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Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: February 4th, 2024

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  • Well that’s kind of my confusion - because CS:GO isn’t an “easy” game per se, but it’s still massively popular.

    It’s hard for me to know why. I do think the skill floor (as opposed to skill ceiling) is a decent part of it - but I honestly think a lot of it is just developers who never knew how to adapt that kind of arena shooter into something that actually makes money.


  • Minotaur@lemm.eetoGaming@lemmy.mlWhere's my current gen rocket jump?
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    7 months ago

    The death of the multiplayer boomer shooter (or crack shooter, if you will) is a real shame. They just never really maintained a presence and I’m not sure why. The most recent one I can think of was Quake Legends, which I actually thought was really good! I think the monetary approach behind it was just off.

    It’s funny, back then the assumption was that these ultra fast twitch games would be the whole future, and you’d kind of assume that’s what people would gravitate to, and now the most popular competitive FPS is CS:GO by a margin - a pretty slow burn tactical game lol






  • Minotaur@lemm.eetoProgrammer Humor@programming.devExam Answer
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    8 months ago

    I think you’re missing the forest for the trees here pretty heavily.

    Yes, Python has some goofy aspects about managing it while performing high level, in depth tasks.

    This is a post and a comment chain about pseudocode being taught to people who likely just learned what a “programming language” was several weeks ago. Essentially no one taking the GCSE knows what “bash-like scripts” even means.


  • Minotaur@lemm.eetoProgrammer Humor@programming.devExam Answer
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    8 months ago

    I’m very much guessing that this is just supposed to be a type of pseudocode given the context and vagueness of it.

    It’s a big reason why I really dont like pseudocode as instruction to people learning the basics of what programming is. It made more sense 20 years ago when programming languages were on a whole a lot more esoteric and less plain text, but now with simple languages like Python there’s simply little reason to not just write Python code or whatever.

    I took an intro to programming class in College and the single thing I got dinged on the most is “incorrect pseudocode”, which was either too formal and close to real code or too casual and close to plain English.

    It’s not a great system. We really need to get rid of it as a practice