tray5895
@tray5895@feddit.nl
- Comment on As Microsoft Forces Users to Ditch Windows 10, It Announces That It’s Also Turning Windows 11 into an AI-Controlled Monstrosity 4 days ago:
I personally had some trouble wrapping my head around distrobox while using bazzite and trying to install coding dependencies, but I’ve been having a great time gaming and programming on Nobara! The nice thing with Bazzite is the integrated distrobox which lets you run something under any linux OS (and even windows, I think?), and should theoretically be good for coding, so if you spend more time than me you should be able to program just fine. Maybe VSCode with remote ssh addon or something.
- Comment on The Simpsons: Hit & Run modders have made their own Futurama total conversion, with future and ramas 6 days ago:
Also if it isn’t sold anymore, my go-to website for games is myabandonware.com It tends to have descriptions of the compatibility with modern systems, and for hit and run it has the modding tools linked. For other stuff it has the patches you need to run it, usually
- Comment on Today's featured article on Wikipedia: Terraria 2 weeks ago:
It is really rough starting without any pointers, since the game does kind of expect you to have a wiki open (imo). You can talk to the guide repeatedly (granted he isn’t dead) and he gives you some of the picture, but not the full picture.
Usually I build houses (check wiki page for details on this since the guide does not explain it well)
-> go caving to get a few heart crystals and silver/gold armor (usually caves are accessible from the surface, break the pots too for money)
-> visit corruption/crimson to bomb 2 demon orbs/heart thingies, then gtfo
-> visit jungle for some better gear (including an ivy whip) (you may die, so put your money in a piggy bank!)
-> build boss arena (just a line or 2 of platforms with a few campfires and sunflowers works wonders) and summon him (or wait for a “you feel an evil presence” night)
-> after that, you have a pretty good basis to explore the different weapon/armor build options, go deeper in the ground, try some different events, find new accessories, etc.
Terraria is all about exploring and the main progression is tied to bosses that may need a specific place to be spawned, or are tied to some other condition. The guide does update his dialogue as time goes on, so you can keep talking to him to figure out what is next slowly. The wiki can point you in the direction of the next armor set to build, or the next accessory/weapon to try to get for your chosen archetype (which is pretty flexible, you are totally free to mix and match your weapons-- like using a summoner weapon on a melee character). And the wiki can tell you about what boss or event you should prompt next. Enjoy!