I tried the beta and I must say they did a great job on the art department.
Doesn't get much better later. And if you're surprised you're not the person that abused animation breakpoints back in the days.
I played an older patch of Diablo 2 within the last year and still found it very enjoyable. Progression and playstyle is only an issue for me if I pick a class that happen to suck for the patch that I'm playing. Unfortunately, that means Assassin and Druid are pretty much always off limits.
Diablo 2 Resurrected is a re-release of Diablo 2 for modern platforms, built with a modern graphics engine.
This installment offers players the original game's content, which features updated graphics and animations. Here, players, choosing from seven different character classes, go on a chase after a demon to stop him and his brothers, Mephisto and Baal. During their adventures, players will have to visit various locations, including high mountain plains, deserts, and abandoned ancient citadels. To defeat the demons, you need good equipment passing through level after level. Personally, I'm great at playing with the best unique gloves.
I'd say quoting the spam URL isn't the best idea, as deleting the spam account (which I reported yesterday) + its messages (which is as a whole a 1-click action) would take care of the original one, but is presevered in your quote.
i'd say whoever clicks a bot link deserves whatever lurks beyond
that said google says site is legit gameshit marketplace
No worries. I am only aware of the fact becaused I was the forum admin for our company's public forum back in the day when forum spam was still a thing (fortunately seems to have dried out over the past decade in favor of social media sites) and then had the "pleasure" to manually edit out the URLs in quotes after I deleted the account + all of its postings.
Yea. It's the ever-demanding need for more engagement.
https://rosie.land/posts/stop-measur...ty-engagement/
This nightmare scenario is exactly what happened to social media. Originally they were there to connect people and let them share in each other’s joy. They couldn’t measure joy, but they could measure engagement, and so they did.
That measurement became their goal, and they focused on maximizing it. They built algorithms that could analyze millions of posts to determine which ones would get the most engagement, and it would promote those posts to a wider audience.
What they didn’t understand was that negative, divisive, hate-inspiring posts get more engagement than positive, supportive, kind posts do. The algorithm didn’t care whether the posts brought joy or anger, it only cared about whether they brought engagement. So in order to maximize engagement, the algorithm actively encourages and elevates posts that cause unhappiness among the platform’s users.
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