buffaloseven

joined 2 years ago
[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 weeks ago

I'll have to see if I want to go to the rigamarole of setting up Wallabag on my home server or if I just fall back to using GoodLinks on iOS exclusively and forgo articles on my e-reader.

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 16 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Count me in the group of people sad to see it go because it made it very easy to get articles onto my Kobo e-reader. There are other ways, but they're all too labour intensive to be practical. Probably should have seen the writing on the wall, though.

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 weeks ago

Sounds like a solid B game with a B-game price. I played the demo and really enjoyed it so I'll probably pick this one up sometime. Assuming the final is similar to the demo, you can also run the game acceptably on the Steam Deck!

 

Despite his best efforts, Adam Lowry could not hold back the tears.

And you could hardly blame him, given the cruel set of circumstances that had just unfolded.

The captain of the Winnipeg Jets was sitting at the podium and was doing his best to summarize the wave of emotions that had taken place during the previous 13 hours or so.

Not only had the Jets spent a good chunk of the day lending support to teammate Mark Scheifele after his father Brad passed away at the age of 68, this memorable season came to an end after a 2-1 overtime loss in Game 6 to the Dallas Stars inside American Airlines Center.

To add to the emotional toll, the game ended on a Stars power play goal from Thomas Harley that came with 13 seconds left in a tripping minor to Scheifele, who got his stick into the skates of Sam Steel to prevent a clear-cut breakaway in the waning seconds of regulation time on a play that could have been called a penalty shot.

“It’s just an awful day for him (emotionally). You want to give him the strength, you want to get that kill so bad. We just couldn’t do it,” said Lowry. “Heartbreaking. We felt like we had a great regular season, we felt like we had a team that could go on a run. For it to end the way it did and everything else surrounding the day, it’s just a lot of emotion.

“It’s tough to put into words what Mark went through. Gets a huge goal for us, plays a heck of a game, and it ends the way it does. Just emotional, heavy. Really proud of the group we had. The commitment, the no quit. A lot of things that a good team needs. We ran into a great Dallas team. We couldn’t find that extra one and that was the difference.”

Lowry showed his tremendous leadership during the course of the day, beginning with his glowing words about what type of person Brad Scheifele was when he spoke to reporters at the arena in the morning.

After the overtime winner was scored, there was Lowry heading to the box to console Scheifele.

And after Scheifele made his way through the handshake line, Lowry waited to provide one more tap on the shin pads before the Jets alternate captain made his way off the ice for the final time this season.

“We’re there for him. we’re a family, Scheif’s a big part of our family, and we’re here for him, no matter what,” said Jets defenceman Neal Pionk. “So that’s a ‘we weren’t leaving the ice without him’ kind of thing. Did everything we could to get him and his family a win, just didn’t pull through.”

The Jets weren’t the only ones offering support for Scheifele.

While sharking hands, each of the Stars players and coaches stopped to say something to Scheifele and many provided an extra hug for the Jets’ centre.

One of the longest embraces was with Stars captain Jamie Benn, the same player who caught Scheifele with a stiff punch to the face in the third period of Game 5.

“I just told him that I respected him as a competitor, and as a hockey player,” said Benn. “You can grow to not like guys throughout a playoff series, but when it’s all over, I told him I respect him as a player.

“I wanted to let him know that it took a lot of courage for him to play today in a tough situation. I’m not sure too many guys would have done that in his situation. So, I respected it. I know every guy in our room respected it, and our whole organization respected it.”

That respect was noticeable and you can be sure that Scheifele appreciated it a great deal.

Let’s take a closer look at this one:

THIS ONE’S FOR DAD

Scheifele endured one of the toughest things a person can go through, finding out that his father had passed away late Friday night.

Despite having to deal with the emotional toll of losing someone that was so close to him, Scheifele didn’t hesitate to suit up with his teammates in Game 6.

Scheifele opened the scoring on Saturday, getting to the front of the net and depositing a rebound through the five-hole of Stars goalie Jake Oettinger after a shot by Kyle Connor at 5:28 of the second period.

Scheifele’s celebration and smile as his teammates gathered around him after the goal told you how much the moment meant to him.

“For him to go through what he had to go through, and perform the way he did, so proud of him,” said Jets head coach Scott Arniel. “And his dad would be so proud of him. He wanted to win so bad. The circumstances, so, so tough. Being in a situation like that, I couldn’t imagine it. The pro that he is, the leader that he is, the year that he had with us, his dad and his family would be very proud of him.”

The goal wouldn’t have happened without an excellent play down low by Gabe Vilardi, whose spin move against Stars blue-liner Lian Bischel helped create the passing lane to find Connor for the initial shot.

THE EQUALIZER

The Stars pulled even at 11:12 of the second period on a rebound goal of their own.

Stars D-man Thomas Harley took a low shot from a sharp angle and Jets goalie Connor Hellebuyck kicked out a juicy rebound that found the stick of Sam Steel.

Steel, who has been energetic throughout the series, buried his shot high to the glove side of Hellebuyck, setting the stage for an exhilarating finish.

THE (HIGHLIGHT-REEL) SAVES

This was an outstanding goalie battle, with two Team USA netminders going up against one another, with tremendous saves being made at each end of the ice to ensure extra time was required to determine a winner.

During the third period, Lowry found Mason Appleton for what looked like an empty net, but Oettinger made a sprawling glove save to keep the game knotted 1-1.

Appleton looked to the sky in disbelief after the stop, which represented the best unconverted scoring chance the Jets had in the game.

Then, with roughly 2:30 to go in regulation time, Hellebuyck kicked out his left pad to prevent Mikael Granlund from scoring on a backhand rebound chance.

Like the team in front of him, Hellebuyck lost a 10th consecutive road playoff game, but he took a big step toward quieting the narrative about his play away from Canada Life Centre.

THE KEY PLAY

Thomas Harley blasted home a one-timer at 1:33 of the first overtime to deliver the knockout punch.

THE THREE STARS

  1. Thomas Harley, Stars, Scored the series clinching goal and added an assist in 25 minutes of work.

  2. Mark Scheifele, Jets, Scored the lone goal for the visitors, showing incredible strength while dealing with a monumental personal loss.

  3. Jake Oettinger, Stars, Finished with 22 saves in what was another extraordinary effort.

THE INJURY

The Jets lost top blue-liner Josh Morrissey with 4:53 to go in the second period with what looked to be a left knee injury.

Morrissey was battling with Mikko Rantanen in the defensive zone and as he was trying to get some leverage on the Stars winger, the Jets’ D-man tripped the Stars’ winger.

As Rantanen was falling to the ice, Morrissey’s knee got caught underneath the Finnish forward, leaving him in discomfort as he left the ice.

Morrissey was holding his left knee and let out an audible expletive as he made his way to the bench. Once he had a quick word with Jets head athletic therapist Rob Milette, Morrissey had to be helped as he made his way down the tunnel to the locker room for further evaluation.

Following the game, Arniel didn’t get into specifics but some healing will be required, even if the full severity of the injury is not yet known.

“It’s not good,” said Arniel. “We’ll obviously get him home. He’s banged up pretty good.”

The Jets finished the game with five D-men, something they had to do in Game 7 against the St. Louis Blues after Morrissey left the game after three shifts with what appeared to be a shoulder injury.

Prior to his departure on Saturday, Morrissey was flying. In just under 15 minutes of ice time, he had one shot on goal and five shot attempts, two hits and four blocked shots.

EXTRA, EXTRA

Special teams were a massive story in this series, as the Jets were outscored 7-3 in that department. The Harley goal allowed the Stars to finish seven-for-19 (31.8 per cent) on the power play, while the Jets were held without a man-advantage on Saturday and finished three-for-21 (14.2 per cent).

With Morrissey leaving the game, Pionk finished the contest with the most minutes of any Jets player, taking 34 shifts for 24:47 of action. Dylan Samberg was next at 23:35.

For the third time this series, the Stars opted to dress 11 forwards and seven defencemen, giving them some insurance with Miro Heiskanen working his way up to full speed while getting Rantanen some additional playing time. Heiskanen was up to 23:40 in Game 6, while Rantanen led the Stars’ forwards at 24:23.

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 4 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

If you still have a mortgage on your home, you’ve lost a lot because you may no longer have equity to cover your mortgage. Which, probably not a huge deal if you actually plan to live in it and not treat it like a medium-term investment. But there can be a tangible loss there.

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 3 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I honestly don’t see much comparison at all, to be honest. This doesn’t have a web of skills to unlock nor does it have the rapid-fire pace of a Diablo game. I guess a vaguely isometric 3rd person action game is automatically Diablo?

It’s 1,000% in the Soulsborne category, but with select systems from ARPGs mixed in, and the pains of figuring out how to adapt them are showing, but the potential is huge.

And maybe that’s the thing; coming at this from “I want an alternative to a Souls game” and it lands great. If I picked this up expecting Diablo or Torchlight (ha! I’m old!) or something, I’d be WTF-ing within 8 second of the game starting.

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 20 points 3 weeks ago (4 children)

Personally, I picked up NRFTW after the first hotfix for The Breach and I haven’t run into pretty much anything most of the negative reviews are complaining about. There were 100% tuning issues with the original Breach update and they got pummelled for it in the reviews, but in less than a week they fixed 90% of the problems.

It’s an early access game, so no, of course it’s not perfect yet, but it’s a really solid product with a ton of potential that’s fun to play right now.

The problem is that reviews are rarely updated, so right now there’s a ton of reviews that capture a tiny snapshot of the game’s life that don’t reflect where the game is merely a couple weeks after they were left. I’m sure there was a bunch riding on this…they’d been locked up in legal proceedings getting the rights to the game and getting out from under a publisher, and I’m sure part of the hype train around The Breach was to spur a renewed round of funding.

As someone newer to its community, I’m really surprised at how much complaining there is about end game longevity and a bunch of other things that make me want to ask, “You…you know the game isn’t done yet, right?”

Moon Studios took a risk going independent which means two things: (a) they have strong faith that their project can stand on its own, and (b) they are far more sensitive to cash flow now than they were under a publisher. One thing I think they’ll need to work on is their community relations, and it’s a shame because it almost always means we hear less direct communication and more stuff filtered through PR people.

I’ll leave a positive review b/c I’ve played about 10 hours and I’m really enjoying the game in front of me and look forward to the updates coming through the rest of 2025.

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 2 points 4 weeks ago

Good to know; thanks for getting back to me!

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 2 points 4 weeks ago

Based on my experience with Shadow Tactics, I will be getting this month’s bundle for this game alone. Like ST, Shadow Gambit should play great on a controller and be a good fit for the Deck.

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 2 points 4 weeks ago

I’ve been on a Souls-like kick lately, so the two games I’ve been playing the most recently on my Deck are Blasphemous 2 and No Rest for the Wicked.

Blasphemous 2 I got as part of Humble Choice a bit ago and I’m really enjoying it. Not too difficult, but definitely gives its own unique feel to a metroidvania.

I just picked up No Rest for the Wicked after its recent Breach update and I’ve been loving the gameplay and loop they’ve built. Hope to see more performance improvements for the Deck…it really feels like a game that they should be able to get running much better on the Deck over time, but I am able to get a mostly stable 30 FPS so far.

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 2 points 4 weeks ago

Have you had a chance to play it since the recent update? They completely re-did the controls on the Deck, right? I’d love to hear how it plays now, I’ve been eying it for a while.

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 2 points 4 weeks ago (2 children)

How have you felt about playing CO:E33 on the Deck? The game looks quite good, but I’m really unsure about playing it now on the Deck or waiting until I build a new mid-range PC in the fall/winter.

Do you feel the trade-offs for getting it working on the Deck are worth it?

[–] buffaloseven@lemmy.ca 3 points 3 months ago

Boys are all going to need ice packs after tonight's tilt. Sheesh! Why did the All-Star games suck so much compared to this?

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