenAndRice @sh.itjust.works

    How the Far Right Killed My Brain Cells Rule