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Not sure, but probably. I only used yarn 1. Never got around to trying yarn 2+ as migrating our fairly large monorepo project at the time felt like a pretty large and complicated ordeal. By the time I switched jobs npm was already a whole lot better in the ways most important to me.

The little I’ve read about and used pnpm so far it seems a lot more plug n play than yarn while bringing big benefits. Even workspaces seems a lot simpler than it ever was with yarn (at least when I used it). Love the idea of non-flat node_modules and simplified lock files as well.

Time will tell if npm incorporates enough of pnpm’s features to make it obsolete eventually but for now I can understand why it seems so widely adopted.

Fast, disk space efficient package manager | pnpm

Fast, disk space efficient package manager

He certainly has the high ground
I’ve heard that for smaller studios it is incredibly important to get those early sales. Their margins are often very small (if they exist at all) so getting early and continued support is often vital.
I haven’t played anything regularly in a few years. My board game group is finishing up an Imperial Assault campaign and there’s been talk of maybe doing RPGs next (though lord knows I have no shortage of board games that I have bought but not yet played). Would love to run Blades in the Dark, Mothership or maybe something OSR. I think all those could be good fits for our group.
Not quite the right kind of RPGs for this community but exciting nonetheless!

I imagine there might be quite a few available on the PS store so don’t worry about it.

Enjoy! I’ve only played the first one but I enjoyed it enough to 100% it twice.

Yeah these games are quite story heavy so don’t start with Miles, play them in order.

Also, there’s only 3 games in the current series to my knowledge.

isthereanydeal.com is great for getting any given game at a good price. You can see where it is currently/usually cheapest, its price over time, etc. You can also set up notifications for when it drops below a certain threshold.
IsThereAnyDeal

IsThereAnyDeal

What were the best and worst games you played in 2023?

https://lemmy.world/post/9488540

What were the best and worst games you played in 2023? - Lemmy.World

The title of this post [https://infosec.pub/post/5975961] made me think about the best and worst I’ve played this year. The best: - The Case of the Golden Idol. Short and sweet mystery game in the vein of Return of the Obra Dinn. Not quite as good IMO but I still liked it. - Marvel’s Midnight Suns. Don’t let the IP fool you, this is a really solid turn based strategy game with some occasionally really solid writing. The “dating sim”/downtime parts were surprisingly fun at best and dragged down the pacing at worst. - Death’s Door. Really cool, minimalistic, take on a Zelda-like game. Similar to Tunic in a lot of ways. Funny, cute and probably the best game about death I’ve ever played. - Moving Out. I don’t think I’ve ever laughed as much while playing a game as I did with Moving Out. It will always hold a special place in my heart for allowing me to connect and laugh virtually with people I love but don’t get to see very often. Generally I mostly play games a while after release, when I know how they panned out. As such there aren’t many real stinkers I can think of (plenty of games that I found overrated though). With that said, here are my worst: - Doki Doki Literature Club. With the way this game is set up it’s all about the twist. The problem is that the game it pretends to be until it reveals itself is incredibly boring. Maybe it would have helped if I wasn’t aware of the twist but generally I found this game to be a slog. - Turnip Boy Commits Tax Evasion. Games that rely heavily on humor are always hit or miss. Unfortunately it wasn’t for me in this one and the actual gameplay is incredibly barebones. Thanks for reading! What are your lists?