Example?
RedditRefugee69
I don't think playing Wii Sports with a Dualsense would be fun at all.
I had a match last week, as a free account who's never had premium.
I'm all for language evolving but I feel like people are reaching into a bucket of words without looking and just chucking them at a sentence before vomiting it out.
Vibe English, like Vibe Coding.
Is it even a joke if it's true?
Especially when all the new titles are just graphics updates on older games.
I don't give a fuck if Mario has DLSS on his eyeball so you can really feel his pain when he's hit with a blue shell.
The Wii was a notable exception to the rule. Can't really do Wii Sports on an Xbox controller.
Caring about stuff alone is never virtue signaling. Telling people you care about stuff can be, especially if you think your audience agrees with you:
"Virtue signalling is the act of expressing opinions or stances that align with popular moral values, often through social media, with the intent of demonstrating one's good character. The term virtue signalling is frequently used pejoratively to suggest that the person is more concerned with appearing virtuous than with actually supporting the cause or belief in question."
I would try Ubuntu in your shoes, personally. It's got downsides but it's definitely plug and play. I don't know what metrics distrowatch uses to rate distros but it's widely known that Ubuntu is user friendly as hell.
Turns out people generally don't like war against nuclear powers and would rather watch someone else get invaded than risk themselves getting nuked. Ironic, considering the context.
Where are you getting these distros from? Most popular distros do more than "just view websites or write code."
I've been using Linux for years and I've never heard of the distros you just named.
I'm not surprised at all that you had trouble using niche distros. Try something more popular with good documentation so you have a community supporting you with bug testing, guides, and Q+As when people run into issues you might run into later.
Wrong community.