Helldivers 2 in the streets, Unicorn Overlord in the sheets
like, undocked and chillin’ in bed
Helldivers 2 in the streets, Unicorn Overlord in the sheets
like, undocked and chillin’ in bed
Best thing about this is that it is canonically true; “Cameron believed that cops, institutionalized in a system that encourages them to abuse their power, were a perfect representation of the inhumanity that led to the creation of murderous robots.” https://screenrant.com/terminator-2-movie-james-cameron-t1000-police-officer-reason/
My crew had fun with Tribes of Midgard for a while but to be honest you’ll need more than 5 people :)
Has anyone located the actual ad yet?
The toggle is off which means it’s not currently getting backed up
If the question is why would it take ~900MB if you turned it back on, I’d assume that it’s not marking offlined files as purgeable, which would exclude them from backup
OTOH some might say this is the better experience with a full backup after a critical data loss – to have all the files you previously marked as offline available immediately after you’ve done a restore from an iCloud backup 🤷🏾♂️
No, it’s because they understand that from books comes great literature and poetry, and they’ll be happy to think that’s what you mean when you say your hobby is books, until you clarify that they are the books in the “Dragonlance” Dungeons and Dragons novelization universe
Not a hot take at all. It was revolutionary for the first year it was released and then was quickly surpassed on every front by any company that put slightly more effort (and more cost) into any part of the switch: graphics, sensors, controllers, expandability, etc. Pretty stock for any Nintendo product, because they only focus on hardware that be produced mass-market and get good profit margins on. Which means it’s often made with current-to-dated components that can get overlooked because it’s the only platform you can play Nintendo games on. Also, not sure why they are so allergic to ergonomics, all the way back to the NES controller, the least comfortable controller of its peers