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  • I had a similar issue and honestly I would just recommend worrying about it later. Don't force it, just try it when you have some free time.

    I started off with dual boot to play with Linux and jump to windows when I need it. Then eventually to full Linux once I realized I never actually needed it to do all my work.

    I recommend Linux mint as its the most similar to windows and is built for new Linux users. I tried Ubuntu first and the experience was pretty bad, but I learned much quicker in mint and had a much better experience right away.

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    How many showers do you take a day?
  • Once a day, I feel like trash if I even skip one day.

    Tho honestly I often wonder if twice a day is optimal. I always feel great the few times I take it twice, but when I only take it once, I always wake up wanting to shower immediately to get the oil off.

  • Is anyone else having trouble giving up Reddit due to content?
  • I just use reddit for basic news on specific products I'm looking forward to, and the occasional time I need to search a specific question on it.

    After trying out Lemmy, I used a script to delete mass edit/delete all my stuff in reddit, deleted the account, and never went back. I find no enjoyment in commenting on reddit anymore so it was an easy decision.

    I agree Lemmy has a long way to go, but I only see it getting better from here which is enough for me to stick with it.

    Now that you mention it though, communities do kinda feel empty. Not as in a lack of users/content, but that theres nothing in them that try to promote discussion like "weekly discussions" you would see on reddit. Its more or less entirely some random post by someone, or a news post.

    As someone who only cares about news and the discussion around that news, Lemmy satisfies me pretty well. But for people who want a more social experience (probably most people), Lemmy begins to fall apart quickly.

    Right now, I think the memes community is really the only active social one.

  • What would you considered "Ethical Piracy"
  • When I can't buy it in a reasonable way lol

    Simply wanting to save money is a valid enough reason to pirate. The only time you should have any second thoughts is if its a product you REALLY want to see more of or if its made by a smaller group that could really use that money.

    Even then though, you can always help without spending money. Easiest way is to spread the word.

    You enjoyed that game?

    Tell others its a good game worth getting. In many cases, that might help more than buying the game and saying nothing about it.

  • How good is arch linux for running cracked games?
  • Yeah steam does it very well. On stuff like the switch, the prices are so crazy I immediately go hack my console. But in steam, prices were so much lower to the point in which I never thought about it.

    I only recently started doing it when I noticed some games block you from playing offline.

  • Is anyone else getting downvotes for benign disagreements here?
  • You will get downvoted in any disagreement, that's not exclusive to reddit or Lemmy, that happens in any social media with downvotes.

    The purpose of downvotes is to show what the general people in that common section think about your comment. You shouldn't give any hoot about it other than the info it provides.

    Obviously, if you are talking in controversal topics or ones with conflicting sides, you are gonna see alot of downvotes. Its just people expressing their opinion.

    Echo chambers are just a natural part of communities. People often come to feel validated so they stick to ones with the same thoughts as them. I don't recommend trying to argue/discuss with people who only want to "win" cuz there's nothing to gain.

    Talk with those who argue because they want to learn or understand something better. (or perhaps help you learn something new)

  • What trait instantly makes you despise a person beyond belief?
  • Pretty much any trait that awful people usually have. I feel these kind of people are pretty easy to spot usually.

    Lacking basic manners, can't be bother to do small things that can help others, greedy to a point that hurts other and is OK with that, only looks at people as tools/resources, only argues to win instead of to teach/learn, and the list goes on forever.

    It becomes a lot harder to despise people if they don't have any of the usual awful person traits.

    I do hate it when people ask to ask though, that always annoys me to no end. Just tell me what you need help with lol

  • What do you think about sublemmies that add content by reposting from Reddit?
  • I think its good even if lemmy becomes huge, the less we have to look into those other sites to get info, the better.

    And it helping the growth of the communities just makes it better. I hope people bring stuff from the other subreddits too.

  • What options you would like to have in certain Nintendo games?
  • Overall better control options is all I want. More accessibility options is always good, but I dont know a first party game thats needs an easy mode.

    They are usually already easy enough for even new gamers, or already have an easy mode implemented in some way.

  • I hate battle royale games
  • Its definitely a mindset thing. In any game with any sort of competition, the majority of people seem to have this thought that "I must win". And if they dont, then they are having a bad time.

    I notice this alot in smash specifically when I play with new players, they put all this emotion into matches with nothing on the line. Then beat themselves over every loss.

    I even get questions like "Why you did this dumb thing?" which sometimes leads them to thinking im trolling. Like bro, im playing for fun.

    Or if im not sweating 24/7, "Are you sandbagging?" Dude, we are playing friendlies, this is not a tourney that decides my future career, its not that serious.

    Its like people forgot what casual gaming was.

  • I hate battle royale games
  • Casual multiplayer games still exist, but are pretty rare these days. Stuff like left 4 dead, minecraft survival, and halo minigame maps are all very casual. I would think VR multiplayer games are probably casual too but I never got into it lol

    If you hate any social interaction with randoms at all tho, then I would still avoid those probably.

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