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It should be publicly-funded, like infrastructure. Having a video sharing platform is clearly very important, but I don’t think there are any companies that are both capable of running it and trustworthy enough to do so.
It should be publicly-funded, like infrastructure. Having a video sharing platform is clearly very important, but I don’t think there are any companies that are both capable of running it and trustworthy enough to do so.
The Saturn managed to do well in Japan after a soft relaunch with a new marketing campaign
Every platform wants to be every other platform nowadays
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I hope it goes away
The file size was why I uninstalled Tekken 7. This is going to be a pass for me.
Reminds me of that one Miyamoto quote
Yes, sell AI to artists, a demographic that is known for having enthusiastically embraced AI. Why not sell it to writers too? /s
In a sense, it’s the only way
Vendor lock-in is a big one. Losing access to your purchased games/apps and having a harder time bringing over your music and video libraries could turn people off, even if F2P games and streaming have made these less relevant. There’s also the matter of switching cloud storage providers
True, but they shouldn’t be the only option. A big part of why they sell the way they do is brand recognition.
Why do Android manufacturers keep turning their phones into iPhones? If I wanted an iPhone, I’d buy one.
This is reminding me of the collapse of Channel Awesome. If this goes the same way, LTT will continue to exist but not be as big
I know one thing it didn’t simulate was parking
Oh no, sure hope the Bible doesn’t contain anything objectionable
Especially if resellable physical games became widely available on PC again. In my eyes, that’s the biggest advantage consoles still have.
I see where he’s coming from, as when cross-play isn’t available niche online games can die quickly and exclusives are annoying, but if there was only one platform holder, that status would quickly be exploited with high online fees and tighter controls of how games are purchased/resold.
So productive!
Even if they would, look what at happened to Bleem. They successfully argued in court that the PS1 emulator they were selling was legal, but Sony kept suing them until Bleem went bankrupt paying legal fees. That was an actual corporation, too. What hope does an individual artist have?
The fewer devices listening in on me, the better.