Prominent's Recent Forum Activity

  • I've grown suspicious of sketchfab since I noticed they do a lot of pushing to get their api into other people's software- which I interpret as a marketing strategy.

    They've engaged me in the past to put their api into my software, and I noticed today Godot just recently added some sketchfab api into theirs.

    So.. I don't know what to make of it. That sort of stuff tends to turn me off.

  • One option is to animate the different parts in a traditional way, and then destroy them and then spawn separate sprites with physics on them. Or have their physics disabled and then enable the physics when they should fall off.

    You don't have to try and do everything all at once with physics and fight with the simulation, etc. Usually simpler stuff is better if it gets you further along.

    Ashley, I wasn't focusing on any specific rule in particular, nor did I have in mind any specific rule when I wrote my post. I was simply giving my thoughts on aspects related to moderating a community and what I have noticed in communities I've been a part of in the past.

    I was speaking generally about rules as a whole, not necessarily what the rules are.

    This brings up another point though, regarding interpretation, and how words can be misconstrued. I'm not sure if I need to go into that subject though, as then it becomes an issue of which interpretation is more relevant or appropriate, etc.. And everyone has different viewpoints on that.

    Without knowing your situation you mentioned, I can only judge based on my interpretation and understanding from what I experience personally. I can only assume that since you put yourself in front of so many people, you're more likely to be targeted by others in various different ways because everyone has different mental states. Do whatever you need to do to control your own sanity though- I just hope it serves good example.

    I think that's the main thing I was getting at in my post- that there will always be a preconceived notion of superiority due to the few in charge over the vast collective- and how you behave will always be scrutinized in detail because everyone's attention is funneled towards your way since you sit at the top. I'm not saying you're doing anything wrong- I'm just sharing my experience and viewpoint.

    Since I have administrated and moderated a community of thousands in the past, I figure I should provide some observations and insights on the matter for both sides.

    As communities grow, there is always a development of a perception that there is a superiority if there are only a few people running the community- there lacks diversity in judgement, simply by the limited number of people in charge and it is easy for users to target that dynamic.

    One way to solve it is by creating more moderators and developing a system of checks and balances, so that doing more regulation work can be enforced.

    The problem with this approach is that it will stifle the communities expression and give the impression of a suppression-like mood. It will put more walls between people and essentially drive people out of the community since they can easily find other channels elsewhere to communicate more freely. I've seen communities decline because of this.

    Places like Discord offer places where communication can be more free and timely- where it often is more about lifestyle and person to person interaction- it is more intimate than a forum and can be a place where you feel more included and part of a family. This obviously can become more heated and spontaneous because of the realtime nature of it, but that's life and humans have emotions, so it is better to learn how to deal with your emotions and how to interpret other's emotions than to simply suppress them, etc..

    Anyways- I'm concerned that Scirra might be going down a path of more regulatory measures, based on this thread post. I could be wrong though- I could be taking all this out of context since I don't visit the discord channel..

    I think a better way to handle this would have been to find some people to act as moderators/middle men, as such discussions coming from a limited set of people from Scirra can appear unfavorably for them. If they do go that route, then I'd expect to see more enforcement of rules, etc, and the community to decrease in size. Worse case scenario is they begin to only allow paid subscribers access to the community forum.

    Also, the past talk of wanting to create ways to engage the community- If they do this, I expect more official events and things like that, which in turn stress more regulatory type tactics, which will in turn also lead to impressions of misjudgement and bad decision making, etc. I see it happen all the time in other communities, and the results are predictable.

    Another point I want to mention is that longer lasting users tend to have more gripes or reasons for expressing themselves, and put more effort into being heard, etc. So if Scirra is tired of listening, then it will eventually leave them with a community that is younger and less experienced, and satisfied with new flashy things that haven't been tested yet, etc..

    Scirra doesn't have to respond to everyone, and everyone's requests won't be answered- there's only so much time and people have to choose where to spend their focus, etc.

    Also, pushing away people won't solve anything anyways, there will always be new users that haven't learnt how to communicate that well, or don't have as much life experience or foresight, etc.. so I think it is healthy to encourage people to get it out their system, and maybe there'd be more good that comes from it. Yeah some people will utterly hate something, they probably have good reason to hate it. Others will love stuff.. It's a balance, and we don't need to be suppressing either side, because it just suppresses both in the end because everyone loves and hates different things at different times.

    I generally think that banning people should be avoided unless it's harming people. People act crazy from time to time- and that's just human nature. It happens. It's better to take those instances and try to be the better person in it and grow your character and be an example for others, and by doing so others will learn how to better themselves rather than just ignore others and shun them.

  • If the paint tools rely on canvas drawing operations, the algorithms differ in each browser which may be why you see subtle differences like that.

    I came across this issue when I made my own paint editor in the past.

    Maybe someone from scirra can explain more about it.

  • I've implemented similar stuff.. as seen here: https://twitter.com/SpectreSkully/statu ... 1744829440

    That might give you an idea on how you can set it up

  • spent my votes months and montsh ago, so I never visit the suggestions anymore.. I'm clueless to whatever is being suggested.

  • Try Construct 3

    Develop games in your browser. Powerful, performant & highly capable.

    Try Now Construct 3 users don't see these ads
  • Any new laptop but ask for Windows 7.

    Windows 10 comes pre-installed with many shitware that will slow down your pc.

    Windows 7 extended support will end January 14, 2020 - so I'm sure a lot of new software won't support it after that time.

    It makes more sense to go with a newer operating system I think.

  • tunepunk , yeah that is something I'm wondering about too- since I do art work, that it may be good idea to get something with touch/pen support. I haven't considered developing for mobile, since I don't have any way to test that sort of platform. If a laptop with touch helps in that regard, then it seems like something I should consider.

  • Thanks for that info R0J0hound , it helps ease my mind.

    I've been considering a new laptop for quite a while now, but end up very undecided. So it is good to get feedback from others and understand what I should look for.

  • I'd shoot for 1000.. 200 is a drop in the bucket when speaking to nintendo, I would think.

  • Thanks R0J0hound , I'll keep that in mind. Since my current laptop has dual core, it might be good to step up to a quad. Do quad cores help with virtual machines? I may need to run a virtual machine from time to time to test my games- I think I remember something about cores helping in those cases.

Prominent's avatar

Prominent

Member since 28 Apr, 2012

Twitter
Prominent has 9 followers

Trophy Case

  • 12-Year Club
  • Popular Game One of your games has over 1,000 players
  • Famous Game One of your games has over 10,000 players
  • Email Verified

Progress

15/44
How to earn trophies