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The review copies had no microtransactions. They were added at release.
The review copies had no microtransactions. They were added at release.
Same for me. I don’t understand why, I should love it but I don’t.
Just to clarify, the one that said that is actually one of the oldest far right parties in the country, not one of those that just popped up.
Take it from the fossil fuel subsidies.
There’s no such link in their comment history either.
Sure, but it’s still thousands. From Cambridge dictionary:
the thousands
numbers between 1,000 and 1,000,000
1200 is thousands. 1.2 thousands, to be specific.
Works perfectly on mine.
Why would I like to know that you’re proud of potentially causing suffering to your pets and other animals?
Even just today I had to rescue a kitten who had been yelling for hours near my house because their owners let them outside. At least she was microchipped so we could find them easily, but she was not happy about it at all. Came running after me as soon as she saw me, and ran inside the house when I opened the kitchen door.
Well I’m having plenty of fun with it, and I haven’t even installed 2.0. If it was a release from this year it would be my second favourite after Baldur’s Gate. So I strongly disagree with your dogshit assertion. If the DLC and 2.0 make it better then it’s for sure a redemption arc. And from the looks of OpenCritic, seems like a very universal feeling.
If everything was there from the get-go, how would there be a redemption arc? There would be nothing to redeem.
A redemption arc is when someone or something starts bad or reviled, and eventually comes to be seen through other eyes. Looks like that applies to CDPR and Cyberpunk to me.
Who are you talking to? That was my first comment here.
Ah yes, what could go wrong with doing things the way they were done in the past?
So, again, if those three examples are what you mean by catastrophic failure, then my assumption was correct. None of them were due to maintenance failures or being in service too long. Catastrophic failure is not a failure mode for a modern reactor past its service life.
You said catastrophic failure in the same context as loss of life and land. That is what I was responding to, and it is incorrect.
The pressure that the metals of the reactor are put under from the radiation is a real thing, it causes damage and fatigue.
Yes.
they’re decommissioned because if you keep them running they’ll have catastrophic failures, which besides the loss of life and land
No. This is the fearmongering part. A nuclear plant that is past its service life doesn’t just turn into Chernobyl.
I don’t know what article you’re talking about, but I’m pretty sure it won’t trump my years of university education on this.
all need to be decommissioned at some point, because they will fail catastrophically if they don’t.
This is false, that idea comes from decades of anti-science fearmongering. They need to be decommissioned for the same reasons as everything else, they just become too expensive to maintain. Same as every other energy source, including renewables.
Nuclear subidies aren’t even in the same order of magnitude as fossil fuel subsidies. There’s so much fearmongering in that comment I don’t even know where to start… Chernobyl really was the best thing to happen to the fossil fuel lobby.
go look at the history of nuclear power research and development
My friend, I went to university for this shit.
I mean, those are power companies. If you’re calling public power companies “the oil and gas billionaires” then you’re clearly being facetious.
When people talk about the oil and gas billionaires they are referring to the ones who spend millions on lobbying, Exxon, Shell, BP, Aramco, etc. You know, the ones funding climate change denial and nuclear fearmongering for decades.
But can it be solved by throwing less sensors at the problem? Cause that’s what he’s been doing. Removing sensors from the newer versions that were in the older ones.