Stellar Blade is a single player game.
Stellar Blade is a single player game.
Because support is missing from SteamVR, existing games, or both.
None of these features are usable in SteamVR, or if they are, aren’t supported by any games, like HDR.
Nature is healing.
What? I didn’t want you to list a bunch of things off the top of your head. I asked for one factual thing, and you instead you provided a bunch of assumptions. If you can’t provide actual facts maybe just don’t state guesses like they’re true?
I stopped reading when you implied that Facebook invented pancake optics. They have been used in cameras for decades. And while I agree they’re the way forward in the future, saying they let more light in is factually incorrect: they only let about 10-15% of the light through. This page has a good overview of why that is and how they work.
Buying up game developers to make them exclusives and selling hardware at a loss to stifle competitors is the only “benefit” their money has produced. This is a net negative for VR as a whole.
Like 90% of what a modern VR headset is made of has come from their money.
Like what? I can’t think of a single invention they pioneered that’s used in their own headsets, let alone everyone else’s.
The Switch is 7 years old this month.
Try Sidebery instead.
Most games have a day one patch, but the game on the disc is usually playable without it.
“Could do”? I haven’t used Windows in a decade at least, but doesn’t it have ads in the start menu now?
I wish people would stop parroting this. For the vast, vast majority of games it isn’t true.
Show me a standard that was destroyed by EEE and I’ll show you a standard that never took off in the first place.
XMPP says hi.
Declaring Game Pass profitable right after they reclassified every Xbox Live user as a Game Pass user smells like creative accounting to me.
It’s not even a question anymore. Even if every single subscriber is on the highest tier, they’re not even close to making back their third-party costs to run the service, let alone server costs, cannibalized first-party game sales, and whatever else they pay to run it.
This article could be about any year from the past 10 years. Why do people still believe these “promises”?
It’s much faster.
Most of those were preexisting contracts they needed to fulfill. You’re the one who’s arguing in bad faith.
Astroturfing is a very real thing that major companies participate in to sway public sentiment.
60Hz has been the standard (at least in the US) since CRTs. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a 30Hz display.