Honestly, though - “method or mechanic”, do you think palworld is a pretty blatant copy of Pokémon or not? Like, most of it. Not just a single bit.
Honestly, though - “method or mechanic”, do you think palworld is a pretty blatant copy of Pokémon or not? Like, most of it. Not just a single bit.
I missed this - what happened? (Searching now)
Sadly, I think this person is railing against “having more than just white guys featured” (as if that’s forced, when you start making games in new locations around the world) rather than the bland Ubi-style open-world map checklist that you might expect to be the sane complaint.
Fair enough.
Thank you for the response!
Just pointing out, once again, that games sold on the Epic store can be different prices to Steam. “Valve uses their market dominance to force the same price across marketplaces” is a nonsensical, incorrect statement.
That’s because the versions sold on the company site are for ArenaNet keys, not Steam keys.
The rule is only for selling Steam keys.
As has been pointed out by many other people in this thread, this is untrue.
If you are providing a Steam key, it has to be the same price as Steam. Otherwise, you can set whatever price you want (e.g. if you were selling on both Steam and Epic - like Borderlands 3, which frequently had sales on Epic where the price dropped below the Steam price)
https://partner.steamgames.com/doc/features/keys
It’s even fine to sell your Steam keys at a lower price in another place - as long as you’re planning to have a similar sale on Steam at some similar time.
It’s OK to run a discount for Steam Keys on different stores at different times as long as you plan to give a comparable offer to Steam customers within a reasonable amount of time.
TL;DR: Games sold on Epic could be any price they want. They’re no different to Steam, in general, because that’s what publishers choose.
I haven’t played it in years, how is it doing now in 2024?
I’m not saying everything in the world has been done, but “what, like Tiny Tina’s Wonderlands?”
Wow, I didn’t realise that was still about! I’m tempted to go check it out again!
From what the steam reviews say, it’s using Dosbox for the former.
Just FYI, it generally seems that none of these require origin or the EA app or any more than Steam as DRM.
Came here to say this. It hugely weakened any investment in characters and story, for me.
I would not recommend playing legion for the story. Or, arguably, at all - but particularly not for the story.
Out of interest, at a high level, why?
Did they patch out interesting exploits/speed run things?
Which C25K app is that? I’m using one that sounds less good! Would be interested to try that one.
Would you accept "in a way that can be reversed"?
Seems like they assumed their original foot-in-the-door would hold the slam, here.
I was really interested, but heard that they added Denuvo after the review window, which is somewhat offputting.
Fair enough!