I've actually seen some arguments that requiring ID for voting would be legal if it were easy to acquire and free. Of course, the politicians arguing for ID requirements also oppose any attempt to make ID free.
VindictiveJudge
I like to describe classic Oblivion characters as looking like they were all carved from the same potato.
You could also watch Chappie, which is essentially the same concept but darker and more South African.
Backwards compatibility is actually a bit of a nightmare on Linux. Ironically it can be easier to get old windows software running on Linux than old Linux software.
I've been discovering this on Steam, actually. Square Enix released Linux versions of some games, like Life is Strange or the most recent Tomb Raider trilogy, but they'll crash at the main menu if you try to run them. Similarly, the Shadowrun games from Harebrained Schemes assume that you have a configured .asoundsrc file in your home directory, which likely isn't true if you're on a distro that has migrated to pipewire. The .asoundsrc issue is easy to fix by just making the file yourself, but LIS and TR have to use the Windows versions via Proton to run at all.
It actually doesn't fit the rules. That comma before "announces" is completely unnecessary and accomplishes nothing. The headline should read,
Pope Francis has died, the Vatican camerlengo announces
It might partially be that Worf's suggestion to shoot first and ask questions later tends to be the solution.
Or that TOS was progressive for the '60s but we caught up and passed it.
Or that Berman, who ran the franchise for the '90s shows, was actually pretty conservative and progressive messages had to be almost snuck past him.
Ah, but Factorio has multiplayer, and sex can lead to additional players to build the factory faster.
I just need to know which one would be best with stuffing and gravy for Thanksgiving.
If the ping rate is irrelevant, then the good old sneakernet is a great way to transfer large amounts of data.
It's also from the era when people were expected to read the manual while the game installed, so the game never has tutorials for certain things, most prominent being fatigue. New players tend to run everywhere, drain their fatigue meter, and struggle to hit anything or cast a spell. Just reading the manual, as the devs originally expected, solves a lot.
I'm fine with almost any changes to the combat. Oblivion's combat felt worse than both Morrowind's and Skyrim's to me.
They would definitely watch Forged in Fire, at least.