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18 votes
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Steam's Lunar New Year 2019 sale - many games on sale, including an extra $5 off first $30+ purchase
7 votes -
Who do you go to to learn about the state of PC ports?
I used to watch TotalBiscuit's videos to learn about PC ports of games, to see if they were any good. Obviously I can't do that anymore, and the best replacement I've found so far is looking at...
I used to watch TotalBiscuit's videos to learn about PC ports of games, to see if they were any good. Obviously I can't do that anymore, and the best replacement I've found so far is looking at PCGamingWiki. If a game has a long page with a lot of issues and workarounds, it is probably a bad port.
But that doesn't really help if I want to know if a game has improved a lot since launch. Does anyone do a good "state of game x a few years later" series?
8 votes -
What are some of your favorite co-op games?
What are some great PC games to play with a friend (who may be in the same room with you)?
15 votes -
Subnautica: Below Zero | Early Access trailer
9 votes -
Metro Exodus being pulled from Steam, now only on Epic Store (preoders will be honored)
13 votes -
Praey for the Gods | Early Access trailer
5 votes -
Subnautica's standalone expansion "Below Zero" will be available in Early Access on PC starting January 30
6 votes -
Amplitude Games: Endless series free weekend
7 votes -
So you want to compete with Steam: Epic, Discord, Kartridge, and RobotCache
11 votes -
Twitch Prime: Pikuniku free from Jan 21 - 23
3 votes -
Steam - 2018 Year in Review
12 votes -
‘The Division 2’ coming to Epic Games Store, pulled from Steam
17 votes -
Let's talk Soulsborne
I spent most of 2018 exploring the Soulsborne games (Demon's Souls, Dark Souls I (no longer for sale, thanks to the Remaster), II, III, and Bloodborne) and wanted to know all of your thoughts on...
I spent most of 2018 exploring the Soulsborne games (Demon's Souls, Dark Souls I (no longer for sale, thanks to the Remaster), II, III, and Bloodborne) and wanted to know all of your thoughts on them. Like them? Hate them? Want to try them? Favorite and least favorite?
From Software is probably my favorite game dev studio now. I want to say I adore all of the games, but I haven't tried Demon's Souls or Dark Souls II... yet. Bloodborne is my favorite out of the collection (or what I've played of it) because of the familiar but much faster-paced gameplay, with higher risk meeting higher reward. Not to mention they didn't put Ornstein and/or his armor in it.
10 votes -
Meditations - a collection of 350+ tiny, experimental games by different developers that will only be available for a day each (Windows+OSX)
15 votes -
Steam's “Best of 2018” Lists - A Look Back At 2018
9 votes -
Steam Winter Sale is live until Jan 3, including voting for the Steam Awards and a daily "advent calendar" of Steam items
19 votes -
Artifact update: Skill Rating, Leveling, and Balance
4 votes -
Slay the Spire will release from Early Access on January 23, 2019
10 votes -
Steam Awards nominations are now open!
14 votes -
Gris | Launch trailer
9 votes -
BELOW | Launch trailer
5 votes -
Blizzard is shifting developer resources away from Heroes of the Storm and dropping its eSports events
9 votes -
Introducing 'Hades', now in Early Access!
16 votes -
The Pathless | Reveal trailer
7 votes -
Counter-Strike: Global Offensive is now free-to-play and has added a battle royale mode named "Danger Zone"
19 votes -
Quake Champions' December update will remove lootboxes and switch to a new progression system, including a paid "Battle Pass"
8 votes -
What are some must-dos when you are setting up a new PC?
What are some of the must-dos, must-installs, must-uninstalls, and must-alters of setting up a new PC? I'm getting my first new PC in 5 years on Sunday and the old one is really showing its age. I...
What are some of the must-dos, must-installs, must-uninstalls, and must-alters of setting up a new PC? I'm getting my first new PC in 5 years on Sunday and the old one is really showing its age. I would like to avoid that as much as possible in order to keep the PC running smoothly as long as possible. I'd also like to optimize its performance and have useful software tools.
Thank you for any advice,
gbbb35 votes -
Steam Autumn Sale 2018
16 votes -
How a book binds the Return of the Obra Dinn
7 votes -
Warframe's "Fortuna" expansion is releasing on PC this week, consoles "soon"
9 votes -
Destiny 2 base game for PC is free on Battle.net through November 18
27 votes -
Ten great adventure-game puzzles
8 votes -
Steam developers speak: Maximum profits for Valve, minimum responsibilities
10 votes -
RimWorld 1.0 released
25 votes -
Artifact - Draft mode gameplay - Drafting a deck with Richard Garfield
6 votes -
Thronebreaker: The Witcher Tales - 37-minute Gameplay Walkthrough
6 votes -
Command & Conquer update from EA (potential remaster of older games)
8 votes -
A thorough look at Neverwinter Nights
8 votes -
The future of GOG: Mod support, Steam rivalry and problematic tweets
23 votes -
Video game 'Donut County' asks big questions about gentrification...
7 votes -
Heat Signature's "Space Birthday" update released - daily challenge, character traits, 4 unique enemies, 20 features, and on sale for 40% off
8 votes -
Controller gaming on PC
21 votes -
The GOG client for Linux is no longer actively being worked on
42 votes -
Dragon Quest 11 (PC) and Spiderman (ps4) has absolutely consumed my life the past week and a half
The games are masterpieces in their own right. DQ11 probably the best jrpg I've played in a very long time (dq8 ps2) . Spiderman is just a very fun game. It's light hearted enough and has some...
The games are masterpieces in their own right. DQ11 probably the best jrpg I've played in a very long time (dq8 ps2) . Spiderman is just a very fun game. It's light hearted enough and has some intense moments. I'm level 41 I think right now and I have a lot of my abilities unlocked and I just destroy the dudes even if I'm out matched 11 to 1. Very satisfying.
Back to dragon quest. They made huge strides in quality of life with book shelves that actually show you that yes, you can read a book from it. The visible enemies is something that is sort of a relief for me because by my second playthrough of DQ8 I was so sick of random battles I almost just threw in the towel. I can explore and fight if I want. I would neglect exploring in DQ8 because of the random battles. Anyway what are your guys' thoughts on the games?
edit: emulating DQ8 on pcsx2 is very very cool. You can make the graphics look almost exactly like DQ11. The textures work wonderfully with interneral resolution increase. Plus you can trigger "fast mode" when runs the game at like 3x speed, which makes the random battles not so monotonous
6 votes -
CrossCode - Release trailer
11 votes -
Destiny 2: Forsaken review - Hallelujah, Destiny’s back
5 votes -
Return of the Obra Dinn - Coming Soon (from the dev of Papers, Please)
10 votes -
In Death (VR archery roguelike) will leave Early Access on Oct 2, along with new content and a price increase
4 votes -
Linux gaming: GOG vs. Steam?
I started prioritizing GOG a couple of years ago, buying most of my games there because I love their DRM-free stance. I have an entire backup of my GOG gaming library on my hard drive, so even if...
I started prioritizing GOG a couple of years ago, buying most of my games there because I love their DRM-free stance. I have an entire backup of my GOG gaming library on my hard drive, so even if something happened to my account I'd still have everything I've bought from them over the years. On the other hand, their Linux support isn't great. For example, GOG Galaxy, their all-in-one frontend, is still not available on Linux despite being out for other platforms for years.
Steam, on the other hand, is DRM-agnostic, and there isn't an easy way to separate my games from the service. I worry about what would happen if I somehow lost access to my account. When a game is available on Steam and GOG, I opt for GOG each time because I'd rather have a DRM-free copy that I can control. Nevertheless, Valve has done a lot to support Linux gaming, especially with their recent debut of SteamPlay and Proton. Right now, Steam gives a much better user experience to Linux users and supporting Valve helps move Linux gaming forward. It also helps that their selection is much greater than GOG's, (though that's less of a pull for me as I do appreciate GOG's heavier-handed curation).
I'm torn because I want a little of column A and a little of column B. I keep hoping that GOG will eventually catch up with Steam with regards to Linux support, but that's already been the dream for a while (and a lot of people are done holding their breath). At this point I'm wondering whether I should just hop on the SteamPlay train and start putting my eggs back in that basket. Anyone have any thoughts? Who do you choose to buy from, and why?
31 votes