![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/2665e448-91d9-484d-919d-113c9715fc79.png)
No, dummy, it’s obviously the 2020th game
No, dummy, it’s obviously the 2020th game
You know we can see that you removed the comment that was screenshotted, right?
Nonsense, they can’t all be your favourite.
It’s just bait (just look at their comment history). Please ignore and move on.
Joel also has a real-time flight from Sweden to Brazil in Flight Simulator that’s very entertaining despite being several hours long.
And it’s bizarre that some of them seem to get angry when someone else points the issues out.
Probably because 10 out of 14 of them are porn lol
Here in Portugal the prescriptions even say how much the generic medicine should cost, so that you immediately know if the pharmacy is trying to sell you more expensive medicine.
Hello, cousin!
Quite irresponsible of you to just recommend those games like that without any sort of warning :P
What does you having calloused hands have to do with Valve’s influence on the handheld PC market? Did steamOS damage your hands or something?
I have a very similar concept: with gameplay somewhat inspired by job simulator or keep talking and nobody explodes.
The general aesthetic is focused on silly and cartoon aliens, not serious at all.
You’re in your alien apartment dealing with some machine that kinda reminds you of a printer (but silly and strange due to the silly alien theme), but you have no idea what the hell it does, just that it’s broken beyond belief. (If made interesting enough, finding out what the hell it does could be a good hook for the player to keep playing)
The general loop consists of calling support and having the support people troubleshoot you into getting the thing working (you have to mess with it manually, opening flaps and moving pieces like the games mentioned above), except since it’s a silly alien machine, some of the parts have silly names and are silly looking (think of the Plumbus from Rick and Morty), making figuring out what the hell the operator’s talking about a challenge.
For added funny, you could see the portrait of the various operator’s (silly aliens), and even better: you could animate them getting more and more exasperated or bored with you as you try to figure out the machine.
For even more funny, you could maybe give some funny references to common irl printer problems like complaining about no ink when you just replaced the carts. And maybe at the end the machine could do something really silly and stupid, fitting with the comedic tone of the game
Same on Connect (Android).