You can usually tell by their feet. For example, if they’re behind their head.
You can usually tell by their feet. For example, if they’re behind their head.
Are you playing it on disc by any chance? I know that I couldn’t get it working due to “Games for Windows Live”. I had to purchase it a second time on Steam before it worked (since they removed GFWL from the Steam and GOG versions).
but have no idea how I should go about playing games on Linux
What distro?
Do you know what graphics card you’re using?
The appetizer before the main course.
Have you looked through PCGamingWiki?
Well necrophilia itself is pretty wrong
Placement is key. You want to make sure it’s close enough to still wake you, while far enough that you can’t turn it off without getting out of bed.
I use “Sleep as Android”.
That, and the smaller communities that are here tend to be split between multiple instances.
“An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind”.
No it doesn’t. At most the world no longer has depth perception.
This sounds like a plot straight from Gintama.
How about Planet Crafter? You crash land on a planet and you have to terraform the planet using the materials you gather.
There’s also Occupy Mars. This is more realistic. It’s just that there’s one aspect of it that I think you might love.
https://store.steampowered.com/app/758690/Occupy_Mars_The_Game/
Using a drill, crane and vehicle to break down boulders for example.
I haven’t played the games I’m about to recommend.
Is it Life Simulator type games you’re interested in? Or just specifically those concerning mining, smithing, and forging?
Especially with a decent modpack. Specifically, one that comes with Tinker’s Construct.
This type of stuff always reminds me of “Welcome to Nightvale”.
Honestly, the only reason I have Netflix in the first place is because it came bundled with my ISP. Can’t cancel it without phoning them up and I’m much too lazy to do so.
I recall a few games where I’ve had to limit the processor speed.
The weirdest one was an old adventure point and click. It was either “The 11th Hour” or “The 7th Guest”. It had a puzzle where you need to beat the CPU in a board game.
At the time it was released, it was possible. On a modern PC, not so much. The more powerful your processor, the more skilled the CPU was in the board game. Made it impossible.
“Another settlement needs your help.”