And before that, they were in a separate section like they are now, but it had a thing you could click to hide that section entirely for 30 days.
Just because it’s less bad than the previous thing doesn’t mean it’s good.
And before that, they were in a separate section like they are now, but it had a thing you could click to hide that section entirely for 30 days.
Just because it’s less bad than the previous thing doesn’t mean it’s good.
I didn’t say it was legit, I said it has always worked for me.
I’ve bought a ton of stuff (both games and DLC) from G2A and never had any issues.
I have to smell the black pepper shaker any time I use it. Not because I’m worried that there’s something wrong with it, but because black pepper smells good.
It’s all a blur because I was maybe like 6 or 7 at the time, but I’m fairly certain it was Red Hat. The original, not RHEL.
I have vivid memories of playing a game that involved collecting gems and avoiding falling rocks in a maze, similar to Boulder Dash or Emerald Mine. I have no idea what it was, but I know it wasn’t Rocks’n’Diamonds because I played that a lot and the graphics were different.
Disappointment.
Rage comics.
Same, I like playing railworlds but I always get stuck when I start expanding my railway network because there aren’t enough resources for the expansion to pay for itself.
Does Factorio count?
Why say lot word when few word do trick?
ENT era, and specifically the Andorian Kumari-class.
Use whatever distro you’re comfortable with, unless it lacks the features you need. I prefer Ubuntu MATE, but I use Arch because the official and user repositories generally have the newest versions of everything and I don’t have to mess with PPAs.
I use Arch btw.
Sad? It is a good day for Twitter to die.
Microsoft Flight Simulator.
I get to fly planes for a year, and then I get enough money to buy my own plane in real life? Yeah, I’m doing fucking AWESOME. Let’s go!
It’s easier. You need enough room for the nose to swing around because the front wheels follow a wider trajectory than the rear wheels. The access road is usually much wider than the parking spots, so backing into the spot gives you much more room to maneuver.
You also have much better visibility overall. If you go in nose first, you can’t see the front corners of your car, and you also have terrible visibility when backing out of the spot. If you back in, the mirrors show you exactly how close you are to the cars around you, and you have an unobstructed view when you leave.