I bought it because my son has been asking for Skatebird, but we also enjoyed an hour playing Ripped Pants at Work together and I'll give Delver a go later tonight.
Thats the thing with bundles, different titles will appeal to different people.
Well that's not ideal.
The only thing they have ever done well is host a Q&A board and incubate niche communities.
Then they stopped doing that well.
"We just had an outdated sanity.io dependency used since 2016 to show release notes from sanity headless CMS, that was the only issue they found."
"That dependency has been there since 2016 and passed every check since then, now it looks compromised but NO ONE from Microsoft reached us to remove it. They just pulled down everything causing issues to millions of users, and causing a loop in vscode (yep, it's their fault)"
If the dependency has been compromised then extensions that use that dependency and ship compromised code are also compromised. Its a transitive property if it ships bad code.
With that in mind Microsoft yoinking the extension from the market place and user devices seems reasonable. But what was the "loop" they mention?
My workplace calls it "n-jinx", we know its nonstandard but its still what is understood by the team.
That was fast!
Edit: its great to see the games they highlight with the cover illustrations. They cover a variety of genres and all look like quality games with interesting design choices.
With a stable release imminent, join us for one final round of testing.

Interesting to see the doom recreation. The commentary in the subtitles is fascinating.
MPL is a weak copyleft license.
If they make changes to your files then they have to share their changes to those files with a reciprocal license.
It has no impact on the licencing of the rest of their project.
I understand proprietary licenses and the business models they support, I also understand open source licenses and the business models they support.
If they they published paid binaries and free source code I would support them (morally), or if they published free binaries and free source code and ran a patreon I would support them (morally).
But to fork GPL code and hold the derived source ransom? Not cool.