What an awesome resource, I’ll definitely have to contribute a bit to it.
What an awesome resource, I’ll definitely have to contribute a bit to it.
Serve with mayonnaise.
ffs how did they make it so much worse on the very last line
That’s, uh, literally the exact thing I explicitly said I don’t want to do
I don’t want the games all in my library. Retrodeck is one non-steam game addition in your library and then you launch it and all the emulated games are browsed through the retrodeck UI.
Lots of emulated games, mostly. Retrodeck is kinda jank but when you figure it out it’s such a convenient way of using most emulators you’ll need.
I don’t want leftist fanatics
Too bad nerd we’re already here and we will cleanse you of your brainworms. Please do not resist.
Go back to reddit where you belong, reactionary
Liberapay is much preferred
Maybe you should make that more obvious on the page somehow? Like make Liberapay a bigger button that’s separate from the rest, or just outright say in the text that it’s preferred? Because as someone with no preference between them and considering supporting, I probably would have gone with Patreon out of inertia/recognition.
The simple version is that color blindness is caused by a physical problem with your eyes. If you don’t have the parts required to detect certain colors then no glasses are going to fix that. They’re just tinted glasses, the guy in the video tries three different pairs from different companies and all they do is tint the world a hideous shade of pink/magenta.
As someone else said above, what they can do is change your ability to differentiate between objects of slightly different colors. You might have a really hard time telling the difference between red and green, but find it easier to tell the difference between hideous vaguely reddish magenta and hideous vaguely greenish magenta. They don’t grant you a greater range of color vision, but they do change what color is actually hitting your eyes. Mostly into hideous magenta.
FWIW the guy in the video points out that in his experience it generally made colors harder, not easier, to differentiate.