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Showing results for tags '2016'.
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Which game do you prefer: KSP or Orbiter (Hint: Orbiter doesn't let you build your own craft)? This is a discussion/debate thread not unlike the one I made about KSP and Minecraft, and again I am not responsible for any big quarrels that may go on here.
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KSP is certainly one of the best indie games of all time, mainly because it enables players to experience realistic spaceflight (along with a few explosions and bugs, such as the dreaded Kraken). Minecraft, on the other hand, is popular because it allows players to kill time and construct physically impossible structures, such as floating islands. But while Minecraft is good as a timewaster game, KSP excels in simulating real-life aerodynamics and spaceflight (plenty of people play KSP when they're bored, but it's usually due to the fact that they're bored of playing other games, such as-you guessed it-Minecraft). So which indie game is better? This is meant to be a discussion/debate thread, and I am not responsible for any big fights about the two games.
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Which engine do you prefer: Vector or Mammoth?
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NOTE: This post is not about global warming per say its about an unprecedented climate anomaly that occurred in 2015-2016 and about its future. Please respect the intent of the thread and do not drive this again into politics. https://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/april-2016-earths-12th-consecutive-warmest-month-on-record This blog is basically recapitulating my previous thread OP with details and predictions from NOAA. The problem is that they actually previously predicted its decline last fall that we would be neutral by the spring, Obviously we aren't, its May and El-nino rains, the most severe that I have seen, so I think that the call of el-Nino is not as fast and the la-Nina may not develope as quickly. As El-Nino suggests decline, we have in the last month had two decadal floods, this follows a decadal flood we had last year (2 depending on the area) and expect another event of sorts today. "When it rains it rains, but when it really rains, its El Nino." If you scroll down the page you can see GOES of my state, Im in the area that has not yet been hit. Note the cloud coverage over the entire state including over Big Bend region areas of which get less than 8 inches of rain per year. The recent floods we have had are not the typical flood systems that fill up one or two major river systems. We have events that filled rivers from the Guadalupe river all the way to the Calcasieu river in Louisiana, not within a protracted event but as a single contemporary system.