[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 3 points 7 months ago

I didn’t expect to like Balatro as much as I did. I’m a big fan of deck builders but the poker theme was not super compelling to me. But wow, I’ve had a blast with it. Just boils down to a really good set of mechanics and some ridiculous fun builds. I don’t think it will hold my attention as long as like Slay the Spire or Monster Train but it was well worth the price.

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 1 points 7 months ago

Thanks for confirming this, all the rage around this game is exhausting. I loved the first game, would probably place it in my top ten of all time. I have no complaints about omg actually having to traverse the world. It’s the way the game is designed to play. If there are paid workarounds to play it a different way it doesn’t affect me or anybody else who loves this kind of game.

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 1 points 7 months ago

I’ll most likely end up picking it up and I’m glad it runs well. The reception has been wild to me. I loved all the jankiness of dragon’s dogma but I feel like a lot of people are buying this sequel and not knowing what to expect

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 12 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

The original dragons dogma had poor quality of life features and its arguably a large part of the appeal. No fast travel, no multiple saves. If you didn’t like your little ai character you had to advance pretty far to change it (and the same with fast travel, it sort of existed and was a surprisingly cool unique system but you had to get through a lot of the game for it). I’d compare it in a lot of ways to the first dark souls as far as not following gaming industry trends.

I was hoping dragons dogma 2 was more of the same honestly, I don’t think I care if travel stones can be purchased or whatever. Is it a bad game for those that liked the first one?

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 3 points 7 months ago

And those folks wouldn’t be commenting at all if he wasn’t paraded around like some “get away with murder” mascot. It was a massive and heinous childhood fuckup and he’s giving speeches at colleges now like he’s something one should aspire to be. Technicalities of the trial are not the real problem people have.

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 3 points 7 months ago

Yeah so I don’t think he went and killed some folks to get famous, I think he happened to kill some folks and got famous. And he’s malaligned, certainly a dumb kid like most of us were.

My criticism of Kyle is more around conservative folks who want to lean into that dumb kid fuck up like it’s something aspirational.

I think absolutely if you want to hold it up as a triumph of the justice system I’m with you. But as an example of a good human not so much.

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 3 points 7 months ago

Dude provocation is entirely dependent on how others feel. If I find you bringing a rifle to my kid's birthday party is unsettling then you’ve by definition provoked me. I don’t care if you’re not pointing it at anyone lol

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 13 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

I think that most critics of Kyle Rittenhouse don't disagree with the carriage of justice as much as the disgusting capitalization of his person after the fact. And the entire rationalization for bringing a weapon to a protest is frankly sick, whether he used justified force or not.

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 10 points 9 months ago

AI has been a field within computer science since at least the 1950s. It encompasses algorithms for making decisions, which is why so many technologies are labeled this way. “Intelligence” may seem like an odd choice of terminology (some people conflate it with sentience or similar), but general machine intelligence is one goal of this study, and the applications of AI are putative steps to that end.

Back when those guys started talking about what methods could get us there, things like decision trees, symbolic manipulation, neural nets, were all potential pathways that were on the table. So these get included in the field because that’s where and to what end they were produced.

Another thing is that intelligence can be narrow in its domain. A character in a video game that needs to move from point A to point B can do so following something like the A* pathfinding algorithm. In the domain of graph traversal/pathfinding, it’s hard to imagine something much more intelligent (or fit to solve the problem) than A* despite being a simple algorithm.

But yeah, as a marketing term it is kind of silly since most people don’t know what it means. It remains a useful categorization for a broad field of study/research in CS though.

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 8 points 9 months ago

Same. I thought it was a pretty underwhelming show after the first season but that theme song and seeing the printing/construction process never got old.

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 20 points 9 months ago

Didn’t he kill an employee with a box cutter? lol

I’d still rather hang with him than JP, you’re right on that.

[-] infamousta@sh.itjust.works 5 points 9 months ago

I got the same message on iOS Safari with no special config or UA switching (just an ad-blocker). I figure it’s a badly implemented feature. But holy shit I thought the browser wars settled out a long time ago and we had decent standards in place, guess we’re regressing back 20 years though.

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infamousta

joined 1 year ago