![]() Their day to day life, career, personal life, what it takes to be successful in a competitive industry and random chit-chat and so much more! Although Knighton likes to have a script, the show seems to have a mind of its own that does not obey such puny things. Git Gud with Knighton is a show by the youth and for the youth! The premise is rather simple, Knighton hosts modern-day celebrities, AKA Instagram and YouTube influencers to talk about stuff they’ve never spoken before. In fact, Git Gud with Knighton is a testament to the fact that you don’t need to be good at a game to enjoy it, hence the gatekeeping is absolutely useless. ![]() However, it was not just fun for us and the viewers, but also the ones getting thrashed, thanks to a safe and inclusive environment where they were playing for fun, rather than beating the game. Regarded as ‘the toughest game ever’, Dark Souls 3 is not the kind of game you hand it over to a total newbie, it’s like giving the keys of a Bugatti Chiron to a student driver.ĭid they get thrashed? Absolutely yes! It was hilarious to see otherwise confident people struggling to remain alive in the game. The goal is to survive as long as they can to claim the title and ‘Git Gud’, a play at ‘Get Good’. We got a bunch of our favourite influencers and video game newbies and pitched them against Iduex Gundyr, the first boss of Dark Souls 3. So when it came to promoting a positive and inclusive gaming environment, we were supposed to take the logical steps to raise awareness, make a petition and yada yada. In the pursuit of excellence, we forgot that video games were meant to be fun. As a gaming company, there isn’t really much more that we could wish for, but something feels amiss. Markdown, MakeCode, Twilioquest, my huge writing archive, to name a few.Video games have boomed in India during the past few years, thanks to the accessibility of network and hardware. Lastly, this whole post is annoying full of things I wanted to blog about but have not. Actual Repositories, where I did some level of work on them. So anyway, if you want to see some random bits of code, some from 20+ years ago, feel free to poke around my growing pile of repositories. I’ve also started using Markdown to draft out blog posts as well as for my archive of old writings. The main page for each repository is just a specific Markdown file, so having more repositories means I can make many pages of different types. Like Git, it feels like a skill I should have practiced more much sooner than now. Right now, it’s all just MakeCode games, but I plan to add more if it seems like a good idea.Īnother motivator for this push to tidy up my GitHub is it’s an excuse to practice using Markdown more. Speaking of “showing off”, I also found that the little games I had made last year with Microsoft’s MakeCode Arcade are all browser based, so I set up a little page to specifically show off Code Projects. I mostly just want to show off some mediocre code to the nobody who would look at it. It feels like the common goal is to try to get a programming job, but I am not really sure I would want that, at least not anytime soon. I don’t really have any overall “goal” here. Still, I think my main take away is… it doesn’t really matter how the code gets there. I did get to go through the proper, Fork, Branch, Edit, Push process a few times while doing some lessons through Twilioquest, and a follow up afterwards. I have, more recently been pushing myself to use Visual Studio Code (VSCode) lately and a few other code apps, and thus I’ve been pushing some repositories with those various program’s interfaces. I suppose there really isn’t anything inherently wrong with this method. Almost everything I do I just revise and edit locally until it works, then if I want to “show it off” I scrub out any static IPs, usernames, and passwords, and upload it to a repository. Most of my projects are just single upload drops. I still wanted to get a better feel for the proper flow, which I probably still don’t have, and won’t really ever get until I (if ever) have the chance to actually work with a team using Git. At some point I went through and removed all of these forks and was left with only my code projects. I feel like that’s not quite the proper way to go about using things. I’ve had a GitHub account for a good while, and at one point I “had” a ton of repositories because instead of simply following something, I would fork it to make a copy of it. ![]() Something that I’ve have tried and fail to quite get a hang of is how to use Git, and more specifically, GitHub.
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