Pretty cool, do they have a beta branch that follows the daily builds?
domi
Maybe he can crunch a PC version in there?
Most Souls-likes are slow and methodical, if that's not your thing you probably won't have fun with any of these except Sekiro. I would not call the official ones (Dark Souls, Elden Ring, ...) clunky but many of the "copies" certainly can be.
but it felt like Sekiro was wasting my time in comparison because I had to GET to the boss again for each attempt. The grunts didn't pose enough of a challenge to be interesting, just enough to slow me down.
You can rush past most enemies on your way to the boss and the difficult ones usually have a respawn point close but this is a problem with many From games. I bounced off Dark Souls 1 and Sekiro for similar reasons the first time I played them.
If you enjoy the boss fights you might enjoy Kannagi Usagi? It's essentially a carbon copy of the Sekiro bosses in a boss rush mode and with an anime skin. I have seen even the biggest Sekiro haters enjoy that one. Also, it's free and short. https://store.steampowered.com/app/2551500/__KANNAGI_USAGI/
Are there any statistics on which projects the Linux Foundation spends how much on?
Their annual report for 2024 only lists "Project Support" with 64% ($193,704,610) of its expenses but doesn't go into details which projects are supported by how much.
Which one played first?
Would be a shame to drop Sekiro. Definitely one of the hardest souls games but very redeeming once you get the hang of it.
Code Vein is very rough around the edges but has a cool art style and interesting boss designs. Also has a banger soundtrack by Go Shiina, best known for Demon Slayer. Some of the boss themes go really hard. Pretty good in coop but probably wouldn't have finished it alone.
Did not enjoy The Surge and did not play Steel Rising.
So what are the 4 Souls-likes in your backlog?
linux-image-oem-24.04b
contains newer firmware. It's quite possible that firmware for your wireless adapter was not included in the latest Linux Mint version.
The 4070 Super is more than new enough that it should work just fine with the official Nvidia driver.
If you are willing to give this another go, it might be worth booting a distro with newer packages and pre-installed Nvidia drivers just to test. You should keep your current Windows installation in case things don't work out.
Here are two distros that are fairly recent and come with Nvidia drivers pre-installed:
- Nobara (make sure to use the Nvidia version)
- Bazzite (choose
Desktop / Nvidia / KDE / No
in the dropdowns)
Everything should work out of the box with one of these without having to install anything extra or dropping to command line.
Hope that helps!
What's your hardware? Specifically your wireless chip(s) and graphics card.
It's now possible to pre-authorize apps for remote desktop access, so you don't have to wait for them to pop up an interactive permission dialog. Preliminary documentation can be found here. (Harald Sitter, 6.3.0. Link)
Awesome, that's a feature I have been waiting for.
They are not but Prusa Link is, which is their local version of Prusa Connect: https://github.com/prusa3d/Prusa-Link-Web