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Is there a tool/method to find games you have in common with someone else?

Stories related to "Is there a tool/method to find games you have in common with someone else?" across the full archive.

Is there a tool/method to find games you have in common with someone else?
Let's Prove Random Games are Winnable (with Formal Methods) (hillelwayne.com)
Color in games: An in-depth look at one of game design's most useful tools (gamasutra.com)
PlayArchive - A commandline tool to play classic games from 'The Tnternet Archive' (notabug.org)
Raytheon - Proof By Games (2013) (dtic.mil)
Online gaming is popular and it would be extremely valuable if a system could harness this intellectual effort for practical purposes. In this report, we discuss two crowd-sourced, on-line games, that present players with arcade-style puzzles to solve. The puzzles in Ghost Map and Ghost Map Hyperspa...
Common problems when translating games into Japanese (legendsoflocalization.com)
Valve seems to be working on tools to get Windows games running on Linux (arstechnica.com)
Nintendo shuts down the tool behind your favorite Pokémon fan games (theverge.com)
What are some of your favorite tools that have given individual games a new life?
What interesting, uncommon mechanic would you like to see more commonly in video games?
What are some noteworthy games that aren't available through traditional/common means?
Luxtorpeda: Suite of unofficial Steam Play compatibility tools for retro games (luxtorpeda.gitlab.io)
Let’s Use An Automated Theorem Prover To Verify Video Games; I Swear This Is More Fun Than It Sounds (youtube.com)
Formal-Methods-Based Bugfinding for LLVM's AArch64 Backend (blog.regehr.org)
New Research Finds That Commonly Used Osteoporosis Tool Is Suboptimal (scitechdaily.com)
The Fracture Risk Assessment Tool (FRAX), frequently utilized in assessing fracture risk, incorporates self-identified race and ethnicity information. However, its performance in accurately determining the risk of major osteoporotic fractures among younger postmenopausal women across different racia...
What are some noteworthy games that aren't available through traditional/common means?
Luxtorpeda: a Steam Play compatibility tool to run games using native Linux engines (luxtorpeda-dev.github.io)
AI tool helps people with opposing views find common ground (nature.com)
AI tool helps people with opposing views find common ground (nature.com)
GOG wants your vote on classic games to bring back with its new Dreamlist tool (polygon.com)
Computer program that learns to play classic NES games (youtube.com)
Statically Recompiling NES Games into Native Executables with LLVM and Go - Andrew Kelley (andrewkelley.me)
Statically Recompiling NES Games into Native Executables with LLVM and Go (andrewkelley.me)
Microsoft’s Xbox One: Owning Your Video Games Is So 1994 (blogs.wsj.com)
Popular iOS Games That Could Have Been Designed for 8-Bit Systems (prog21.dadgum.com)
EU takes on “misleading” free-to-play games (arstechnica.com)
Japan used to rule video games, so what happened? (theverge.com)
A look at why the once-vibrant Japanese game development scene is now falling behind, and whether indie games are the way forward.
A look at input latency and framerate in videogames (blog.faulty.equipment)
LoveDOS - A framework for making 2D DOS games in Lua (github.com)
It's basically a port of a subset of the Love API to DOS.
Classic Nintendo Games are (Computationally) Hard (arxiv.org)