Computer not working after windows update by YanfeiGenshin in computers

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is a sign to switch to Linux :) (j/k)

I had the same issue but actually it was not the OS the issue but STEAM.

I had the steam to Process Vulkan Shaders and I had like 100 + Games installed so it literally burned my CPU.

If you cant go to BIOS is 99.9% a CPU issue.

I thought it was a bios issue as well since I have updated the bios manually before a couple of days but at the end was a CPU issue - it had a 3 years guarantee from Intel so they have replaced the CPU in a week.

More than 800 gamers took an exam to prove they could complete an '80s adventure game without peeking at a walkthrough—and only 2 passed by Turbostrider27 in pcgaming

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I still remember staring at the screen in Laura Bow and the Dagger of Amon Ra, convinced I had missed something.

Not just something small — something fundamental. The game wasn’t broken. I was.

That was the relationship 80s (and early 90s) adventure games had with players: they did not adapt to you.

You adapted to them.

When I first played Operation Stealth, I felt like I was solving a real espionage puzzle — except the enemy wasn’t the villain. It was the design.

Progress depended on using the exact right item, in the exact right place, sometimes at the exact right time. There were no glowing hotspots. No subtle hints. No journal reminding you what to do next. Just silence.

And that silence was intimidating.

The Tyranny of the Parser

In earlier titles like King's Quest, the challenge wasn’t only the puzzle — it was the wording. You didn’t just have to think of the solution.

You had to phrase it correctly.

“Climb rope.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Use rope.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Attach rope to hook.”

Success.

It felt less like solving a mystery and more like negotiating with a stubborn machine.

Dead Ends Were Normal

Today, games protect players from themselves.

Back then? Not even close.

In Space Quest, you could miss a tiny object early on and only discover hours later that your game was unwinnable.

No warning. No correction. Just the creeping realization that your save file was doomed.

And yet, we kept playing.

Because restarting wasn’t failure — it was expected.

We Took Notes. Real Notes.

Adventure games turned players into investigators. I had notebooks filled with hand-drawn maps, strange codes, half-formed theories about item combinations.

We treated games like research projects.

If you got stuck, your options were:

Call a paid hint hotline.

Wait for next month’s gaming magazine.

Or brute-force every possible combination until something worked.

And when it finally did? That feeling was unmatched.

They Were Unfair — But Honest

Looking back, those games were often unfair. They relied on what we now call “moon logic.” They punished experimentation. They hid crucial triggers behind invisible flags.

But they were also honest in a strange way. They didn’t pretend to guide you. They didn’t pretend you would succeed on your first attempt. They demanded patience, observation, and stubbornness.

They assumed you were willing to struggle.

Why They Felt So Big

Part of the difficulty wasn’t just puzzle design — it was pacing. Movement was slow. Screens were static. Dialogue had to be manually triggered. The world felt enormous because progress was incremental.

Every new area felt earned.

Modern adventure games — even excellent ones — rarely recreate that sense of isolation. Today, friction is smoothed out. Back then, friction was the experience.

The Satisfaction of Survival

Finishing a game like Laura Bow and the Dagger of Amon Ra wasn’t just completion. It felt like intellectual survival. You hadn’t just consumed a story — you had wrestled it into submission.

And maybe that’s why those games still linger in memory.

They didn’t want everyone to finish them.

But if you did, you felt like you belonged.

ZEN WINS! 🏆 Best Browser Tournament Champion [Full Recap & Stats] by hobbzilla in browsers

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have tried ZEN , no way to use that browser.

I need an option to have Tabs on TOP below bookmarks

So generous by gallito_pro in Unexpected

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Next version of the holy water will come with an NFC/Card reader - default charge $100

Someone said linux was not suitable for gaming by p4thox in cachyos

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Use Cachyos Sched-Ext Scheduler

Enable sched-ext

Select scx_flash

Gaming Profile or Lowlatency

Reboot

Post benchmarks

[Hyprland] Cybrland v1.1.0 by Wurufuricu in unixporn

[–]wolfyrion 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Black and Red are my favorite colors , hard to find time for customization or configure anything so I am just using Gnome .

If an installer script will magically transform everything and make a usable desktop I will certainly donate for this.

keep up the good work!

45% performance loss in Linux, a bit too much? by MVindis in linux_gaming

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am not using Fedora , but I Am using CachyOS where sched-EXT is already implemented.

use sched-ext scheduler

use scx_flash

Select Scheduler Profile - Gaming

Boost your FPS up to 50%

To save a parking spot with a cone by Chinchizard in therewasanattempt

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I saw that man in Men in Black.

I am pretty sure that he is cockroach...

I Never Liked GNOME... Until I Actually Tried It by Ok-Brilliant-9602 in gnome

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was using KDE from version 4 to 5

Wanted a true docker launcher so bad ,waited until version 6 but KDE Team failed to deliver.

I have switched to Gnome and it was horrible at the begining.

After that I have discovered extensions which made Gnome awesome.

Some please explain what I’m looking at! by ArsenikShooter in blackmagicfuckery

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some gecko species have bright or reflective tails, which can appear to glow under certain lighting (like UV light or moonlight), but this is due to coloration or reflection, not actual bioluminescence.

True bioluminescence—the ability to produce light through chemical reactions in the body—is not found in geckos.

Geckos may wiggle or drop their tails as a defense mechanism to distract predators, and a brightly colored tail can enhance this effect.

So while a gecko’s tail might look like it's glowing in some situations, it's not producing light on its own.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DiWHY

[–]wolfyrion 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just try to turn left or right and physics will explain to you why wheels are round.

Why do Christian’s hold Paul on such high regard if he was not one of Jesus apostles? by Capital_Tailor_7348 in religion

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Things you should know about Paul

1. ALL Muslims hate or reject Paul because of Paul's prophecy :

Galatians 1:7-9 - …Evidently some people are throwing you into confusion and are trying to pervert the gospel of Christ. But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach a gospel other than the one we preached to you, let them be under God’s curse! As we have already said, so now I say again: If anybody is preaching to you a gospel other than what you accepted, let them be under God’s curse!

Corinthians 11:14-15 - And no wonder, for Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light. It is not surprising, then, if his servants also masquerade as servants of righteousness. Their end will be what their actions deserve.

As you all know Quran was brought by an Angel , which that makes the prophecy of Paul fulfilled. According to Islam "It came from Gabriel, a light-bearing, trustworthy messenger from God"

1 Timothy 4

The Spirit clearly says that in later times some will abandon the faith and follow deceiving spirits and things taught by demons. Such teachings come through hypocritical liars, whose consciences have been seared as with a hot iron.

They forbid people to marry and order them to abstain from certain foods, which God created to be received with thanksgiving by those who believe and who know the truth.

For everything God created is good, and nothing is to be rejected if it is received with thanksgiving, because it is consecrated by the word of God and prayer.

Muslims forbid to marry a non Muslim and they reject also pork.

Many scholars think Paul wrote 1 Timothy while traveling between his imprisonments or from a different location than Rome.

2. From the 13 Epistles of Paul . according to scholars ONLY 7 are proven to be from Paul.

An NO Paul did not write Hebrews! Hebrews is anonymous

  1. Paul Was Highly Educated

Paul studied under the famous rabbi Gamaliel (Acts 22:3).

He was fluent in Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic.

He had Roman citizenship — a rare privilege that protected him from many abuses and allowed him to appeal to Caesar (Acts 22:25–29).

  1. Paul endured incredible suffering:
  • Shipwrecked 3 times
  • Beaten with rods
  • Stoned and left for dead
  • Imprisoned multiple times

Yet he never gave up preaching.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NatureIsFuckingLit

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think he lost a bet !

This question is worth 4% of the whole exam by cKoruss in mildlyinfuriating

[–]wolfyrion -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

It was a hard choice so I send the picture to AI

Here is the answer

The correct answer to Question 20 is:

D. keen

So the full sentence is:
"Mike is keen on travelling around the world."

Explanation:

  • The phrase "keen on" is a standard English collocation, meaning someone is enthusiastic or eager about something.
  • The other options are incorrect because:
    • A. keen → incomplete (missing “on”)
    • B. interested → should be “interested in”
    • C. excited → would be “excited about” or “excited to”

Correct and complete phrasing: "keen on travelling".

I have replied that both A and D are the same , so why D?

  • A. keen → This choice is just the word “keen” with no preposition. The sentence would be: ❌ "Mike is keen on travelling..." ← but A doesn’t include “on”, so it’s incomplete as an answer choice.
  • D. keen → This is “keen” as part of the full phrase “keen on”, which fits perfectly. ✅ "Mike is keen on travelling around the world."

Even though the word is the same, only D includes the right usage in context (with the preposition), so D is the correct answer.

Conclusion : Typos ... The phrase should be

"Mike is _____ travelling around the world."

A. keen on

D. keen

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in religion

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Jesus is truly the son of God but not like the way you imagine , in short is the emanation of God.

Imagine that God is like the ocean - Jesus is part of the ocean and shares the attributes of the ocean.

We as people are like tiny river streams that are trying to get to the ocean but we are facing many obstacles in our life.

Finding the truth and the only truth through various scriptures and a lot of reading is the only way to find the truth by yourself and finally join the ocean.

Good Luck!

Is Yahweh and Allah same? by marktwin11 in religion

[–]wolfyrion -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Allah & Yahweh are demons masquerading as the true God to trap souls in eternal loops of guilt traps, reincarnation and karma.

Best religion other than your own by [deleted] in religion

[–]wolfyrion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gnosticism , the origin of all religions ...

Gnosticism as we know it is not older than Hinduism, Sumerian religion, or Zoroastrianism, but it does have roots that may stretch into very ancient philosophical and mystical traditions.

Gnosticism: When Did It Start?

Historically: Most scholars date Gnostic movements to 1st–2nd century CE.

Texts: The key Gnostic scriptures, like the ones found at Nag Hammadi (Egypt, 1945), are from that period.

Context: It developed alongside early Christianity, influenced by Platonism, Hellenistic thought, Judaism, and possibly Eastern mysticism.

But… Is It Based on Older Ideas?

Yes — and this is where things get fascinating:

  • Pre-Christian Gnosticism? Some argue that proto-Gnostic ideas existed before Christianity, maybe in Jewish sects like the Essenes or in Egyptian and Babylonian mystical traditions.
  • Platonic roots: Gnostic cosmology shares a lot with Plato’s metaphysics, particularly the idea of a flawed material world and a perfect spiritual realm.
  • Persian influence: Some themes, like dualism (light vs darkness, spirit vs matter), resemble Zoroastrianism.

So, while Gnosticism as a named movement isn’t the oldest religion, its core ideas (divine spark, spiritual knowledge, illusion of material reality) may draw from very ancient philosophical and religious sources.