Hey guys, it's my birthday today and the best present would be if you went and gave my upcoming game, God's Disdain, a wishlist on Steam! I'd also appreciate signal boosting and letting other people know about the game :D
I've been working on this game for nearly a decade and it is finally coming out on March 14th, being free for everyone! It'll be completely unencrypted and DRM free as well, so anyone can mod and share it.
It's a mix of the classic Dragon Quest games and Elder Scrolls, with a turn-based RPG battle system and a world where every NPC is named and follows their own unique schedules. The story follows Tamiko and Kenshin, two young adults who are trying to stop a plague that has been killing all of the plant life on their continent. The main story cutscenes have full voice acting and make use of paintings to show off key moments!
There will be a demo available on February 3rd since the game is part of the RPG Maker Festival 2025. I hope you guys will enjoy it :)
https://store.steampowered.com/app/3057330/Gods_Disdain/
#godsdisdain #rpgmaker #indiedev #indiegamedev #gamedev #indiegame #indiegames #indies #steam #rpg
It's almost creepy to me, hearing about how so many people born deaf, upon gaining the ability to hear, remark how quiet the sun is. They grow up assuming that it should be very loud.
I keep imagining as if it should, but for some reason we don't hear it, and deaf people have this instinct that it should. Like a cool horror prompt.
Windows 10's demise nears, but Linux is forever https://www.theregister.com/2025/01/28/windows_10_demise_linux/ by @sjvn
Want to keep your old computer running? Can't stand #Windows 11? Then, it's time to give serious thought to switching to desktop #Linux.
Does this count as a GPL violation?
(Preventing people from sharing/accessing the source code?)
RE: https://cyberpunk.lol/users/FediPact/statuses/113906932147208715
From http://tunes.org/wiki/no-kernel.html
> A term describing a system without a kernel. The idea looks like it is original as far as operating systems are concerned, but it is so natural that for any other kind of software (and one of our points is that there should be no such privileged notion as that of an "Operating System" well-separated from "Applications") where there isn't such a stubbornly overwhelming tradition, it is the very idea of a kernel that looks odd.
> Software in a no-kernel system works just like most any software: various objects interact, each doing its part of the work. The difference compared to software in kernel-based systems? No-kernel software is not limited to a single centralizing entry point like the Unix syscall() or DOS interrupts, whose overhead, limitations, bugs and misdesign you must cope with or work around. Instead, objects can directly interact one with the other, and you can upgrade/extend/modify any unlocked part of the system anytime.
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