YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
This is a talk from BenUI for #notGDC.
Covers UI / UX best practices and thinking through the lens of:
- Letting the player know something
- Letting the player do something
- Letting the player feel something
Slides are available as well
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
This is a talk from BenUI for #notGDC.
Covers UI / UX best practices and thinking through the lens of:
- Letting the player know something
- Letting the player do something
- Letting the player feel something
Slides are available as well
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
This is a talk from BenUI for #notGDC.
Covers UI / UX best practices and thinking through the lens of:
- Letting the player know something
- Letting the player do something
- Letting the player feel something
Slides are available as well
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
This is a talk from BenUI for #notGDC.
Covers UI / UX best practices and thinking through the lens of:
- Letting the player know something
- Letting the player do something
- Letting the player feel something
Slides are available as well
Over my life, I've noticed that my expenses for living fall into one of three buckets:
- Exciting buys
- Wise purchases
- Necessary costs
But I'm mostly curious about that first one...
What is your favorite kind of exciting buy?
My exciting buy might be a new musical instrument even though I have plenty, a new video game, purchasing art, a vacation, a luxurious meal, etc.
And less on the fun side of things, my other categories would shake out like:
- A wise buy might be investing in a house or business, putting money away for savings, or spending a premium on a BuyItForLife kind of purchase to avoid buying a new one every year.
- A necessary buy is probably the same as most others: housing costs, utilities, clothing, household goods, food, transportation, etc.
According to the docs, there should be a lemmy-ui
folder that was created by the Ansible install. Within that folder, the app is set up to search for an extra_themes
folder by default.
For native installation (without Docker), themes are loaded by
lemmy-ui
from./extra_themes
folder. A different path can be specified with LEMMY_UI_EXTRA_THEMES_FOLDER environment variable.
Digging into the docker-compose.yml
file used by the Ansible playbook, it looks like this is where extra themes directory is mapped into the lemmy-ui
service.
Build your next website like it's not yet 1999. (Use lots of GIFs.)
Have always had a huge soft spot for Neocities, happy to see it getting some time in the news.
I made this dumb game years ago and it somehow is just still there, being a weird HTML game on Neocities.
For me, I enjoyed D4 as a nice campaign. Played through a few times, once with my partner and another solo.
D4 pros: Impeccable game feel, moment to moment combat, graphics and even some nice storytelling. Enjoy the QoL features for alts and the myriad of endgame loops; Helltides are a lot of fun.
D4 cons: Dungeons are boring to me. Builds that feel fun and powerful are limited to 0-2 per class; a big letdown. Weird network / instance lag which stands out among the otherwise polished aesthetic. Middling open world re: exploration to reward ratio.
PoE pros: Deeeeeep. Hardcore. Aspirational? Still haven't cleared the campaign despite getting closer each league. Lots of builds and skill variety.
PoE cons: Feels like the oldest baguette ever to exist. Wildly stiff gameplay. Ugh its such shit compared to D4. Like DMC vs Skyrim level of difference. Disparate, cheap feeling UI and tacked on storytelling. Exudes HardXCore__Statzz.xls energy and feels practically impossible to navigate a viable build without a guide.
In the end I think Grim Dawn outplays both D4 and PoE. Check it out if you love ARPGs