Latest Comments by Cley_Faye
Survive an elevator trying to eat you in co-op horror KLETKA when it releases February 19
20 Jan 2026 at 5:49 pm UTC
20 Jan 2026 at 5:49 pm UTC
Is that a new info box at the bottom of posts? Nice.
Ghostship is a new Super Mario 64 PC port from HarbourMasters
19 Jan 2026 at 1:29 pm UTC
19 Jan 2026 at 1:29 pm UTC
I was under the impression we already had a PC port of Super Mario 64.
Anyway, good news.
Anyway, good news.
Masters of Albion from Peter Molyneux / 22cans arrives in April
16 Jan 2026 at 5:24 pm UTC Likes: 1
16 Jan 2026 at 5:24 pm UTC Likes: 1
I'd really like for a good game from the guy (and the rest of the pretty good team in my eyes). If there's no last minute surprise bullshit shoved in, why not.
IO Interactive have fixed the crazy PC specifications for 007 First Light
16 Jan 2026 at 5:22 pm UTC
16 Jan 2026 at 5:22 pm UTC
I'm curious about the non-existent CPU thing, but aside from that, at least these make some sense.
I also wonder how much of these "new specs" is here because of an honest mistake, and how much is here because of the backlash. It's hard to trust anything these days.
I also wonder how much of these "new specs" is here because of an honest mistake, and how much is here because of the backlash. It's hard to trust anything these days.
Valve reveal all the Steam events scheduled for 2026
15 Jan 2026 at 7:19 pm UTC Likes: 3
15 Jan 2026 at 7:19 pm UTC Likes: 3
It was unlikely, but I kinda hoped there would be some hardware release date announcements too :D
After a poor relaunch, SPLITGATE: Arena Reloaded devs release a statement
7 Jan 2026 at 6:22 pm UTC Likes: 1
7 Jan 2026 at 6:22 pm UTC Likes: 1
Kernel level anti-cheat? Well, that's a way to push me away. Knee-jerk reaction aside, of course.
Although according to protondb this does run. I'm curious on how these works with proton/wine. Or maybe the store page is outdated.
Although according to protondb this does run. I'm curious on how these works with proton/wine. Or maybe the store page is outdated.
The best Linux distributions for gaming in 2026
6 Jan 2026 at 8:46 am UTC Likes: 1
Please don't think that internet memes and caricatures are that common. If anything, I'm happy to help. Showing someone that software and features aren't distribution specific does not sound like a bad thing to me, and if it was someone just trying to move away from windows/macos, my first reaction would not have been "YOU DID IT WRONG IDIOT". In fact, I would never say that. The point was comparing distributions, and the futility of specific distros that embed the *same* software with different settings.
But I guess rationale discussion between people is a thing of the past, and if I said something not utterly positive about their choice, I'm obviously mocking them and trying to push them down the pit of idiots that obviously exist, right?
Thankfully, neither he nor I reacted this way.
I stand by my point that *changing your whole OS* for a glittering title bar or a two-step process becoming a one-step process is not that interesting given the alternatives. If you think that's some elitist behavior, then so be it.
6 Jan 2026 at 8:46 am UTC Likes: 1
Quoting: LoftyThat friend was already a linux user. He wasn't "dipping his toes" in linux through popOS as its first adventure, so I doubt I've driven him off.Quoting: Cley_FayeWhen a friend came to me about PopOS telling me "now I can switch between the integrated GPU or the Nvidia one in one click!" I put my ubuntu laptop in his face, clicked on "nvidia-prime" in the menu, where I had that exact same feature.tbh your attitude seemed a little condescending towards your enthusiastic friend. If they found a solution to a problem on linux no matter how inelegant it was then that's a good thing, because they are more likely to stay on linux.
That said i wonder in the past just how many excited newcomers got bummed out by the well known "smart ass know it all" linux user and went back to windows or migrated to Mac?
(or console if they were interested in linux gaming).
Thankfully a lot of that elitism has died down now.
Please don't think that internet memes and caricatures are that common. If anything, I'm happy to help. Showing someone that software and features aren't distribution specific does not sound like a bad thing to me, and if it was someone just trying to move away from windows/macos, my first reaction would not have been "YOU DID IT WRONG IDIOT". In fact, I would never say that. The point was comparing distributions, and the futility of specific distros that embed the *same* software with different settings.
But I guess rationale discussion between people is a thing of the past, and if I said something not utterly positive about their choice, I'm obviously mocking them and trying to push them down the pit of idiots that obviously exist, right?
Thankfully, neither he nor I reacted this way.
I stand by my point that *changing your whole OS* for a glittering title bar or a two-step process becoming a one-step process is not that interesting given the alternatives. If you think that's some elitist behavior, then so be it.
Augmented Steam browser plugin added AI features from VaporLens
5 Jan 2026 at 6:04 pm UTC Likes: 4
I know *I* will not bother too much with game reviews on Steam from now on for that reason.
The new default settings to have this collapsed mostly avoid this issue, and people that still wants it regardless can open it once (the extension remembers the last state). It can make a good difference, because some people just assumed that this was a new integral part of the review system and stopped there without questions.
5 Jan 2026 at 6:04 pm UTC Likes: 4
Quoting: ChloeWolfieGirlSo weird to see backlash over features like this, I don't use these kinds of tools, but this is a feature that'd at least make me interested.There's many reasons for the backlash. While some people just jump on the "AI bad" side of the discourse, there is also the issue of the validity of the summary (an extremely weak point of LLM-based reviews that most people gloss over), and the issue of putting a very large summary in front of the actual reviews. Some people enjoy writing these and try to make these interesting; there is less enjoyment for them if they try to write something insightful just to feed a machine that will output bullet points.
I know *I* will not bother too much with game reviews on Steam from now on for that reason.
The new default settings to have this collapsed mostly avoid this issue, and people that still wants it regardless can open it once (the extension remembers the last state). It can make a good difference, because some people just assumed that this was a new integral part of the review system and stopped there without questions.
Quoting: ChloeWolfieGirlHowever Amazon also has an AI thing that summarizes reviews, and I find it really useful.How do you know if the review summary matches the reviews? That's the issue with AI summaries. They can be good if you're familiar with the topic at hand (a summary at the end of a meeting you've taken part in). They are terrible if you're not (like the non-proofread summary of a meeting the reader have not taken part in).
The best Linux distributions for gaming in 2026
5 Jan 2026 at 5:56 pm UTC Likes: 4
5 Jan 2026 at 5:56 pm UTC Likes: 4
My opinion on "distributions for gaming" is pretty "old man yells at cloud"ish.
If you have a relatively stable base distro, let's say Ubuntu (there's arguments to be had there too…), why bother switching to a different one that might or might not be based on your base, just because some stuff is preinstalled?
I get the "it's more streamlined" argument for some pieces of software, but as far as distribution goes, my main goal is pick one on which I can do whatever. When I hear "this is preinstalled on this distro" or "that is pre-configure on that distro", all I hear is that you could just run a script (let's make it a graphic-based executable that you one-click download somewhere…) to get to the same state, plus keeping your known base under it. Plus plus keeping whatever support you provide to open source projects and services less spread out.
When a friend came to me about PopOS telling me "now I can switch between the integrated GPU or the Nvidia one in one click!" I put my ubuntu laptop in his face, clicked on "nvidia-prime" in the menu, where I had that exact same feature.
Sorry, sorry, I'm rambling. But I'm quite annoyed at the plethora of "new distro" that are basically another one in a trench coat with a pretty hat. That's spreading resources, and large open source software are not exactly rolling in free resources, as far as I know.
If you have a relatively stable base distro, let's say Ubuntu (there's arguments to be had there too…), why bother switching to a different one that might or might not be based on your base, just because some stuff is preinstalled?
I get the "it's more streamlined" argument for some pieces of software, but as far as distribution goes, my main goal is pick one on which I can do whatever. When I hear "this is preinstalled on this distro" or "that is pre-configure on that distro", all I hear is that you could just run a script (let's make it a graphic-based executable that you one-click download somewhere…) to get to the same state, plus keeping your known base under it. Plus plus keeping whatever support you provide to open source projects and services less spread out.
When a friend came to me about PopOS telling me "now I can switch between the integrated GPU or the Nvidia one in one click!" I put my ubuntu laptop in his face, clicked on "nvidia-prime" in the menu, where I had that exact same feature.
Sorry, sorry, I'm rambling. But I'm quite annoyed at the plethora of "new distro" that are basically another one in a trench coat with a pretty hat. That's spreading resources, and large open source software are not exactly rolling in free resources, as far as I know.
Firefox dev clarifies there will be an AI 'kill switch'
19 Dec 2025 at 9:49 am UTC Likes: 6
If the upstream (Firefox) starts messing up with a lot of features that used to work fine but are now entangled with unwanted bloat, each fork have to do more work to untangle the mess. And, when the upstream codebase inevitably starts to deviate too much, maintaining the fork gets exponentially tedious. It's not like LibreWolf's devs said "I want no AI and tracking" and poof, it's done.
If the worst happen and the cleaned up Firefox forks have to completely separate from the upstream, then any future improvement (and that would include spec conformance and fixes) will have to be manually cleared again and backported from a source tree that's more and more distinct over time. I have no idea about the resources available to LibreWolf, but that would end up meaning maintaining the whole thing instead of a fork. That's a big task.
19 Dec 2025 at 9:49 am UTC Likes: 6
Quoting: doragasuToo late, today I switched to LibreWolf after literally DECADES of loyalty, and everything is working great, I'm not going back unless things change A LOT.There is a fundamental problem with depending on a *Firefox* fork to alleviate potential Firefox issues.
If the upstream (Firefox) starts messing up with a lot of features that used to work fine but are now entangled with unwanted bloat, each fork have to do more work to untangle the mess. And, when the upstream codebase inevitably starts to deviate too much, maintaining the fork gets exponentially tedious. It's not like LibreWolf's devs said "I want no AI and tracking" and poof, it's done.
If the worst happen and the cleaned up Firefox forks have to completely separate from the upstream, then any future improvement (and that would include spec conformance and fixes) will have to be manually cleared again and backported from a source tree that's more and more distinct over time. I have no idea about the resources available to LibreWolf, but that would end up meaning maintaining the whole thing instead of a fork. That's a big task.
- Survive an elevator trying to eat you in co-op horror KLETKA when it releases February 19
- Draft code submitted to KDE Plasma turns it into a full VR desktop
- Proton Experimental brings updates for MonoGame, Rockstar Launcher and more
- Valve tweak Steam AI disclosure form for developers to clarify it's for content consumed by players
- No Rest for the Wicked co-op update lands on January 22 and it hit a big sales milestone
- > See more over 30 days here
- Casual/Social places for developer chatter
- simplyseven - Will you buy the new Steam Frame?
- eev - One-time logout
- Liam Dawe - Away later this week...
- Liam Dawe - Weekend Players' Club 2026-01-16
- grigi - See more posts
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