@RoelvanUden 2 companies bought the license for the old game "Not Unholy Wars" and both are actually doing a great job so far. "Rise of Agon" and "New Dawn"
My favorite MMO was Aion, followed by GW2. Now.. I'm just looking for one that completely changes the definition of MMO again. Which is not easy, I guess. BDO came close, but it's unbalanced and very PvP unfriendly.
I gave it up when I realised I couldn't pass exams, have a job, or eat real food and bathe myself, and also commit the required amount of time to the game
@JakobMillah I don't mind the setting that much. I just want something engaging and challenging. Being a PvP orientated player, I want to learn about every class/skill/combination and devise strategies to counter them. Being a support player, I want the ability to turn the tide of a battle with well placed support skills (e.g. healing, shields, buffs, etc). I don't care for the "Every class can do a little support" nor "You are always safe when grinding" mindset AT ALL.
@RoelvanUden Everyone can get every spell, but these companies are working towards making it easier to skill 1 particular "school" and then harder for each school
If you have a chance, try it. It's a creepy horror setting in a post-apolyptic world where you have to survive against shitty monsters creeping up on you from 360 degrees. In virtual reality. With limited flashlight batteries and ammo.
@RoelvanUden bc of how it plays, it's a massive open world with so much things to do so much to look around that tbh I think it would play better in a 3 monitor surround setup
@JakobMillah Then you probably ran into the aliasing and effect problem. That's entirely solvable with better lenses (read: not the Oculus) and good configuration/beefy computers.
@LikeIfYouCaredAboutMyName It's awesome because it's an open world and there is so much so do
I'm having a problem with tests that use files. I'm reasonably certain my code is releasing files when it's finished with them; the problem with that as I understand is that the filesystem is asynchronous and a file can appear to the OS as locked for reading even when the code that locked it has completed.
We have a test machine that regularly fails tests because files are locked, and I believe that's because the machine just sucks, but I'd like to be able to measure how long it's taking and compare that to a reasonable performance baseline. How can I measure that particular aspect of performance?
@TomW That's not true. When you close the file handle, the file is immediately closed and the lock and sharing status are reset. This happens immediately on a CloseHandle call. If you use memory mapped files, it can happen that a read/write call occurs after a CloseHandle but that's not regular, and even then, the file system will lock/read/unlock as a mostly-atomic operation. Memory mapped files could be an issue, regular files cannot.
@LikeIfYouCaredAboutMyName An updater should just update files. That's all it needs to do.
Then I'd love a better explanation of why files that I know have been released by managed code still throw IOException when they're next opened for reading
@RoelvanUden this one also updates the .config files entries and database and runs scripts if needed
@RoelvanUden Mr. Toxy was actually the one who made the app but his intership has ended now so Im here alone and I need to turn this into a general updater. I only need to figure out the naming part and that's it for the most part