For YouTube it’s PeerTube and for Twitch it’s probably OwnCast
Developer, Free Culture activist, self-hoster, auxlanger [EO-IO-LdP], translator-adapter, A11Y advocate, free-time gamer. Proudly self-hosting my instance from Santa Ana, Costa Rica. Posts generally in English and Spanish.
Desarrollador, activista de la Cultura Libre, promotor del autohospedaje, aficionado a las auxilenguas [EO-IO-LdP], traductor-adaptador, promotor de accesibilidad, juego videojuegos en mi tiempo libre. Orgullosamente autohospedando mi instancia desde Santa Ana, Costa Rica. Mensajes por lo general en inglés y español.
#fedi22 #english #español #esperanto #idolinguo #lingwadeplaneta #uropi #a11y #cybersecurity #gamer #selfhosting #costarica #freeculture #conlangs #softwarelibre #freesoftware #webdeveloper #linux #gnu #copyleft #creativecommons #foss #opensource #programming #security #technology #accessibility #a11y #tootfinder #tfr #searchable
For YouTube it’s PeerTube and for Twitch it’s probably OwnCast
You could also use Hubzilla
As somebody who likes the concept of VTubing but loathes corporations with overreaching NDAs such as Cover Corp and AnyColor, this is my vibe - subbed!
The 3DS was at its best when playing 2.5D games with a veneer of 3D layering put on top. The Nintendo 3D Classics series and Shovel Knight were a prime example of that.
That, or a *decent* upscaling algorithm such as xBRZ. Old upscalers like Super 2x SAI made pixel art look like a cheap watercolor, and made later upscalers get a bad fame. Nowadays a good upscaler basically turns the game screen into a vectorized set of lines, and it looks much better, closer to what the pixel artists intended the end result to look like on a big screen.