And my point is that allowing further updates without having to abide by preservation is a giant loophole publishers absolutely WILL use.
There would simply never be a new FIFA game again. Only "updates".
Do you see what I mean?
And my point is that allowing further updates without having to abide by preservation is a giant loophole publishers absolutely WILL use.
There would simply never be a new FIFA game again. Only "updates".
Do you see what I mean?
I still believe they're not going for retroactive legislation.
Did I say otherwise?
Let me put some emphasis on what I have been saying.
Potential regulation does not need to be retroactive, in order to apply to current products.
Perhaps you are confusing "current" with "today", rather than with what is intended. That being the future point in time at which any such regulation comes into effect.
All those games are not exceptions, nor the main target of SKG.
What? I'm not saying they are.
Ross has made it pretty clear that the target is ALL games.
Potential regulation does not need to be retroactive, in order to apply to current products.
The only thing the initiative definitely doesn't look to do, is make publishers go back and spend resources on titles they haven't touched in years. Unlike what your initial comment suggests, currently live games do not fall into that category.
Helldivers hasn't shut down yet.
SKG absolutely seeks to protect games that have already been published. It won't apply to games that have already shut down.
But if the game is still making money? On the hook it goes.
Mo and Krill all over the lawn.
Speaking of muscle-mommies, have you read Claymore or Kengan Asura? Both great mangas with unwatchable anime adaptations.
The family must be fed!
Cool.
But the reason you're being downvoted, is that instead of commenting this, you made a comment that sounded like you were dismissing the dangers of PFAS, and dismissing it as the modern-day equivalent to lead, asbestos, and the like.
Which is what it is, and you clearly agree that it is.
Maybe lead with that, instead of the conspiracy angle.
Did you at some point read about how some of them, such as the ones used in frying pans, are unlikely to cause problems in the human body, and then completely stopped looking into it further?
It's a massive group of compounds, some of which currently look to be quite safe, but a significant number of which also have fully verified dangers (especially some compounds required for production).
It's not a catch-all game launcher.
It's a wine environment manager. And it is becoming increasingly good at simplying the complexity of setting up wine bottles for different things.
It's basically winetricks on steroids, with a really nice GUI to boot.
Running windows games is just one use-case.
Yes.
It's also the title of the franchise.