Mostly because they have to wait for Half-Life 3 in order not to confuse the customers.
Mostly because they have to wait for Half-Life 3 in order not to confuse the customers.
I don’t think it’s the passport thing. The differences between European passports are minor, so in that matter you surely could accept all EU nationalities. If you really want the best ones, then Sweden, Finland, France, Italy, Austria and Switzerland are among the ones that bring you the farthest in the world, and those are not in the list, while Greece and Norway are less powerful passports, and the USA, Canada and Australia even less, and all of them are in the list.
https://www.passportindex.org/byRank.php
Of course it could be one or multiple specific countries they want you to travel, but chances for that are low. Clearance sounds much more likely.
Not having 60 fps might be an issue for a shooter or anything that is built on fast reactions, but it doesn’t really sound like an issue in a city builder.
Same for me. And the individual games have prices > 0.
EDIT: 15 minutes later, now it works.
Given that in the very same post he wrote “we need to go back, way back, into the mists of time, when dinosaurs roamed the earth, and we started working on TF2”, did you consider it could just be a joke?
The English voice recordings for Cyberpunk 2077 were all done in London and LA. So it’s basically sure that it wasn’t Poland, and it’s much more likely that it was LA than London in this case.
Das Rechtsfahrgebot existiert nicht nur, es steht sogar direkt in §2 der StVO: “Es ist möglichst weit rechts zu fahren, nicht nur bei Gegenverkehr, beim Überholtwerden, an Kuppen, in Kurven oder bei Unübersichtlichkeit.”
I’ve been programming with lots of dumb people, and I’m particularly dumb myself, but if you really literally spend hours looking for missed semicolons, then you should give up programming no matter if this means more time for date nights or more time to look at the wall.
Best I can offer is a combined UI and logic class with 12,500 lines currently. It started out with less than 3,000 lines in the year 2000 (using the brand new Java 1.3), grew to 14,000 over time and survived our recent project-wide one-year cleanup project with only minor losses of code lines.
But Linux is a registered trademark, too.