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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: October 16th, 2023

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  • Jumping for sure. Sucks everyone is so paranoid these days, but it’s also easy to understand why. Rest assured, everything on the site is written and edited by humans, and I wrote this post on Lemmy.

    From what I can tell some key giveaways are excessive use of emdashes and emoji in lists. LinkedIn is a perfect example of everyone using AI.

    But yeah, I recently launched my site in retaliation to all the slop out there (more about that here), as I’m just as sick of it as everyone else, maybe moreso because it’s destroying the field I work in while decimating the careers of many friends and coworkers.

    The only AI that touches the site is in place of stock photos and logos, and that’s simply because the site isn’t monetized and doesn’t make any money. Me and the crew would rather put our focus into creating high-quality content, which means recording our own videos and taking our own images of products (we only review products we’ve actually hand tested), as well as writing our own words.

    We don’t want to regurgitate news in a rush like the slop shops; we have no interest in writing endless affiliated bullshit recommending products a writer has never used. We want to dig in and report the finer details, the stuff other sites won’t cover because they think their audience are idiots that need everything dumbed down. And that’s the point of opening an independent site, one owned by the writers; we are free to do the job as we see fit, and that means doing it with integrity.




  • The outcome isn’t the same; FPGA devices can read the physical carts. And if the core is made well, it can be indistinguishable from OG hardware, though it’s not like we don’t have some good emus out there as well. For me, it’s like asking why anyone buys imported beer when Coors exists. Sometimes I want something that’s made to be a higher grade, and FPGA devices tend to be on the higher end. I’m a collector of games and devices, and the last thing I’m looking for is yet another cheap emulation device. Those are a dime a dozen that market is served. Right now, what the market doesn’t offer is an FPGA handheld with a 3:2 screen that can read physical GBA carts, and I’d love to get one as soon as someone makes one.



  • Were it a shithead company like Ubisoft running a crowdfunding campaign, I would heartily agree. But using crowd sourcing for its intended purpose, I’d say it’s less so. Not everyone can just go out and get a loan for $100K to manufacture an open-source handheld. No bank is signing up for that. Really, I’d be a lot more skeptical if they didn’t already have a manu lined up. Sure, crowdsourcing can be risky to back, but I’ve also bought all kinds of stuff off the shelf that was absolute junk at the end of the day. Purchasing things comes with risks, some more than others. You just gotta weigh if the purchase is a risk you’re willing to take.