I’ve had that happen before lol
I was like wait this sounds familiar
From their Steam page:
Per-person behavior simulation: Each person is different, except they’re all bald.
Fuckin lol 😂
Only to run down the road a hundred feet, turn around, and they all respawned immediately.
That was one of the things I didn’t like about that game along with the malaria.
However, the fire physics was cool, as was the sound design (the guns sound and felt punchy).
Instead of generative AI for game assets, id much rather see something like a LLM in game that dynamically controls NPC behavior. That would be cool as hell.
Like an RPG where you can type what you want to say to an NPC instead of choosing a fixed dialogue tree.
Do the bonuses from all the sights stack?
All that RPG needs now is a bayonet.
When do I learn how to dodge gigantic boulder traps?
Your friend sounds like an awesome person to hang out with.
So how would you say that you’re a disappointment to the empire in Klingon?
He needs to put points into two handed fighting though. Otherwise he’ll have a -6/-4 attack modifier. If he does though he should be able to reduce it to -2/0, negating it almost entirely.
That’s how Big Floppy has tricked us into buying more floppies.
Right, but at the very least the government goes through a commercial grade dedication screening for these types of things. It’s not like Norfolk Naval Shipyard just goes “eh let’s just put a X-box 360 controller from Amazon on it and call it a day.”
I agree, definitely for those safety-related critical components.
Got a separate sonar monitor that needs a controller to navigate menus? Sure a Logitech F710 would work for that. For actually controlling the entire sub? Definitely not.
There is a good reason engineers specify single points of failure so as to mitigate them in the design phase.
Move fast and break things isn’t the right philosophy to have when you’re leagues under the sea and a failure can be absolutely catastrophic lol.
Ave, Caesar!
The original guy in that company had such hubris that it amazes me that he was an engineer at one point. Choosing materials for a submarine that didn’t fit the role (carbon fiber sucks at compression), going cheap on those parts (Boeing QC-lot rejected carbon fiber lol), over-reliance on commercial-grade components like the gamepad for submarine control, and the general “safety is overrated” mentality that eventually hoisted his own petard.
The submarine wasn’t designated seaworthy by any third party organization and even independent engineering analysts said years prior that structural failure was less of an if and more of a when.
They can get cockroaches, but the nozzle has to be like 2.54 cm or less away from it otherwise the velocity dropoff is too great.
What if they’re in Britain or any of the left-hand drive countries?
Only you can… uhhh …
…