From the perspective of someone who plays a lot of Phas, the idea of modding furries into an investigation game and having friends along to solve open-ended mysteries sounds like kind of a perfect game. Especially when it involves the kind of wonton havoc and destruction that would invite to each session.
I really enjoyed Shadows of Doubt, but it ended up being a much better thief simulator than a detective game. Really want to dig into the simulation aspects of it more at some point.
A t-shirt design for Myr kicking around his natural habitat.
You could t-shirt at https://my-store-df7bdf.creator-spring.com
You could BE t-shirt via https://t.me/khyaber
All my high res art available for one pay-what-you-want download at https://khyaber.art
social vr, headset, right-to-repair
This leaves me with the same concern I have with the Index: with so few companies supporting headsets, I'm kind of wondering how we'll be able to use VRC or its equivalents going forward. Being able to be a creature with friends is kind of essential for me and others at the moment.
And I'm wondering if we've gotten to the point where we'll need to build and repair our own headsets, and if so, what that even looks like.
social vr, headset, right-to-repair
So I received my BigScreen Beyond here to replace my aging Index headset, and I'm conflicted by how simultaneously great and frustrating it is.
Good:
* Not having a giant brick attached to my face helps substantially with my dysphoria in and for VR
* Colorspace adjustments help my specific type of colorblindness
* The unit itself is surprisingly simple, and seems easy(ish) to disassemble and user service
Bad:
* Still prohibitively expensive (>$1k for just the headset)
* Support is a Discord server (whyyyyy)
* Has all the signs of a SV project doomed to dubious long-term support
1993: I use BBSes for online interaction. Each BBS is run by some random person. They connect to a federated worldwide network. I keep my notes in .TXT files.
2008-2022: I use social networks like Facebook and Twitter for online interaction. They're huge and popular. I use Evernote for my notes, which is full of features.
2023: I use Mastodon for online interaction. Each instance is run by some random person. They connect to a federated worldwide network. I keep my notes in .TXT files.
re: ffxiv
Anyway, I'm just relieved that I'd braced for "congrats, you won, here's our complementary escalation-of-commitment to keep you playing" and it wasn't there.
re: ffxiv
Like, it feels like MMOs and RPG subgenres have kind of branched into two tracks over the past several years.
Track A: here's a grinder that will take all of your time. Sometimes we love the idea of including mobile game FOMO because it makes all of the money, and if you fall behind, tough.
Track B: here's a game that's like a goldfish and expands to fill the time you have. We acknowledge that extreme type A people exist, but if you're not that, here's a minimum set of recommendations that you can probably automate or fit into your schedule. The rest is there when you want it.
re: ffxiv
It won't keep me forever -- there's just more to do in games that do self-motivated challenge runs better than 14 does.
But just the idea that there can be an MMO endgame that respects my time is... nice, honestly. Especially after bouncing off Warframe for the dozenth time and all of its incredible FOMO.
ffxiv
Caught up on MSQ through 6.0, and gotta say, I'm relieved that the endgame is no longer "tomestones and raid or perish" like it was during the HW era.
I always preferred solo and small group challenges and deep dungeon, and seeing a lot more of the current late game geared in that direction is more of my speed honestly.
I made a little Caves of Qud mod that adds bat people and a village where they reside :)
Dragon. Agender, otherkin, occasional artist and writer, infosec engineer, in about that order. Avatar by Xeirla. Singular they/them preferred.
Also on @Goldkin (meow.social) for follow requests that don't work here.