@nucleative If one of those copies you own is on the Microsoft Store for Windows 10/11, you should already own the Java edition as well, courtesy of Microsoft themselves. Just open the official launcher (or a custom, community launcher like MultiMC, Modrinth App or Prism Launcher) and select the version you wanna play
averagedood
@Nemoder Cracking the games doesn't do shit in this matter. It'd block the online functions of the game if they depend on anything else, or on license checking (one simple example, Steam/Epic based servers)
To put an example of this, you can pirate Baldur's Gate 3 and still log in with a Larian account, connect the Twitch integration and even setup a multiplayer campaign like it's nothing.
There are Unity related DLLs that take the role of the telemetry, and thus, don't care about cracks (in fact, Unity have said that the developer should contact them to avoid getting charged by piracy, meaning that those DO count)
@mossy_capivara @uuhhhhmmmm Yeah, I don't think those games and the developers behind them are at fault for Unity's bullshit.
Just block Unity's telemetry call by redirecting the URLs to 127.0.0.1 on your hosts file and done
@aphlamingphoenix @poVoq No, but I have personal confidence on that they'll get there. The Arc chips look promising to me, maybe next generation they'll be a better competing option?
And yet, Steam hardware survey shows Linux growing almost every month. By little, yes, but still growing almost every month, with Valve and Steam themselves betting more on Linux than on Windows and the Steam Deck being a thing.
If Lemmy feels like a computer science party, tell ya what: feel free to join us, everyone's welcome. Just don't claim "cope and seethe" when there's actual growth here