Humble is still around? I stopped once the deals got enshittered
Games
Welcome to the largest gaming community on Lemmy! Discussion for all kinds of games. Video games, tabletop games, card games etc.
Weekly Threads:
Rules:
-
Submissions have to be related to games
-
No bigotry or harassment, be civil
-
No excessive self-promotion
-
Stay on-topic; no memes, funny videos, giveaways, reposts, or low-effort posts
-
Mark Spoilers and NSFW
-
No linking to piracy
More information about the community rules can be found here.
It’s utterly shocking that RS is still going… everything about the game has not aged well in any sense and yet there’s still 50K people who still play that trash at a time.
It's a genuinely good game for the "watching numbers go up as I also watch youtube on another screen" crowd.
It looks like the number of people who RuneScape (3?) is less than that, but OSRS seems to have a healthy population.
I don't know what 4 knowledge bombs do, but they make me feel glad I don't play that shitty game.
Edit: Jesus Christ they're almost $30!!! I can buy Pacific drive for that!
Humble is a shadow of its former self
I think they got bought by IGN, if I am remembering correctly. That tells you plenty.
corporations ruin everything they touch
The pathfinder bundles have been pretty good
No doubt.
They have 30+ bundles listed at the moment and I'm sure some of them are great but I've unsubscribed from their notifications, they've lost some focus and quality control from when each bundle was a notable event.
They sold to IGN a few years ago.
It was also when they introduced a $7 minimum humble tip for the bundles.
I think they'd already lost their way a long while before that.
They started as indies grouping together to get visibility, at a time when Steam still curated every game and accepted maybe 4 games a month (yeah, hard to imagine today. It's still hard to be noticed, but for the opposite reason). Back then they distributed only DRM-free games too, with eventually a Steam key option.
At some point they opened their own store and started including big publisher games, and really became just another store, and mostly a key store too. They spew some bullshit about not being specifically a DRM-free store, but really "DRM-agnostic". "We don't restrict publishers' choice of DRM, they can be DRM-free if they want!"
And I'm like, dude, it's not a stance, Steam technically doesn't either. You may need the client to install but plenty of games don't run on any DRM, not even Steamworks.
it lets me customise the tip/charity/bundle organiser ratio and i'm 85% sure I've gone under $7 for the tip multiple times
You can still customize it, but it has hard minimum at what I think is $7. The old humble had no minimum at all. They also deceptively set the "default" cost 1 tier above the actual "get all the items" cost for bundles. A very irritating and obvious dark pattern.
Just IGN brutalizing a beloved name in gaming via enshittification to make its money back.
Somehow in find it still worse that old original charged for crappy midis to have sound in the game