I really wish the ttrpg.network munis were more consolidated in general. It seems like the ubiquity of lemmy.world has made it hard for other instances to carve out a niche
I really wish the ttrpg.network munis were more consolidated in general. It seems like the ubiquity of lemmy.world has made it hard for other instances to carve out a niche
!osr@lemmy.world (Inactive, but I’d love to see this one get some new activity, I just started getting into more OSR stuff recently)
Yeah, you could make it the “traditional/tabletop games” thread, in the spirit of the divide between eg. /tg/ and /v/ on ye olde 4chan
No. But I’d comment with some of said communities in the gaming thread
Maybe broaden “video games” to just “games” to let the board gamers, TTRPG-ers, and CCG-ers post about their stuff as well. Right now I feel like those don’t have a great bucket in the categories there.
A more accurate and detailed explanation is available by running man hier
Fun fact: you get more accurate info by simply running man hier
It’s entirely possible to use, enjoy, and benefit from Linux while also using proprietary software. Your attitude only hurts the reputation and adoption of Linux by perpetuating the notion that you’re either all-in or else you’re out. Your idea of “Linux the lifestyle” is a fantasy.
In other words, RTFM
linuxcommand.org is a good resource for the command line specifically, and there are guides there for some other things like tmux.
Once you have a foundation of basic Linux skills, there are so many different directions you could go with the learning, it’s hard to write a singular guide. At that point it’s best to simply read up on different topics on the archwiki or similar resources.
!rpg@ttrpg.network and various other munis from ttrpg.network
Depends if you care more about performance or ease of use. Based on the fact that OP hadn’t considered VM as a solution, I assume they aren’t super familiar with hypervisors.
Can you install windows in a VM instead? VirtualBox is easy to set up.
Right, but subscribing to a community doesn’t obligate you to post there.
What do you mean spread yourself? If a community doesn’t have activity, there’s nothing to see from it. If you’re subscribed, it’s just more stuff on your feed.
Why not just sub to both?
It’s because of corporate greed. Anticheat is basically totally achievable on the server side, but that requires much more computing power. The idea of client side anticheat is to reduce infrastructure cost.
Based
!ottawa@lemmy.ca