January 2026 PCG Article Discussion

Zed Clampet

Community Contributor

I'd like to make the change, but I do kind of like Xbox Game Pass. It has saved me a lot of money and let me play games I never would have played before.


If you are wondering who Blondie is, she's in the newspaper comic "Blondie". She's the mother and the wife of Dagwood, who makes magnificent sandwiches (There used to be a restaurant we went to that had the 'Dagwood'. Blondie used to be a big deal outside of just the comic. In the 12 years from 1938 to 1950, Her character was the star of 28 live action films. She also had her own radio program.

You are probably familiar with flapper girl Betty Boop (I think Blondie started as a flapper, too). No idea who Mickey Mouse is. /jk
 

I'd like to make the change, but I do kind of like Xbox Game Pass. It has saved me a lot of money and let me play games I never would have played before.

As long as there are games I want to be able to play that don't work as well on Linux as they do on Windows I prefer just sticking with Windows.

However, my old PC is currently running Windows 10 with the extra year of support. Once that's up I can re-evaluate whether I want to try to upgrade it to Windows 11 or to put Linux on it.
 
I like Linux a lot and it works absolutely flawlessly on my Deck.

That said, if you want to just play games and not constantly **** around with your computer, stick with Windows.

I've tried Linux on numerous systems and it just constantly devolves into messing around with settings, figuring out why something doesn't work or some game has awful performance or whatever. In 2025, I installed Linux on two different systems, my Thinkpad P1 Gen 4 with an i7-11850H, RTX A3000 and 32Gb of RAM. It was pretty good and in a vast majority of games, I saw a performance uplift over Windows, but there was also some weird fiddliness that I had to deal with on the regular in Linux. There was also the issue of Tempest Rising, where it ran great in 4k under Windows, but for whatever reason, in Linux, Linux refused to spin up my fans, so the game ran like trash because the laptop wouldn't cool itself.

About a month ago, I installed Debian on my Surface Pro and while it was mostly a lovely experience, everything working great, Linux, lacking proper driver support, has no idea how to properly throttle a CPU. Playing Darkest Dungeon 2 in Linux, the Surface Pro throttles down to 200Mhz and struggles to recover from that. Under windows, it throttles itself to a more acceptable 900Mhz to keep it under its heat threshold, which allows Darkest Dungeon 2 to run at an acceptable 30FPS, versus slideshow 2FPS in Linux, which also locks down the system since the processor is stuck at 200Mhz.

This is also not mentioning using it on a previous Thinkpad, a T460 with integrated graphics, where the driver support for my wifi card wasn't there. Where I could Steam/Moonlight things perfectly fine in Windows, on Linux it was an artifacting, slow mess.

And actually, come to think of it, I also installed Linux on a third and what was to potentially be a 4th PC this year, because I wanted to upgrade my kids PC's to it, since they don't officially support Windows 11. Unfortunately, this wasn't going to really work either because now they couldn't play Minecraft Bedrock together. I did install a mod with controller support for Java edition, but it came with its own separate microtransactions and store, which rubbed me the wrong way. Not that the devs shouldn't make money or whatever, but some third party, random mod asking for money just seems...sketchy. And this isn't counting the fiddliness of getting games to run correctly; I struggled to get a couple of games just to run properly in fullscreen and had to mess with Proton versions, which is ultimately something I don't want to do on my kids computers. I want them to be able to just download a game, hit play and go.

Then there's just the fact that I often don't want to mess with my system. I have limited time to game as is and it's annoying as F*** to have to sit there and tweak, tune and sort-out random little issues when I have half an hour to game and now messing with my computer is eating into that.

All of this said, I do want to install Linux on my all AMD desktop PC, because I've read that Linux can be quite a bit less fiddly on an AMD system and my experience with the Steam Deck bears that out. But I can't afford the time investment right now. My desktop is my main server and I don't have the motivation to go through and reinstall or look for alternative software for everything I need to do with my said server.

Then there's also the fact that trying to search for answers to your particular problem, you're on different forums with years old posts that either don't relate or is some grognard calling you an idiot because you don't know the basics of using Terminal, insulting the OP of a thread and never giving an actual answer. You try different solutions you find and some may work, but often many do not and you spend hours trying to find a solution, which you may figure out or may not. Though, with the advent of LLMs, I could see that being a huge boon to figuring things out, but I haven't tried that yet.

Linux is great if you have the time and motivation to troubleshoot it and constantly be mucking about with your PC. I do love it in theory, I love that it's open source, there's all kinds of different distros, it's free, it's controllable, it feels like it belongs to me and it reminds me of computing when I was a kid. But ultimately, Windows just works. It has some minor annoyances to configure when you first set it up, such as disabling Second Chance OOBE or making sure OneDrive is disabled so you actually have your Documents folder and such on your actual PC and not uploading to OneDrive. But once you configure those couple of things, Windows gets out of the way and just lets you use your PC; to quote Apple, "It Just Works." and I appreciate it for that.

Sorry for the screed. I just...I don't agree with the idea that Linux is the path forward right now. Again, I do like it, but it's far cry from what advocates claim it is. Someday, I hope to run it. Someday I hope the driver support is there, but it's just not right now. It's certainly better than where it's been in the past when I've tried it, but it's still not there.
 

Zloth

Community Contributor
(which is, to be frank, a shame, as the command line is objectively cool)
This word 'cool' - I don't think it means what he thinks it means. ;)

Windows gave me a little trouble upgrading from 10 to 11, but the plusses he mentions just don't grab me. Windows does bug me to get some backup space, but I'm not real keen on Microsoft knowing exactly what I've got on my computer.
 
Not a PCG article, but one that fits here. Has this every happened to anyone here??

Personally id be pretty mad and just cancel the order altogether and then probably try to do some PR like this because this is absolutely scummy of corsair to do.

 
Not a PCG article, but one that fits here. Has this every happened to anyone here??

Personally id be pretty mad and just cancel the order altogether and then probably try to do some PR like this because this is absolutely scummy of corsair to do.


A Corsair rep responded to a Reddit post from the user this happened to:


Seems like this might have just been a mistake (or maybe they're just trying to save face).
 
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Zloth

Community Contributor
So, let me get this straight. Somebody posts that they tried to buy a PC from Corsair, paid, got the invoice emailed, and then the order is cancelled. The user does not ask Corsair what happened and ask for them to fix it but instead posts on Reddit assuming it's because the price increased. Wccftech does not reach out to Corsair to get their take on it but simply assumes it's because of the RAM price increase.

The poster says flat out that s/he doesn't know why this happened but THINKS it was because of the price increase. All fine there. But then people run with it like they KNOW what happened. That's not good. Wccftech really has no business reporting on it, either, if they aren't even going to take the time to ask Corsair for a comment.

Personally, I think it's a lot more likely that the New Year ushered in new software and/or new product updates that caused their system to freak out and cancel the order (probably along with many others). The idea that the company would have people manually go in on New Years Eve to cancel orders made just hours earlier strikes me as... highly unlikely. These price increases aren't a surprise to them. If they wanted to block people out of the lower prices, they simply would have removed the offer from the website when the decision was made.
 

Zed Clampet

Community Contributor

I hadn't realised Palworld still hasn't had a 1.0 release yet. I wasn't too impressed with the game when I played it over a year ago, but I'll definitely revisit it once 1.0 releases. Both my wife and my kid liked it, so maybe I can play with either of them.
Well their first survival game has been in Early Access since 2020, so I'm kind of surprised Pal World is hitting 1.0 this year. Of course, the first game, Craftopia, was basically finished, and they decided to start over from scratch. They left the first game available under the "beta" branch, so people who liked that better can always play it instead of the reboot.

They are a small studio (or used to be--I haven't checked lately) and yet they put out significant updates like clockwork, although they have complained that the consoles are much harder to update.
 
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FO3 Remaster sounds like it could be the most plausible. The article links to the big Bethesda leaks that came out a few years back, which has accurately predicted Oblivion Remastered. If you remember, that game was shadowdropped and did not have any marketing prior to launch. A FO3 Remaster would most likely follow the same footsteps.

If that is what comes out, lets hope that the performance is much better than Oblivion remastered. Maybe that's why it hasn't gotten any updates since July, a FO3 remaster would most likely be made by the same development company, Virtuos, so they're focusing on a new game.
 
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Zed Clampet

Community Contributor

FO3 Remaster sounds like it could be the most plausible. The article links to the big Bethesda leaks that came out a few years back, which has accurately predicted Oblivion Remastered. If you remember, that game was shadowdropped and did not have any marketing prior to launch. A FO3 Remaster would most likely follow the same footsteps.

If that is what comes out, lets hope that the performance is much better than Oblivion remastered. Maybe that's why it hasn't gotten any updates since July, a FO3 remaster would most likely be made by the same development company, Virtuos, so they're focusing on a new game.
Obviously, I'm clueless as usual, but I'm not sure why Amazon would be marketing a Bethesda remaster. Unless, of course, Bethesda is paying for it, which I suppose is possible. I'm guessing there's going to be a spin-off show.
 

Zed Clampet

Community Contributor

I'm no longer a big fan of AI. Not by a long shot. But this article is completely out of touch with reality. These writers live in an echo chamber and think the rest of the world thinks like a progressive games journalist.

I would love for AI to have lost its shine. That is not going to happen. So long as companies can find ways to toss more humans off the side of their annual reports, AI will continue to grow. And in talking to a few people on the sports forum, AI is so entrenched in academic, scientific and medical research that they can't imagine life without it.

This article is simply trying to speak a wish into existence. They aren't even allowing comments on it, hoping not to jinx it.
 
Obviously, I'm clueless as usual, but I'm not sure why Amazon would be marketing a Bethesda remaster. Unless, of course, Bethesda is paying for it, which I suppose is possible. I'm guessing there's going to be a spin-off show.
I think that is the only association, though I do wonder if Amazon Games has anything to do with the remaster. Maybe not though.
This article is simply trying to speak a wish into existence. They aren't even allowing comments on it, hoping not to jinx it.
I'm on the same boat as you, I'm no longer excited about AI as I was maybe two or three years ago. In fact I'd love to see the bubble burst, which many say it is a matter of when, not if. I think these companies are going completely off the rails with it.

But you're also right about the article. These companies won't just stop with the AI just because they make some mistakes, no matter how terrible it is. They will just see it as a learning opportunity and continue to expand upon their models. By pointing out all the failures of AI, we can laugh and see how dumb they are, but that does not deter these companies from continuously working on them.
 

Zed Clampet

Community Contributor

More AI stuff. The problem here is that there are two AI's working together, the SLM that handles communication, and the Diffusion AI that actually makes the pictures. The SLM is a tiny fraction of what the LLMs like ChatGPT are. It doesn't understand things like math, numbers, ages and dates.

Even if you bundle a traditional censor with it to prevent it from requesting bad stuff from the art model, that won't stop the art model, which doesn't know anything but how to draw. AND, it can, and does, accidentally confuse children with adults because all it understands are anatomical ratios. You can tell it to draw a 70-year-old woman, and very early in the process--it may only have a few pixels that it's using at this point--it might look at those pixels and think, 'the ratio between the size of the head and the width of the shoulders tells me this is a child' so it draws a child regardless of what you asked for. Why let it ignore the prompt? Because without the ability to continuously evaluate and adjust, it would make terrible pictures.

Some people would want to, in that case, ban the whole thing, but that is like banning frying pans because someone used one as a weapon. At least no children were actually hurt.
 
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Palworld devs Pocket Pair, gesture toward Nintendo and say, "Come get some." Immediately become my new favorite developer

I hear a lot about Palworld and it's developer, and every time it makes me root for them. They're sticking it to Nintendo and that is always a good thing. How is Palworld as a game though? I'd like to support them but I don't hear too much about the game itself, besides when it smashed concurrent player records.

Steam as a product and Valve as a company are a double-edged sword. They're laser focused on their vision, aren't ruled by C-suite execs, are open to using community feedback to improve, make groundbreaking games and are very great to their employees. However, they are absolutely a monopoly, one that could fall once the rule of GabeN and co comes to an end. One could argue that CS:GO helped usher in a new generation of gambling addicts for the modern age. They aren't perfect by any means, but simultaneously do many things perfectly.
 
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Zed Clampet

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I hear a lot about Palworld and it's developer, and every time it makes me root for them. They're sticking it to Nintendo and that is always a good thing. How is Palworld as a game though? I'd like to support them but I don't hear too much about the game itself, besides when it smashed concurrent player records.


Steam as a product and Valve as a company are a double-edged sword. They're laser focused on their vision, aren't ruled by C-suite execs, are open to using community feedback to improve, make groundbreaking games and are very great to their employees. However, they are absolutely a monopoly, one that could fall once the rule of GabeN and co comes to an end. One could argue that CS:GO helped usher in a new generation of gambling addicts for the modern age. They aren't perfect by any means, but simultaneously do many things perfectly.

*Please consider the source. I haven't been right about anything in probably 20 years :ROFLMAO:

IMO it is unlikely that US courts would rule Steam a monopoly because:

1) There are no barriers for competitors to enter the business. Anyone can open a competing store.

2) They don't control prices. Prices are set by the publishers.

3) They have never taken action to block or hinder new or existing customers.

Steam is a monopoly by excellence alone, and that is perfectly fine. Here is what it says on the FTC's website: "In the end, courts will decide whether the monopolist's success is due to "the willful acquisition or maintenance of that power as distinguished from growth or development as a consequence of a superior product, business acumen, or historic accident."

The lawsuit against them is relying on point #2, claims that they control prices elsewhere. Unfortunately for them, Microsoft, Epic, EA and Ubisoft prove otherwise, often running sales and undercutting Steam's prices. Ironically, the man who filed the lawsuit became a multimillionaire thanks only to Valve's generosity. Allowing other stores to sell Steam keys is astonishingly generous. Every sale at his Humble store costs Valve money and earns them nothing. All Valve asked was that he not sell their keys for less than they were.

Imagine WalMart letting you sell their stuff at whatever price you want, and then the buyers just go to Walmart and pick up the product and leave. That's what this clown wants to be able to do.
 
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IMO it is unlikely that US courts would rule Steam a monopoly because:

1) There are no barriers for competitors to enter the business. Anyone can open a competing store.

2) They don't control prices. Prices are set by the publishers.

3) They have never taken action to block or hinder new or existing customers.

Steam is a monopoly by excellence alone, and that is perfectly fine. Here is what it says on the FTC's website: "In the end, courts will decide whether the monopolist's success is due to "the willful acquisition or maintenance of that power as distinguished from growth or development as a consequence of a superior product, business acumen, or historic accident."
Exactly, not a monopoly in the legal sense, but in a consumer sense. It's the default to use Steam as your games platform on PC, almost the same how Xbox and Playstation lock you into their own stores. There is lots of healthy competition, lots of sites to buy Steam games not directly through them, so there is no legal justification to call them a monopoly. AFAIK they haven't made any ill-purposed acquisitions or anything to squash competition and expand their own growth, their growth seems much more organic. Releasing Steam alongside HL2 and making it a requirement was probably the smartest move they ever made, even if people cursed them to hell back then.
 

I saw this Steam post yesterday and it made me laugh, now PCG has an article on it. I think I saw it on my library page because the game was free to keep last summer. I never played it and had no idea it was made almost entirely with AI. Pretty hilarious, that girl sounds good for him.
 

Zed Clampet

Community Contributor

I saw this Steam post yesterday and it made me laugh, now PCG has an article on it. I think I saw it on my library page because the game was free to keep last summer. I never played it and had no idea it was made almost entirely with AI. Pretty hilarious, that girl sounds good for him.
If I were cynical, I'd say it's a free-to-play game with 35 reviews, so deleting it will cost him roughly 0 dollars, and now people are probably adding it to their accounts just because it will be unavailable soon. I mean, why not delist it immediately? But I've never criticized a solo dev for trying to make a dollar, and he says he's going to bring it back with new assets, so good for him.
 

I saw this Steam post yesterday and it made me laugh, now PCG has an article on it. I think I saw it on my library page because the game was free to keep last summer. I never played it and had no idea it was made almost entirely with AI. Pretty hilarious, that girl sounds good for him.

I've played it. I didn't realise that the art was made with AI, but the entire thing felt very half-baked. It has potential though, so maybe if he can add some proper progression and make it look better it has a chance of doing well after all.
 

Zed Clampet

Community Contributor
From what I understand the generated pictures were based on actual children. Considering that the minimum age to use X in the USA is 13, these generated pictures could very well been seen by the children themselves.
As it turns out, I said a normal diffusion model couldn't do this, but they actually made a separate model to use with Flux that can do it.
 

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