Ah! Thank you. That is good to know.
Ah! Thank you. That is good to know.
To me it also feels like the ratio of low effort content posts or reposts VS original content has changed considerably. At least when browsing /r/all.
I got some of my OC removed on reddit. When that happened, I got a message from the sub’s moderators about the reason. Sometimes the reasoning did not make sense to me but in most cases it was in some way understandable. (I am also sure I must’ve pissed of a mod of the German sub because at some point they deleted whatever I posted…)
Anyway, what I want to say is: I got one OC post removed here on lemmy and was given no notification nor explanation. I only noticed it by accident. I hate it here.
Good bot.
Don’t know if it’s good content but I really like posting here. 😎
I want this guy’s energy. Nothing could stop him!
I take Steam’s labels with a grain of salt.
Just last week I tried Ghostwire Tokio and Deathloop, both labeled as “Steam Deck verfified”. The first title had massive framerate issues on lowest setting which causes hige input lag on the Deck (even when limited to 30fps) and the second one will freeze on Level transitions after the Deck was in sleep mode.
Then there are titles that reliable do not recognize my PS5 controller when the Deck is docked. I wouldn’t recommed the Deck to normal consumers after my experiences over the last year with it.
Awesome that we can officially control the vibrance then. I was a disappointed with the low vibrance for the first week or two but got used to it and haven’t thought about it for the last half year, though.
Remote play on Steam Deck (and previously on the Steam Link) works fine for me, if the PC is connected via Ethernet while the Deck/Link is connected via WiFi. There’s no discernable inlut lag for most games. But half the time I run into random issues with controllers not being recognized properly or sound cutting out. It’s such a disappointment.
The third one eluded me for some time, too. I accidentally caught it while flipping channels some months ago. Don’t ask me what it was about, I already forgot everything. But there was a cute little bird in it.
Back when I started using Reddit it was frowned upon to post OC. I remember some subs had rules that you would be banned if you more than like 10% of your posts were OC.
The guy actually wrote software? Like he coded it?
I love my steam deck but there’s enough games from my library that won’t run at all or only run after some manual trickery in desktop mode.