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2018-04-30
, 05:15
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@ From my Gabriola Island hermitage, near the Edge of the World
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#22
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2018-04-30
, 05:29
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@ UK
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#23
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Curious question. Just one that I perhaps as a gamer do not get the fixation to put Linux in places where it actually loses function.
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2018-04-30
, 05:37
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@ From my Gabriola Island hermitage, near the Edge of the World
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#24
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2018-04-30
, 09:17
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#25
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2018-04-30
, 11:46
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#26
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2018-04-30
, 17:18
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#27
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2018-04-30
, 19:21
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@ Germany
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#28
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Here's where I have an apparent disconnect. And I'm not picking on Wicket, it's just that I do not understand why if a person that does not purchase modern games to be used on a modern game system would want to use Linux on that modern gaming system to play older games.
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2018-04-30
, 20:16
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#29
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At least for me (and I guess that's true for wicket too), getting Linux to run on it is part of the "gaming experience", maybe even the most important part of it.
It is fun to see if you can do it and it's fun to figure out how to solve problems along the way - solving actual technical problems, not fiddling with spanners the manufacturer has thrown in your works intentionally.
If you've played with model railways or Lego during your childhood you might know the feeling:
Building up the tracks and landscapes or the cars and spaceships is the actual fun. Playing with the finished thing beyond the stage of mere function testing gets boring pretty quickly.
Oh, and on the point of EULAs:
Just remember that every time you accept one of those, the licensor slaughters a little kitten!
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Prior generation console emulation has come a very far way on other devices and they do hardware emulation quite effortlessly - some are handheld even.
It's not that I believe that I'm right - I am a person that still plays some games like Mario Odyssey on my Nintendo Switch - but it's just a disconnect that I have. If you place Linux on a device not originally intended to run it, just to play older games (no comment on how you might procure those older games), then doesn't that mean that Nintendo (in this case) still has your money for purchasing the device?
Or is "sticking it to the man" mean that much now?
Curious question. Just one that I perhaps as a gamer do not get the fixation to put Linux in places where it actually loses function.
And for the record, I modded my Nintendo GameCube to play Japanese games, I modded my Sega Dreamcast to play all regions of games, I modified my SNK NeoGeo to have an HDMI port, I soldered a modchip into my first gen Sony PlayStation amongst other things. MAME was my then go-to emulation then later I found a perfect emulator for Killer Instinct and the NeoGeo as well.
Now? Just a Sony PlayStation Vita, Nintendo WiiU, a Nintendo Switch and an older Sony PlayStation 3 that was supposed to have gotten Linux but didn't... not by Sony at least.