

I’ve been using these for years, including with my docked steam deck, and they already work great.
I also wonder what they could’ve changed.
Also The_Picard_Maneuver@startrek.website


I’ve been using these for years, including with my docked steam deck, and they already work great.
I also wonder what they could’ve changed.


I loved the demo and would also highly recommend the game solely based on that.
I’m just waiting for a free weekend to pick up the game now that it’s out.


The only time I ever use them is by accident.


There is a researchgate link in the post body that has more info and a link to the publication. I haven’t skimmed through it myself, but I thought I’d link for anyone who’s curious.


I don’t know, a lot of the red is over pretty rural areas in the south and parts of the southwest, and the majority of the most rural parts of the country are “not significant”.
Also that big blue part in the middle covers some very large cities.


The darker color in tornado alley is green for “no data”, which is odd, but I assume it’s similar to the darker orange and red around it.


Yeah =(
The map tracks with high American Indian and White populations.



I’m pretty sure that would be every state, right?


My guess is that there isn’t a country out there that has a cultural preference for women over men, so at best you’re going to see fairly close to equal, plus the difference of men dying earlier from things like wars, dangerous jobs, and lifestyle.
Whereas there are many cultures that strongly select for male children, plus some that also bring in high numbers of male workers.


In many countries where males are valued more highly culturally, infanticide is depressingly common. On a similar note, many countries have outlawed doctors revealing the baby’s sex during pregnancy appointments because too many parents would end the pregnancy if it was going to be a girl.


Texas is big and tends to go red in the winner-takes-all system, but it also has more blue voters than some states have voters total.


This is literally the best thing that could happen to our democracy, in my opinion. Unfortunately it requires the 2 major parties to agree to give up some of their influence, so…


I believe this is the source of the image:


Colorado was one of the first states to legalize recreational weed, so I wonder if that factored in…


They know what they did.


Absolutely!
It’s probably also not uncommon for people who can work from home to have moved outward to lower cost-of-living areas during this time, but I bet that pales in comparison to the increase of young adults living with their parents.


They mention a few major influences, and population density is one of them. In areas with more sprawl and land, it’s more likely for people to drive longer distances. (This probably explains the Midwest and West)
They also mention poverty being a factor, where it’s more common for families to live together, or very close, in order to help support each other. (so probably explains the South)
Another thing to consider is grandmothers helping when couples have young children. I bet if we overlayed a map of locations where people are more likely to have kids, we’d see a trend too.


I’d imagine elevation and proximity to the coast affect things a bit. I’ve seen a similar one for the US that was also quite varied.
I just connect with Bluetooth like normal, and then in steam you can tell it to treat it like whatever type of controller layout you want: switch, xbox, playstation, etc.