LemmyPlay

joined 2 years ago
[–] LemmyPlay@lemmings.world 6 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Thanks for putting this together. I have been dragging my feet on self-hosting NextCloud, and now it looks like that procrastination may just work out in my favor.

One question, can I just run this on localhost and access through my local network instead of using a reverse proxy? If so, how? That's all I need, I don't use a reverse proxy now and would be fine just using a self-hosted VPN to access it when away from my private network. The docs make it seem like there is pretty stringent requirements on having to use a reverse proxy and certs, etc which was the same 'issue' I had with NextCloud. I guess I'm the minority here, but curious if anyone can help answer.

[–] LemmyPlay@lemmings.world 1 points 2 months ago

I'm trying to do something similar. I am using Wireguard to VPN to my home network. Then I want to route all home internet traffic through one Mullvad instance. How would I do this? So far all my attempts have failed, I was trying to set routes but I don't have an expert understanding of both VPN settings in regards to Linux networking.

[–] LemmyPlay@lemmings.world 1 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Look at the price of the NES when it launched. $180. Then you had games averaging about $40 in price, up to $60. Adjust for inflation, development expenses, and the fact that games offer many more hours of replay these days..it's not priced that badly. Relative to Steam it will look high, but PC games change pricing to grab different customer groups that wouldn't ever buy the game otherwise as a last-ditch attempt to find revenue.