They've been wondering all this time
They've been wondering all this time
They've been wondering all this time
You're viewing a single thread.
I used to hate when this happened to me. Someone reviving a post from ages ago to answer a question that I already found months/years ago.
But hey, it could help someone else in the future if I didn't go back and post the answer to my own question (spoiler alert: I didn't) so now I just do what OP does and thank them for their time, move on with my day. Chuckle at the stupidity of my youth.
Some people get angry about things like that. Just be chill, they probably didn't notice how long ago it was posted.
Yes, many forum troglodites have this heinous reaction. Many of them are incompetent forum moderators. They are upset because they have notification of all changes happenning on the forum but this isn't novel and interesting to them personnally so they attack it with words like "necroposting". Those mostly recycled bbs people with almost no life left in them or OCD people who must compulsively complete and categorize everything and are upset when something is added to something they believed completed. Eventually we will rid our information ecosystem of these, at best, overzealous users or at least marginalize them so they stop causing damage, cutting connections, creating deadends and stopping progress generally. It's like I always say, progress occurs one funeral at a time.
I still occasionally get replies on reddit from threads that are over a decade old. I used to use reddit a lot, but that has dropped to almost nothing after switching to Lemmy.
I've gotten that here, which is incredibly surprising because search on Lemmy kinda sucks. I haven't been here a decade, but I did get some replies from a year old comment I made.
Oh, me too! I think sometimes it's people sorting by TOP/ALL or just scrolling all the way through some of the less active communities.
search on Lemmy kinda sucks
It's quite good in my experience, I was able to find a few old threads with a few keywords
It's okay for what it is, but it's limited to communities and posts cached on the instance. And search engines are often worse.
I think it was just a few years ago they changed it to make that even possible
Maybe I'm remembering wrong, but I thought it used to be possible, then for a number of years they started "archiving" posts and not allowing interaction, then they changed it back.
hm, yeah probably, I'm just not remembering when it was initially possible
I checked Reddit last month for the first time since June of 2023 and had 4 notifications. 3 of them were about buying into Reddit's fucking shitass IPO. I guess people just aren't interested in my half-life hot takes :(
What, like Blue Shift > Opposing Force or HL1 > HL2? Or lore-related stuff?
Uhh yes. Oh boy, an invitation to ramble!
Ah jeez I'm gonna stop. Feel no obligation to read any of that. But yeah I used to post about all kinds of half life stuff. Once I wound up permabanned from okbuddyhalflife when I argued that valve popularized lootboxes and gaben was not a good billionaire
I agree with all your opinions except I would give more credit to HLA as a first timer's VR experience.
I feel that excuse only goes so far. It's funny; the original Half Life was my first PC shooter experience, and Alyx was my first VR experience, but HL1 manages to be engaging for me even now while Alyx already feels stale. Like, I get the decision to dumb the movement way down for VR first timers who might get motion sick, but it goes way too far and offers vanishingly few options for people who might want more immersive physics. Or, like, a sprint button. Apparently I have naturally strong VR legs, but jeez, it bothered me even on my first time with a headset
Other things should still have had more room to expand as the game runs on, too. There's so little weapon variety and even among what it does have, the SMG and pistol fill almost the same niche. Apparently they made the AI painfully bad on purpose, but why couldn't they have saved a more engaging combat experience for the endgame or higher difficulties? And the constant orb puzzles they used to replace the traditional physics based ones get incredibly repetitive, especially when replaying the game.
It fails to iterate on the mechanics it introduces in meaningful ways, instead choosing to introduce new things that are entirely self contained (i.e., the Jeff sequence and the final level's vortigaunt blasts). Like, Jeff was super memorable, but part of the reason for that is he breaks up some seriously repetitive gameplay, and nothing about that level is ever relevant again.
Plus I have other gripes about sound design, physics (especially for heavy objects), even the way fall damage is handled. And the way it retcons Ep2 feels cheap to me. Idk. The game was ultimately fun, but flawed far beyond what I think can be said of the earlier games. Obviously I'm biased, but I wound up having more fun with HL2VR than Alyx.
I think it has to be seen through the eyes of soneone's first VR experience. Which already is where most of the innovation takes place. As far as the game itself, I think it's more streamlined, polished and narratively coherent version of HL2. I think as a whole it does a good job of blowing away most first time players.