When did you first play it and what other shooters had you played?
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raydenuni@lemmy.sdf.orgto
TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name@lemmy.world•Crusher's got gameEnglish
3·2 years agoWhy do you think that?
raydenuni@lemmy.sdf.orgto
TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name@lemmy.world•We've come a long way from the Magna CartaEnglish
16·2 years agoThis is now my second favorite “cart before the horse joke”.
Totally. Perhaps a better way to phrase it would be, the successful result of the adaptation was that birds spread their seeds instead of mammals. Until us.
Still a good joke as we’re mammals, but peppers’s spice is so that birds, and not mammals, eat their seeds and poop them out far away as birds aren’t bothered by capsaicin.
raydenuni@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Gaming@beehaw.org•Factorio Friday Facts #397 - FactoriopediaEnglish
7·2 years agoI appreciate when a company chooses to not manipulate its customers with sales pricing and instead has a fixed price.
raydenuni@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Gaming@beehaw.org•Warcraft 2 / Starcraft type games ( or clones, or engine recreations )English
4·2 years agoI don’t know that I would call Northgard a Warcraft clone. The mall is divided into tiles and each tile has its own resources and building limits. Units can only attack other units that are in their tile. There’s a much bigger emphasis on building up your tech tree and taking tiles.
Still, it’s one of the more interesting and fun evolutions of the RTS genre. If sci-fi is more to your taste, Dune the newer gameby the same studio is similar.

I think you have to take it within the context of when it came out. CoD4 and Mass Effect came out 9 years later. There wasn’t anything like HL in 98. Enemies that talked to each other and flanked you? Unseen before. Does it stand up to games now? We’ve learned so much since then. But I think you’d be hard pressed to find a modern shooter that didn’t trace its heritage back to HL.