"Please, Don't Touch Anything" – казуальная головоломка, где игрок оказывается перед загадочной панелью с красной кнопкой. Суть игры заключается в исследовании последствий нажатия этой кнопки и взаимодействии с различными элементами управления на панели. Игроку предстоит решать головоломки, основанные на логике и внимательности к деталям, чтобы разблокировать многочисленные концовки. Каждое действие приводит к непредсказуемым изменениям в окружающем мире и открывает новые возможности для дальнейшего исследования. Игра предлагает более 25 уникальных сценариев и секретов, требующих от игрока нестандартного мышления и экспериментов.
Resident Evil Requiem ray tracing wasn't really on my mind, but Nvidia DLSS Ray Reconstruction has helped heeb my jeebs A trick of the light. Weekly digests, tales from the communities you love, and more You are now subscribed Your newsletter sign-up was successful Want to add more newsletters? RTX 5060 | from $339.99 at Amazon RTX 5070 | from $629.99 at Best Buy Yes, I review the best graphics cards, but I wasn't really gunning to play Resident Evil Requiem with blistering specs. Naturally, if you want to play Capcom's latest eerie escapade, you'll need to leverage fps boosting tools like DLSS 4.5 and Multi-Frame Generation, and the game does demonstrate why you'd want to crank the settings up On average, I was hitting around 200fps at 4K ultra settings with Path Tracing on using Multi-Frame Generation x4.
Return to Part 1: Dumpster Diving Continued from Part 49: One More to Go! Carrying on in Part 51: It’s Not Easy Being Green Return to Part 1: Dumpster Diving [https://icculus.org/~hamish/retro/part50.html](https://icculus.org/~hamish/retro/part50.html) Last edited by Hamish on 9 Feb 2026 at 8:01 pm UTC For me, CtP is THE best Civ ever made: There are so many amazing game concepts which totaly ouclass basically anything ever implemented on any of SM Civs, that any SM Civ I played was just too boring for me (maybe with the exception of Civ V). I hope it's not true because it would be depressing to wait for over a year for Quake 2 and Ultima Online: 1994 Doom, Doom 2 1995 Abuse, SimCity 1996 Inner Worlds, Quake 1997 Nothing? I thought that LinCycles from 1996 was a commercial title, but a comment from the author is odd, and I have some doubts: https://happypenguin.altervista.org/sheet.php?gameid=57 Quoting: HamishOn a separate but related tangent, whether Call to Power was the first or second Linux game to be sold at retail is somewhat muddied by the fact that Macmillan Publishing announced their boxed Quake releases on May 13, 1999 (my fifth birthday) while Call to Power did not start shipping until May 15, 1999 despite being announced months earlier.I don't know it.