oopsgodisdeadmybad

joined 1 month ago
[–] oopsgodisdeadmybad@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I had "Country Cornflower".

I also saw a bunch of #4 somewhere. It was either at one set of grandparents', or one of my friends' houses.

Mom actually still has the pictured kind, still being used to this day. I was there just last week and there was some of it still drying in the dishwasher. I stole a few plates and bowls when I left, and it's still the only glassware I've ever really used more than a couple times. I'm not particularly find of it, but I have these pieces and I don't give a fuck what it looks like if it works.

At least it doesn't have Jesus on it or something. I would draw the line at that.

No, this came up from talking about how it (the puck) doesn't have to be connected to the device you're playing on. Which outside of Bluetooth or using a steam machine, you would have to have it connected.

Directly wired hasn't come up at all until you just mentioned it.

I mean, based on my observations, I think the only people organizing these at all are straight white cisheteronormative types (and further, almost always women).

Maybe that's just how I've seen it, but I've never witnessed them, I usually only hear about them at all if a video pops up of a compilation of bad reactions or mistakes (as in wrong color reveal, accidental early reveal) pops up. Maybe that's just me but I haven't personally seen much of any other group doing them in the first place. Occasionally there are others, but almost always done by them.

[–] oopsgodisdeadmybad@lemmy.zip 0 points 4 days ago (1 children)

For one, as far as I know that's a single player game. Anyone with other players around means constant slight readjustments, and having everything you do held back (even if only a tenth of a second- I don't know the actual number, that's a ballpark guesstimate) really adds up.

For almost every game it doesn't matter a whole lot. But when it does, it really matters. Bluetooth headphones pad the audio a smidge too, to the point of rather play without sound instead of late audio. It causes constant sending guessing, and if you're using both your leaky playing in a game state that's already past (although when online you always are anyway but cutting as much out as possible is miles better).

[–] oopsgodisdeadmybad@lemmy.zip 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

My point (the part I quoted in my original reply) was that you would need the puck plugged into the device you're playing on, assuming you don't want to deal with the delay.

So if that's not a problem for you, then that doesn't apply, but I assume most people will want the fast connection.

[–] oopsgodisdeadmybad@lemmy.zip 1 points 4 days ago (2 children)

I realize that. But that's just for that machine, but I'm speaking for arbitrary devices.

The protocol hasn't gotten faster in the last few years that I know of.

I've used several with different devices, but most of my direct comparison experience is with an Xbox series X controller paired to the Deck via BT and by dongle, and it's very noticeably more laggy with Bluetooth. I've only occasionally tried others, but every Bluetooth-connected controller I've ever used definitely has a noticeable delay.

[–] oopsgodisdeadmybad@lemmy.zip 11 points 4 days ago (3 children)

The emphasis on making her look young with the hair and outfit is just fucking creepy to me.

[–] oopsgodisdeadmybad@lemmy.zip 9 points 5 days ago (2 children)

I've said this for years.

"Sex Reveal" has an entirely different connotation.

But just let kids tell you.

Give em a few years on their own to be exposed to how gender is expressed, then let them decide who they are.

Update: The error on that issue wasn't the one I had, but the command was the one that ended in Neptune 611, so I did use it.

Ran the debug install again and no dice.

Rebooted and reinstalled, then back to gaming mode, and now it's working. I knew from several mentions that it might take a couple reboots, so even though it felt weird to need to do it more than once, I still did, and it seems to have paid off.

Now I'll still have to switch the dongle back and forth from my PC for now (until I get my hands on the new steam controller), but I can live with that.

Although as soon as I get it paired and working, I see a new steam os update, so I'll probably need to do it all again anyway. But at least I can trust the process now.

 

So far I've gotten it to work in desktop mode, but booting to the regular gaming mode kills it.

It didn't work by simply installing via git as it does on my desktop computer. I've followed this video guide so far: https://youtu.be/YVPtVB0DWUg

But either my reading comprehension is failing me or I'm missing something because per the description and comments, the method still works as of last month.

But I noticed in the video that he mentions running a second command in the terminal and potentially having to change the Neptune number (the video was made for 65, but the deck is on 611 now) on that second command to reflect the current version number.

But he doesn't have the second command listed on that page he links to (https://monroeworld.com/steamdeck/xbox.html), and it's only partially visible for a moment on the video, so I don't know what that 2nd command does.

I was able to get the controller to pair just fine, navigate big picture mode with it, started a game, and was able to control the game using the big picture interface, however.

The first command does make the icons for the script he mentions (in the video he says to use the debug version, and that is shown) appear, and I do get the work he shows initially (xone module not loaded or something like that) that he says is normal for the process before you paste the second command in the terminal. But I don't know what the second command is to finish the process, and I'm assuming that part is the one that gets it working in gaming mode.

I have no issues with the controller or the dongle on my desktop machine, and it works in desktop mode, so I'm sure they're fine. I'm just missing a step to get it working in gaming mode specifically.

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