I don't replay games as much as I used to, but there's definitely "classics" that I'll hit up every now and then.
Old Bioware/Obsidian games definitely have a spot, as well as old Assassin's Creed games.
The Portal series every once in a while. Those games never get old.
Various rogue likes when the urge strikes. Binding of Isaac and Hades are my two favs, though I just started Dead Cells and it's pretty good.
Minecraft, but it's basically a new game every time I get back to it, so not sure if that counts, hah.
There are also tons of games from my childhood that I often consider trying out again, but am concerned will have aged poorly. Old game design was pretty rough in a lot of cases.
Basically hyper charged Main Character Syndrome, further fueled by being able to pay your way out of (almost) anything, and surrounding yourself with people that only say "Yes".
Can't really force anyone to make an app like that. As much as I love rif, I doubt we're getting that treatment for Lemmy. Hopefully the sync dev makes a good one!
Several admins made it known that instances without captcha verification were getting bombarded with account verifications (lemmy.world got shut off from their email verification for a bit, even), and enabling captcha solved the issue. That only really happens with bots.
You can also see fairly dead instances getting 10s of thousands of users without any corresponding activity. That's a pretty big sign there.
Good time to reiterate - Never talk to the police. They are not your friend. Anything you say will be used against you. They will do anything they can get away with to get an admission, or just steal your property because they can.
Don't Talk to The Police (lecture featuring a lawyer and a retired cop detailing why it will never help to talk).
Reddit's actual daily users only equates to about half that number. While an interesting metric, Google search rates don't equate to users. Heck, my searching for that information contributed to that and I didn't click through to Reddit once.
Personally, I still consider SSDs too expensive compared to HDDs, especially considering the space that modern games take up. A dedicated 1TB SSD (around $50 at a good price) can hold maybe 10 games these days.
I don't replay games as much as I used to, but there's definitely "classics" that I'll hit up every now and then.
Old Bioware/Obsidian games definitely have a spot, as well as old Assassin's Creed games.
The Portal series every once in a while. Those games never get old.
Various rogue likes when the urge strikes. Binding of Isaac and Hades are my two favs, though I just started Dead Cells and it's pretty good.
Minecraft, but it's basically a new game every time I get back to it, so not sure if that counts, hah.
There are also tons of games from my childhood that I often consider trying out again, but am concerned will have aged poorly. Old game design was pretty rough in a lot of cases.