I hope you got it by now, but some things you can do:
Save traps until the last stage.
When the Nergigante leaves for the cave, wait until it’s asleep. Then place a big bomb next to it’s head and detonate it. Make sure the hit from the bomb is the damage that wakes the Nergigante up.
Just installed NixOS with Wayland and Gnome the other day on my laptop with Nvidia card. I had to tune the config a bit, but it works flawless now – notably also with the offload command. That’s fine for me though because it saves considerable energy if the GPU only runs on request.
uBlock Origin would be my number one, but they don’t take donations. So my list would roughly contain:
Organic Maps
Thunderbird
Internet Archive
Codeberg
I’d like to donate to Firefox as well, but Mozilla spends too much for the wrong things and AFAIK it’s not possible to only support Firefox development.
Hab' mir eben gerade Thunder heruntergeladen und bin sehr zufrieden. Äusserst slicke App, auch wenn es wie die meisten anderen noch klar Alphasoftware ist.
Hm. Some fantasy stories / books I really enjoyed and recommend are:
Eragon by Christopher Paolini. Just awesome. The pacing is gentle but a lot higher compared to The Hobbit or The Lord Of The Rings. One of the best fantasy stories I know, I read all the books multiple times. Warning: Don’t watch the movie. Just don’t.
The Idhún’s Memories by Laura Gallego. I’ve read them a long time ago, so I don’t know if I’d still enjoy them that much, but I’ve great memories.
I didn’t read The Name Of The Wind yet, but it was recommended to me multiple times as THE best book.
If you don’t mind science-fiction, I also would recommend Children Of Time by Adrian Tchaikovski.
Side note: Fantasy is quite a heavy genre if you’re not really into reading yet. Often the good books are large, which makes it harder to finish in a reasonable time. General tipp: try to read one hour a day. This creates a habit and you will soon read a lot faster, which makes it a lot easier to just grind through a book as if it was nothing. Also try different genres, maybe one doesn’t sound appealing, but you would enjoy it anyway.
A network of (“thousands of”) servers has — like most things — pros and cons.
Some of the pros are:
The network is more resiliant against outages. If lemmy.ml is down, all other users can still access the network.
It's hard to take legal action against the network or to buy it out (like Big Players™ like to do to get rid of potential competitors).
It allows various similar or even conflicting moderation policies. The network, i.e. the infrastructure doesn't allow or prohibit any specific opinion (the communities do).
It allows for different ways to pay the bills: goodwill of the admin, donaitions, ads, fee or selfhosting. The latter also allows great control over the data so you control your privacy.
Some of the cons are:
Content is replicated across servers, which increases the total amount of data stored.
Latency and speed suffer.
Interoperability with the wider Fediverse is less than 100%, which can create confusion and frustration.