I went on a trip with some friends that also had decks so I put a sticker on mine to recognize it
It's been there since last november seems to hold up quite well. It's one of those made for electronics stickers
I went on a trip with some friends that also had decks so I put a sticker on mine to recognize it
It's been there since last november seems to hold up quite well. It's one of those made for electronics stickers
haven't used spotify for a while now but I heard you can specify if you don't want what you are listening to to affect your recommendations
in linux I use codium and add a symlink from code to codium, that way software that only recognizes code will work with codium (don't know why godot does it) and it works great, on windows I just couldn't make it work so I use code because unity only works with code and I have to use Unity for work also, I enabled the vscode store in codium because there are some extensions I need that aren't on the codium store
Spider-man remastered
I find Townscaper really relaxing, there's no objective, just a toy to make cute looking towns. Haven't tested it on steam deck tho.
If you like building/puzzles there's Shapez (this one I tried on steam deck and it might take some time to get used to the controls), it's like factorio but abstract and without resource management, you just make machines that modify and combine shapes to create new ones, it get's progressively complicated, if it's your thing you'll find it quite addicting so be mindfull of that.
For sims there's Two Point Hospital, (Two Point Campus came out recently but I haven't tried it), Planet Coaster and Cities Skylines (if you're into the hard stuff)
Here are some more narrative driven games that I like:
there's a decky plugin to use google drive or one drive (it should work with any other cloud service but requires extra setting up), haven't tried it but seems to do just that
thanks I hate it
what i see today is games are super accessible and everyone owns a portable gaming device, my parents are over 60 and they both play games on their phones, although they would't consider themselves gamers or anything close
i think the barrier to entry on core games gets higher with age so casual games on phones fit nicely within that demographic
i automate things so i have more free time for my hobby: automating things
i didn't de-lid mine, just changed the thermal paste and pads, and it's working fine, might considered doing it in the future
here's a video i followed, it shows a bunch of mantainance and restoration stuff https://youtu.be/iuOlxAYLTM0
i got a broken ps3 from a friend that i fixed and i'm having a blast but i would't say i recommend buying one, if you get one cheap, sure, go for it, i've seen people on reddit find the slim version for 50 bucks and many thrift store finds as well. if you're don't want the hassle of having an unsupported console, i would consider emulating on pc, i triend persona 5 a while ago and it looked better than on ps3
It came in this pack, don't quite remember where I bought it, I think it was a store in madrid