Or the worms that live in your eyeballs.
Chailles
It could be worse. It could have been one of those worms that reproduce and then leave their hosts.
Is that a genuine response or is it because the roundworm found is specifically found among snakes?
And 76 wasn't all that bad. There were a lot of really great elements in it that, had 76 instead been a single player game (or at the most a co-op game), it'd have been much more well received.
The world was fun, the new monsters are cool, the combat was basically the same as FO4.
Cliffs are generally pretty irrelevant even without the ability to blow them up. Just going around or using an Underground belt works.
The matter of being what is essentially the Arbiter of what is considered Truth or Morally Acceptable is never going to not be highly controversial.
We’ve a decade of data showing that almost all pc gamers will not use a storefront and launcher that is not steam
You are literally the one who said that such data exists and is clearly available if some random person on the internet has examined it. You are the one making a claim, therefore it is your duty to provide evidence of your claim, which you stated is in publicly available. If you instead meant that said data is simply anecdotal data based on whatever conclusions you figured is correct, then sure, I'll take that. Just give us a link to it.
But you don't know that. You're only saying that because that's what you think will happen. Give me a genuinely good launcher and I'll use it. The problem is that with how much time and resources that's been dedicated to Steam, that's next to impossible to even stand as equals to.
Not to mention that in cases like Epic, they don't really care about actual user experience.
You know you've played the game too much when you can hear how the Narrator would read those lines.
That's not a problem I'm complaining to have. It's great. We should have it be like this every year.
But on the other hand, there's a decent chance of you worked hard enough, they could probably get there at least a century or two after your death.
Sure it is, hence why it's called a lightYEAR. It's the time that a year passes for one light.