Nintendo Switch, Waypoint 4.07
589824 2022-11-23 v9 BuildID:
27907AB48A78BAD6A13642208C8640A16494E0E6000000000000000000000000
In-game version: 96676
Nintendo Switch, Waypoint 4.07
589824 2022-11-23 v9 BuildID:
27907AB48A78BAD6A13642208C8640A16494E0E6000000000000000000000000
In-game version: 96676
Sean is still suffering from the same misconception…
Yep. My team lead at work thinks the holiday period is a gr8 time to laden us with work while she takes vacation time.
Small update in Steam
Bug fixes
655360 2022-12-06 v10 BuildID:
DB1F84E09190DA581B8D29CC6D3AD563D6630A8A000000000000000000000000
In-game version: 97030
Must be the next redux expedition.
Not sure anyone actually noticed, but the interesting thing about that last internal update was the fact it was actually a roll-back to an update from years prior, being the last NEXT version from October 19th 2018.
well that sounds really strange…and curious…could they be disguising something or actually putting something back in?
Or trying to track down the source of a really hard to find bug…
That’s been there since way back…
Am I understanding this correctly: Internal updates in Steam are for them to test something that can be tested only in a real installation done via Steam? I mean — they have the original, they don’t need Steam to run their own game, right?
So (unless somebody merely drunkenly misclicked) does this mean they are testing some Steam feature that was different in 2018?
I would expect it to be used by QA. So if they have something that they need a lot of people to take a look at and reproduce, I could well imagine that they push it to the internal branch and hand out a specific brief.
Kanaji (aka Kanaju) has an interesting personal “ranking” of No Man’s Sky updates using NMS in-game update “Classes”.
The ‘internal’ branch is an actual proper Steam ‘build’ of the game, which may differ quite a lot from any local source or even a local ‘build’. As @jedidia says, this is very likely being used for QA and inaccessible to anyone outside of HG, whereas creating a ‘passworded’ test branch would just be too risky.
WooHoo. Snowflakes = Fractal. First one I guessed right (it was my first thought).