DM of the Rings Remastered CXXIII: You Go, Girl
This week was going to be more Rimworld, but I made a decision that has robbed me of all the free time I had. I got Balatro.
I never thought a poker Rougelike would work as well as it does, but it has so much feedback through its bells and chimes on every little action, that it is very appealing to my brain.
I know I’m late to the Balatro party. I don’t tend to play new games.
Now I’m going to finish writing this so I can continue playing Balatro. I guess I should also ask what everyone else is doing this week. What’s going on with you guys this week? Balatro?
I have written before about Lifeless Planet, one of my favorite games. It’s short, not difficult (although I still haven’t tried to get the achievement with no lives lost; I really don’t think I can do it. Likewise the speedrun, although I’m more optimistic about that one) and has a fantastic sci-fi story. A crew of three American astronauts in a post-Apollo pre-end-of-the-Cold-War alternative timeline travel at twice the speed of light for 15 years (i.e. 30 Light Years away) to a newly-discovered green and oxygen-rich planet. This is a one-way mission (as far as you, the main character knows) to verify a habitable planet reachable by Earthlings. However on arrival your capsule crash-lands and you discover a barren, lifeless world. Having been left for dead by your colleagues, you follow their footsteps and soon discover that this world appears to have been *already settled* (barely) by the Soviet Union! You learn as you explore the planet and the Soviet structures present that the U.S.S.R. discovered a “portal” in Siberia in 1974 that transported them instantly to this lush green planet. The Soviets immediately began quietly establishing themselves here before announcing the discovery to the world. They also discovered that the green moss or algae that covered EVERYTHING was actually a power source! They learned to tap into this substance for UNLIMITED POWER! They discovered artifacts from the alien race that created the portals, including the remnants of other portals and many other devices, and a portal that let them return to Earth. Unfortunately soon after switching over to the “green” substance as their power source, all life on the planet began to die. The portal from Earth became unstable, destroying anything sent through it. Yes, including people. The portal that returned the Soviets to Earth suddenly changed to show an alien city full of tall skyscrapers and round portals. Also the Soviet scientists realized that time passed on this planet much more quickly than on Earth. Minutes on this new planet equaled months on Earth. As the Soviets died off, one scientists expounds that the alien city visible through the “return” portal isn’t an alien city at all; it *is* the Earth…the Earth as it would appear hundreds if not thousands of years in the future. You, the American astronaut, having been guided through all this by a Soviet woman who somehow hybridized with the native life energy and sacrificed herself to bring life back to this world, knowing the final portal is the only way forward to save his life, steps through the portal to a lush world and an unfamiliar city. The End. (there’s also a sub-plot about letting go and living your life to the fullest, but honestly it’s not that important)
Continue reading 〉〉 “Lifeless Moon: A Worthy Sequel?”
This week I was busy with work, so I only got to play a bit of Rimworld.
The Anomaly DLC has grown on me over the past few days. While I still don’t think it adds much to the main gameplay loop, I do think the entities that you face add some new, fun ways to challenge your colony. The entity containment system is neat, but space consuming. Keeping a bunch of entities is worth it to me anyway because I really like the bioferrite generators. I think Keeping a few monsters in a cell; for fueling a generators that produce 4000 W of power is pretty good. Even with a small caveat of crating a -6 moodlet for colonists nearby.
Anyway, what’s everyone else doing this week?
More on that in a minute. I decided to try using Opera on Linux instead of Firefox. My motivation is the influence Google has been exerting on Firefox coupled with suspiciously-rapid “updates” over the last couple of months or so. Of course, I want to be clear: choosing Opera over Firefox because of problems with Google’s influence is a bit like saying “I don’t like how General Motors controls Opel so I’ll buy a Chevy instead.” Firefox is still based on the Gecko engine; Opera is built on Chromium. As in, Chrome. I have, however; accomplished some of the things I needed to do in order to move on to maybe a more secure and less-Google influenced browser, like maybe LibreWolf. Most importantly I broke my dependence on Firefox’s sync settings, and the Linux version of Opera (in my experience so far) WILL NOT import ANYTHING from any external browser. Or rather, at least; the EASY way. It won’t detect that I have Firefox installed. I had to manually export bookmarks to a file then import it. And since I’ve been meaning to move all my Firefox-stored passwords to Bitwarden for a while, I finally went through that process. After some setup Opera works…fine. I have noticed that it slows down after a while doing playlist management in YouTube, but some things work better on Opera than on Firefox, like video redirects on some sites. Certain ones don’t work on Firefox; they do on Opera. Bit of a surprise honestly, because I thought they were just broken. I will likely try LibreWolf sooner rather than later. Firefox works *well* for me, I just want to get further away from Google.
Continue reading 〉〉 “I Grew Up With Two Songs Called “Forever Young””
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