Might hop on with a few friends in a few days, I'm already excited to see the current state of the game!
extarion
Two or three even, by the looks of it: Worlds Part II, Relics, and Beacon. They're on a roll.
We would have solar panels installed beforehand, so that's fair, does a little for lessening my guilt.
We will likely have AC installed at home before the next summer.
I don't like it, particularly because of the impact on climate and energy consumption, but with the prolonged heat nowadays, it's become nigh impossible to keep our home comfortable throughout most of the summer. :(
A new game from Yacht Club?! Count me in, this looks amazing!
I think it very much depends on what games you're looking to play, but I've been having a wonderful experience ever since I fully switched to Linux earlier this year.
I'm currently on Kubuntu and for games I'm using Steam, Heroic Games Launcher (GOG & Epic Games), and Lutris (Battle.net).
My experience with Steam has been pretty much flawless, Heroic Games Launcher was fairly straightforward to setup, and Lutris was pretty easy as well -- mostly took some extra time due to bad reading on my part.
I mostly play singleplayer games (e.g. Baldur's Gate III, W40K: Rogue Trader), with the occassional multiplayer game thrown in there (e.g., The Planet Crafter, Guild Wars 2). So far, I've had no issues besides having to install Proton-GE in favor of Steam's Proton layer due to some iffy cinematics in games, but that seems to be par for the course when following many guides online.
The main games that don't seem to work are those that require kernel-level anti-cheat, think PUBG or the upcoming Battlefield. Which is unfortunate, but I can personally live without. ProtonDB is an excellent website to check out before you make your switch, so that you can see which games won't work.
No need to require something for an OS they don't plan to support at all anyways, I suppose. :(
It might be a bit naive, but here's to hoping that it's just a stepping stone for a proper alternative search engine.
While I'm glad to see Qwant and Ecosia's progress, I have to say a search index "designed specifically for LLMs and generative AI agents" was not quite what I was hoping for when I saw this pop up.
Whilst I suppose this has been known anecdotally by the gaming community for a long time, it's good to see more academic research reinforce it. Hopefully it leads to better treatment options for the addicted.
I'm sometimes still surprised about people's outdated views on (video) games as a hobby, even among younger generations.