The vast majority of the game is optional so that you can get to the final boss and see an ending. I remember getting the normal ending and thinking "really? That fight was trivial". Turns out the minimal play-through is tuned for a low skill level. The "true" ending is another story though.
teawrecks
lol, you got me, i definitely hadn't thought of that.
Yeah, the only question is whether human brains are also just that.
Lol ok, then I guess I didn't understand what the alternative would be when you suggested putting the OSes on different partitions.
They're definitely not suggesting having both OSes in the same partition (even though that is technically possible using winbtrfs, it is objectively an insane thing to do).
Looks like this is in the standard Fedora /etc/skel/.bashrc
.
Aka the Nirvana Fallacy. Aka "Don't let perfect be the enemy of the good"
Yeah that's what I'm saying.
Not giving any time to blatantly bad faith arguments. You're being willingly obtuse and you know it.
Debian GNU/Linux 12 dullbananas-macbookpro161 tty1
dullbananas-macbookpro161 login:
What more do you need?!
Lol but seriously,
Remove: ...gnome-shell...
That'll do it.
You should consider setting up btrfs w/ Timeshift.
Yeah, you, you're the example.
Yeah, exactly. Very rare.
Idk, I know I'm in the minority, but the stuff I don't experience in a game is just as important as the stuff I do experience.
As someone who played WoW as a kid, the world always felt bigger and more memorable because there was stuff I wasn't geared/skilled/determined/lucky/whatever enough to see. Then during WotLK they made a concerted effort to ensure everyone could see all the content. Suddenly the world felt small. Less like a world and more like a series of checkboxes that you tick off and say "done, onto the next game".
I really appreciate when the creators say "not everyone will see everything, and that's ok, that's how we intended it". Elden Ring is really good about this. I'm about to finish my first playthrough, I know ive missed a lot of stuff, but that's OK, my playthrough was uniquely mine.