This means people in the test market are clicking on those ads. Not much we can do about it at that point - it works therefore they’ll use it.
This means people in the test market are clicking on those ads. Not much we can do about it at that point - it works therefore they’ll use it.
Oh cool, I didn’t realize that was possible. That would be a great reason to use the plugin. I never really play non controller supported games with the Deck, so I just have the track pads set to mouse and scroll for the occasional desktop task on the host and the paddles set to Moonlight shortcuts.
Is there still an advantage to doing it this way after the desktop Big Picture update? Is it different than using the controller configuration menu on the host PC?
I don’t think they care about this feature. Presumably, they don’t see enough people using it to justify properly maintaining it, much less improving it.
As others have said, Moonlight + Sunshine works much better. Add Moonlight as a non-Steam game on your Deck and set it to launch Big Picture directly on your host. That’s my setup and it’s pretty seamless. Ever since the Big Picture update for the desktop client, I forget I’m even streaming sometimes because the interface is the same.
It’s a great game by all measures, but it really feels more like a sequel to the last two Divinity games rather than the Baldur’s Gate series. The only thing it really has in common with the old games is the setting, a few recurring characters, and the fact that it’s based on D&D. Otherwise, they are about as different as CRPGs can get.
If you want a spiritual successor to the old infinity engine games, look at the two Pillars of Eternity games and the two Pathfinder games.
r/redditrequest is a disgusting feeding frenzy right now. For every mod that’s continuing the protest or has already been “fired”, there’s a dozen people desperately begging to be allowed to do free labor for that tiny bit of authority they’ll get on their corner of reddit.
“In addition to setting guidelines for their forums, many are quasi-influencers who engage and lure users. And unlike counterparts elsewhere, Reddit’s mods are unpaid. That makes them an odd hybrid of employees, customers and suppliers. Researchers at Northwestern University estimate that Reddit’s mods perform at least $3.4 million worth of labor annually.”
It’s a good explanation of why Reddit’s structure is both brilliant and fragile. They depend on this labor which costs them nothing, but that also means they don’t really have control over them. Huffman can’t just say shut up and get back to work since they’re not on the payroll.
It also paints a much bleaker picture of their business prospects than most of the other articles I’ve seen. They seem believe the weaknesses that were revealed by this blackout are going to prevent them from going public any time soon.
What the hell are those comments…
I’m the same: I used it a ton when I first got it and now it’s collecting dust. Here are my personal issues with it:
I guess I essentially just wanted a Switch that could use my Steam library for 2D indies and older games.
Aside from that, I think I also kinda bought it to rejuvenate my interest in gaming, but it only did that for a few months. That has nothing to do with the Deck though.