• 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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    63 months ago

    Very nice of them to teach new recruits how to use UE, to see if they could bring any new ideas and insight into the Dragon engine

  • Fubarberry
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    43 months ago

    Dragon engine seems really good in my experience. The last few years have been filled with terrible performance unreal engine games, but Like a Dragon Infinite Wealth looks good (imo) and will run on weaker hardware than its 2020 predecessor.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    Penny drop moment of “oh right we have to look at the competing engines to see our own weakness”? Frankly it should be obvious.

    “If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles.”

    For me it raises really a odd question about their culture too, since only after inshin’s remaster did they add a policy to review developer tools and technology, in a development company.

    I’m trying to not read into it any more than that but I can’t help but imagine there were board meetings beforehand going ‘guys our team want to try using unreal’ and some exec going ‘no it’s banned we only use our own propriety code or else we’ll lose our brand and be washed out! All other engines are banned!’.

    • @[email protected]
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      53 months ago

      Management often has very, very little clue what the development team does or the tools they use. Our IT department management tried to block access to Github and I had to explain why that would be a bad idea™, you know, since all of our code lives there…

      • @[email protected]
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        33 months ago

        Yep though I’m a sysadmin and can feel for that, these consolidated platforms are being used as a straight “you trust this, when I infect you, I’ll use payloads I’ll temporarily host in github because you adjust already block overseas by default expect a bunch of whitelist trusted domains.”.

        https://arstechnica.com/security/2024/02/github-besieged-by-millions-of-malicious-repositories-in-ongoing-attack/

        It’s technically easy to allow a subdomain, but it’s really hard to unblock just a path.

        So yeah, what generally happens is the SOC team complains that the new threat is here, and either vendors (had this with fortinet) move the risk rating of github from a 3.5 to a 6 out of 10, I had put the threshold at a default 5, and now it’s being blocked. I wonder why it wasn’t blocked before, well it wasn’t as risky last week as it is now.

        Anyway just thought I’d share the IT sysadmin POV.

        More to point, using security as an example, we use SentinelOne and azure sentinel. I’ve had a ‘I want to compare crowdstrike and huntress labs’ because I’ve seen really good things with those xdr seim tools. But I got shot down. Why? We can’t deviate our standards. Well, how will we know if the competition is better? Is our choice good? Who knows.

        I still don’t know. I sleep easy knowing it’s not my burden though. It’s their fault if they get compromised on an attack that the other vendor would stop.