You are missing the context as we didn't know it was going to be a 4 hour race when it started. A lot of the event was dealing with the guess work and having the commentators look for things to fill in the time. It was honestly more of an event to be part of at the time. I think the parts you pointed out make for a good highlight session, but there's no way of experiencing exactly why it's such an historic race after the fact.
I'd say the same is true of Brazil 2008, it's not a very exciting race to watch now, but live it was nail biting with a crazy ending. Still fun to watch the end, but we know Massa lost the championship going in so lacks the impact.
Probably https://umoria.org/ I play it often still. It's just so easy to dive into and delivers all the fun tension you'd want but doesn't need you to keep tabs on a story or quests. It's great to dip in for a short run or go for a long time.
So we’re not in r/RedditAlternatives speaking in favor of Lemmy.
This is important. I've mentioned it before. There are probably levels of people: and those that straight up quit, are no longer a voice on Reddit. You could go back with a goal to draw people away, but I think it's also valid to let things play out their course. I'm still missing some subreddits I went to, especially those where I lurked rather than posted. I can live with that loss. I don't use Twitter any more and I didn't replace that with anything. I'm sure my life will go on without some replacement subreddits for now.
Do people expect a fully functional Reddit clone with all the same features to conveniently exist somewhere they can hop to?
Yes.
EDIT: Ok, I should add something more. Sadly, yes. I've seen comments from people say pretty much that. "I went there and there's no content and the UI isn't great". hrumph. Of course there isn't and no one should expect there to be. Reddit didn't start with all that shit either, but Reddit exists now and it pleases a lot of people, despite the cracks forming all around them.
I've seen it talked about a few times across different platforms (Hackernews) where people have pondered the idea of cloning old posts, keeping the poster name but to a non-existent account. Acting as both a way to populate a community and archive content away from Reddit's control.
I haven't seen any examples of this done yet, not sure if anyone has.
Something I often find with mech ("It's mech-aaah") games is the scale of them. They often feel human or tiny. I think this is down to how nimble they can move. They feel much lighter than you'd expect for a 100+ ton metal machine. There's the obvious of pulling the camera in closer to give them more presence on screen, but I don't think that's the necessary solution.
I was going to ask for some recommendations on this vibe. I basically have this https://www.youtube.com/@Meisio channel's WOW OST playing on loop as I work. I like to mix it up a bit but often don't find the right vibe for music to work to as it's too distracting.
I started reading this a few years back and I was kind of enjoying it but found that I dropped it and never went back. I think there was something about the writing rather than the plot that wasn't holding me.
It's something I've been thinking about going back to but have always prioritized other books.
I'd be interested to hear from people that have read it to say it's worth it and pays off.
One way I'm looking at this opportunity is like email, anyone can set up an email server thanks to how it got established. So if this pans out and eventually we get funded hosts in the vein of Gmail and Hotmail, who spend money writing fancy UIs and on marketing, we still have a fundamental base where we can shuffle away from the big players and go set up our own servers.
I do hope to see some funded options come into this space, they can control/own their interface into the data, but they can't control/own the data.
I think people are seeing Reddit as their only solution right now due to the lack of awareness of this place. It's been a bit sad to see all the news articles written about the event but very few plugs for alternate options to visit.
Running the Memmy update today with dark mode and I had moments where my brain thought I was scrolling through Apollo. Gonna be very happy with the app if it continues down this route.
Nice, I’d totally forgotten about this game. I had this on the Spectrum. Seem to remember it came in a double height cassette box. Had a lot of fun playing it back in the day, though I think I was easier to please back then.
It’s odd that I never forgot owning and playing Powerdrift but now looking back I’m feeling like I played this more.
You are missing the context as we didn't know it was going to be a 4 hour race when it started. A lot of the event was dealing with the guess work and having the commentators look for things to fill in the time. It was honestly more of an event to be part of at the time. I think the parts you pointed out make for a good highlight session, but there's no way of experiencing exactly why it's such an historic race after the fact.
I'd say the same is true of Brazil 2008, it's not a very exciting race to watch now, but live it was nail biting with a crazy ending. Still fun to watch the end, but we know Massa lost the championship going in so lacks the impact.