🚨 My active profile is on Lemmy.zip. 🚨

Still figuring things out here. In the world, I mean.

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  • 55 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 9th, 2022

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  • Yeah, come to think of it, I think this is a larger issue I have in life: I always have to be working toward a goal or else I feel guilty. I can see your point of view too though. If there’s no beginning and end, there’s no minimum amount of time you need to play. The goal is just to enjoy.

    My perspective is basically the inverse: if there’s no beginning and end, there’s no maximum amount of time I need to play. 😅


  • I don’t feel this way about open-world games because they do usually have an end and you can skip a lot of the open-world filler content. I get this anxiety about sandbox games. I hate it because I really enjoy games like Cities Skylines and I’d love to get into Dwarf Fortress, but I can’t play them anymore because I could spend 1,000 hours in one of them and never finish. That open-endedness keeps me from playing.



  • Illucia: the town of Final Fantasy. This was a Final Fantasy fan site, but themed as a town from a Final Fantasy. This isn’t a town ripped out of a particular game though. Illucia was an entirely original town with original art created by fan Tatsushi Nakao.

    Before the release of FF7, it was themed after a town from the 16-bit era of Final Fantasy. To navigate the town, the user was presented with a clickable server-side image map, where clicking on different buildings in the town would take the user to a page on the site that was thematically appropriate to the building.

    Quick aside: a history lesson on image maps. Image maps were a technique that allowed for a single image to be linked to multiple different places based on where the user clicked it. In the later years of image maps, the web site developer (“webmaster” to use the period-appropriate nomenclature 😜) could define the different clickable areas in HTML and the browser would handle requesting the correct URL based on where the user clicked. This is a client-side image map. Before browsers had this capability though, browsers would instead send the clicked coordinates to a server-side script — often written in Perl, I think — which would translate the coordinates and send back the corresponding page.

    Anyway, after the release of FF7, Illucia was reworked in that style. I believe in this iteration, the user would interact with it by using the arrow keys to walk an actual character avatar around the town and enter various buildings rather than clicking on a (relatively) simple image map.

    Just like the FF series did, the site sorta lost its luster for me at that point. Final Fantasy had gone from an ensemble cast of quirky but warm characters and brightly colored pixel art to a blue and gray mess of blurry, pre-rendered environments and low-poly brooding characters that looked bad at the time and aged even worse. I pretty much stopped visiting, but I still fondly remember those old pixel art days of Illucia.

    Sadly, I haven’t been able to find any trace of it online anymore aside from one brief mention in another online article. If anyone knows of anything, please send it my way!



  • To offer a counterpoint to this:

    While it’s absolutely true that storing 2FA codes and passwords in the same place is less secure than splitting them up, it’s also true that having both and storing them together is more secure than not using 2FA codes at all. A giant SLR with a bevy of lenses will take better photos than your smartphone, but the best camera is the one you have with you. That’s because, if it becomes cumbersome to take your camera with you, you will take fewer pictures, which, if your goal is to have and enjoy pictures, is the worse of the two outcomes, even though the smartphone pictures would be of lesser quality.

    Your decision on this should balance your personal tolerance for risk with your personal tolerance for being inconvenienced. If you think having to store your 2FA codes in a different application along with having to open that application and run through some additional process (alongside invoking your password locker’s login flow) for every 2FA login is likely to inhibit you from using them in the first place, don’t worry about maximizing security and store 2FA codes in your password locker. If you split them and then are inhibited from using them, you haven’t really accomplished anything.

    The important thing is that you’re aware of the risk, and I believe this commenter has done a good job illuminating that.