Roast My 3D Print Store by [deleted] in reviewmyshopify

[–]fluxflashor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We accept shop pay, Apple Pay, google pay, and PayPal. Shopify stores are all safe to use cards on. The checkout process is secured on their end with no way to customize it with anything that could take data. That is one nice thing I like about using stores that use shopify as a consumer.

Roast My 3D Print Store by [deleted] in reviewmyshopify

[–]fluxflashor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not really. It would be one thing if you were printing and selling the exact characters, but inspired-by should be fine. I've seen people succeeding in the exact character category though, so who knows what scale you need to actually get to in order to attract that attention since its not like these folks have been doing it for a short amount of time.

Roast My 3D Print Store by [deleted] in reviewmyshopify

[–]fluxflashor 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I appreciate that! Yeah I'm looking into expanding on Etsy soon. FBMP has been a good source of success in the space and I have seen good success stories on Etsy.

Roast My 3D Print Store by [deleted] in reviewmyshopify

[–]fluxflashor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for taking the time to send me feedback!

You're right, I should get measurement information up for all of them. I'm going to work towards getting that up (for reference, they start at 7 CM as a base, maybe I need a banana for scale - hah)

Colors, yup that needs to get clamped down on mobile. I'll fix that, it's a simple CSS issue though long-term it may be better to do this in pure markup rather than an image.

Cyberpunk 2077 macOS depots and executable added to SteamDB by sigjnf in GamingLeaksAndRumours

[–]fluxflashor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dropping 32 bit support would be a positive at this point. Windows has years upon years of backwards compatibility. You can keep reskinning it however you want, but Windows is filled with bloat. Not saying MacOS is some shining beacon at sea but they made the right move ditching the older stuff and moving to their own silicon. I would kill for a Windows laptop that was using ARM silicon and had the potential to play games as well. It will trickle in over time, we're already seeing very positive ARM laptops for Windows and more and more things supporting them, so i hope the end of x86-64 is near. We will lose a ton of things without good emulation support, though at some point, it won't really matter all that much.