

Unless you want to have all the beer yourself…


Unless you want to have all the beer yourself…


Control panel -> View advanced system system settings -> Performance -> Settings -> Advanced -> Virtual memory -> Change
Make sure the “Automatically manage…” is nit selected and you should be able to set the paging file for each drive separately. System managed for the main OS drive (usually C:) and any other SSDs you run apps from is fine. Old hardrives and other drives that are just for storage should have “None”, otherwise that drive may be used for paging file. Also make sure the main drive always has a good bit of free space (20GB+ should be more than enough), so it should be prioritized for the paging file.


Windows is stupid AF when it comes to multiple drives and it tends to create swap on all of them.
I think Advanced settings -> performance should get you on the tab with swap settings.
That’s fair. Silksong is harder and more importantly much meaner game than Hollow Knight. It is still a really good game, but it’s a bit of a love/hate relationship for me as well.


I asked the same question year or two back I think and responses could be summed up “yes if you really liked Scholar”. I like it a lot, so I did buy the game. But I haven’t had time to actually give it a go yet, so no personal experience to add.
Otherwise I would say all the DLC is well worth playing. Each of them has a multiplayer thing that kinda sucks IMO, but otherwise they’re great.


Saksa in Finnish, no clue what the origin of that is. It doesn’t even mean anything that I know of.
The end bit of the goblin camp is tough, even on normal difficulty, so nothing wrong with struggling with it. Most areas have a fight or two that are intended to be very difficult, but these are usually optional, so you can return to them later.
I would say BG3 does have a fair bit of these difficult fights, but there’s usually also a lot of options to deal with them. Utilising stuff like stealth archery, area denial (grease/web spells/scrolls), environmental damage (like that pushing dudes off ledges) and so on is important. There are also often other ways around these fights (stealth, conversation options, using environment).
And yeah like others have said, I would generally stay away from Steam forums, there’s lot of assholes in there and a lot of the responses are often straight up wrong.
Well most of GOP is also predators, just with a small “p”


I’ve been playing Riftbreaker, so similar deal with a big mech with absurd firepower and giant melee weapons. I think it would be more of a question of dealing with insight and other weirdness, surviving and killing anything should be pretty easy.
Yeah, that’s how I do it at work. Anything not specifically sent to me will go into one of my extra folders. I don’t often look at most of these until I ran out of other work, which very rarely happens.


Yeah the online 365 office was branded with Copilot BS sometime last summer I think. Also logging in to the online office throws you to the copilot prompt by default. Even before this the online version of office was getting so bad that it was not worth using anymore. I’ve been using LibreOffice for 3+ years now, but every now and then I gave to access a sheet it something with a different PC and still run into this office garbage.


I feel like this is the far superior video
One of ours loves the carrier and car rides too. She will immediatelly get into carrier when she finds it open on the floor.
It’s not until she ends up at the vet office that she gets upset and goes into ball of fury mode.


I’ve had it with this motherfunkeling tinsel on this motherfunkeling tree!
I had good time with that one, I felt it was fun despite the grimdark. Gideon really carried it for me.
I’m reading Harrow the Ninth now, but about 3rd of the way through it has not gripped me yet.
I was stuck with Dhalgren by Samuel R. Delany for well over a year. Finally finished a couple months ago. I think the longest I’ve been stuck with a book before this is maybe 4 months and that’s usually because I haven’t had enough time to read.
Elric of Melniboné stories by Micheal Moorcock are very likely inspiration too, a lot of similar themes.


What would happen to the people if the buffer were to lose power or malfunction in any way? Even a small risk of anything adverse plus the degradation while being stored would make this not acceptable from medical viewpoint.


Scummation or perhaps scumsock
Of course not, but whoever posted it here should