TheKDX7
He/Him
Player (115)
Joined: 7/9/2011
Posts: 392
Location: Switzerland
Doc Skellington wrote:
Hello! Thank you for your support and cheering. Unfortunately, I come with bad news this time. As you may have noticed, I'm not really productive. The biggest reason is (as always) that I'm short in free time and, currently, I prefer playing than fighting with desmume... If you want to know everything: I didn't touch this emulator for several weeks. One day I wanted to continue to TAS and I launched the movie to check if everything was alright. It wasn't. I got a desync from nowhere. I don't know what caused it (same version of desmume, didn't modify the files) but I just don't want to start once more. This is just one of the multiple reasons I got bored of desmume. I'm truly sorry if you were looking forward to seeing the complete TAS. I won't stop TASing but I'm going back to GBA (or an other console if I find an interesting game) :D
Do not worry Doc, we understand this choice! I wish good luck to you for your future projects :D
Active player (252)
Joined: 8/12/2013
Posts: 185
Location: Belgium
No, I haven't, Fortranm. The only thing I did was to reinstall Windows (I switched to RAID disks, so I didn't have the choice). Thanks a lot, TheKDX7 :D
New PCSX2-rr
Fortranm
He/Him
Editor, Experienced player (775)
Joined: 10/19/2013
Posts: 1114
YoshiRulz
Any
Editor
Joined: 8/30/2020
Posts: 78
Location: Sydney, Australia
Would love to see this revisited in melonDS+EmuHawk :)
I contribute to BizHawk as Linux/cross-platform lead, testing and automation lead, and UI designer. This year, I'm experimenting with streaming BizHawk development on Twitch. nope Links to find me elsewhere and to some of my side projects are on my personal site. I will respond on Discord faster than to PMs on this site.
Hey look buddy, I'm an engineer. That means I solve problems. Not problems like "What is software," because that would fall within the purview of your conundrums of philosophy. I solve practical problems. For instance, how am I gonna stop some high-wattage thread-ripping monster of a CPU dead in its tracks? The answer: use code. And if that don't work? Use more code.