Good way to spread the game
Good way to spread the game
Play the game at school during your study or free period. People will come by and be interested, and maybe they'll look up the game and buy it! For me, it got quite a few people interested and they probably looked into the game.
Don't look now, but there is a spider behind you.
- Phillip_Lynx
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Re: Good way to spread the game
I can not do that
I have a desktop and carring this around needs also to carry an electricity generator my both screens and the massive rig around. Not very suitable .
And NO, I have no mobile, tablet, iphone, netbook .... all I have is my desktop and a 60" flat-tv
I have a desktop and carring this around needs also to carry an electricity generator my both screens and the massive rig around. Not very suitable .
And NO, I have no mobile, tablet, iphone, netbook .... all I have is my desktop and a 60" flat-tv
- Xterminator
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Re: Good way to spread the game
I must ask... Just how epic is it playing Factorio on a 60" TV?Phillip_Lynx wrote:I can not do that
I have a desktop and carring this around needs also to carry an electricity generator my both screens and the massive rig around. Not very suitable .
And NO, I have no mobile, tablet, iphone, netbook .... all I have is my desktop and a 60" flat-tv
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Re: Good way to spread the game
I have to attach my rig to the tv before I can answer the question. But this would be a reason to do this one timeXterminator wrote:I must ask... Just how epic is it playing Factorio on a 60" TV?Phillip_Lynx wrote:I can not do that
I have a desktop and carring this around needs also to carry an electricity generator my both screens and the massive rig around. Not very suitable .
And NO, I have no mobile, tablet, iphone, netbook .... all I have is my desktop and a 60" flat-tv
Re: Good way to spread the game
I can confirm that it is awesome.Xterminator wrote:I must ask... Just how epic is it playing Factorio on a 60" TV?
Re: Good way to spread the game
I definately have to try this out, I am pretty sure this will be awesome like the game is!
Re: Good way to spread the game
Just incase this isn't just humorous, you should know that the zip downloads are completely portable, meaning you can run it from a flash drive/USB stick if you wanted.Phillip_Lynx wrote:I can not do that
I have a desktop and carring this around needs also to carry an electricity generator my both screens and the massive rig around. Not very suitable .
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Re: Good way to spread the game
It is not *just* humorous (but phrased so ).n9103 wrote:Just incase this isn't just humorous, you should know that the zip downloads are completely portable, meaning you can run it from a flash drive/USB stick if you wanted.Phillip_Lynx wrote:I can not do that
I have a desktop and carring this around needs also to carry an electricity generator my both screens and the massive rig around. Not very suitable .
The problem is not to take the game around in an USB-Drive (wich I have) but with a device on wich I can play it. And since I have no Tablet or anything portable playing device so i can not do this :
.JayS wrote:Play the game at school during your study or free period. People will come by and be interested, and maybe they'll look up the game and buy it! For me, it got quite a few people interested and they probably looked into the game.
And the computers on my work are not allowed (technical) to use USB-Devices wich are not from the company. And these are checked frequently. And it is not allowed to have executables on it.
Re: Good way to spread the game
Ah, corporate, well there are problems there. Can't help you without possibly endangering your job.
If you're not phased by that, there are a few ways to combat this.
First is just renaming the .exe's to something else. I tend to use .bak or .cop
Second is keeping the zip password protected. Almost all scanners will default-safe/cancel on password requirements.
Third would be some sort of remote connection setup. Teamviewer is useful enough for this. There are other hurdles with the processes, but they're different ones, and not all companies treat all hurdles the same.
Lastly, and most extreme, would to make a bootable disk (USB or CD) for booting into a temporary OS to run Factorio from. Most computers, even in corporate environments aren't protected from booting from disk, since it's the most reliable way of getting a system to run if it can't be recovered. Even environments that prohibit the use of exes and other hefty user restrictions will often forget/decide not to lock down the bootable device. The extremeness of this option comes fro the fact that a) your screen would almost always look distinctly different from what anyone else could possibly have on theirs. b) you will need to know a lot of the hardware specifics in order to get your bootable working well enough to use factorio. c) there would likely be some sort of trouble/alert code thrown because the computer is running, but the monitoring software isn't, assuming they do any level of active monitoring. d)getting caught doing this all but guarantees a full understanding of your actions, thereby making you fully accountable for your actions, as opposed to the others, which could just be a newbie trying to make the computer work.
Alternatively, and of practically no risk, you could buy a copy of Factorio, stick it on a geeky flash drive, and give it to someone in your IT department that isn't a grunt.
The final option is the most likely to succeed, but also the most likely to fail disastrously. The last is the least likely to succeed, most likely to put your name on a list (although not a bad one, it means a shorter list for future mysterious problems.) And the rest are moderately safe, with a moderate chance of ending up on a bad list, but unlikely to be terminated, etc.
If you're not phased by that, there are a few ways to combat this.
First is just renaming the .exe's to something else. I tend to use .bak or .cop
Second is keeping the zip password protected. Almost all scanners will default-safe/cancel on password requirements.
Third would be some sort of remote connection setup. Teamviewer is useful enough for this. There are other hurdles with the processes, but they're different ones, and not all companies treat all hurdles the same.
Lastly, and most extreme, would to make a bootable disk (USB or CD) for booting into a temporary OS to run Factorio from. Most computers, even in corporate environments aren't protected from booting from disk, since it's the most reliable way of getting a system to run if it can't be recovered. Even environments that prohibit the use of exes and other hefty user restrictions will often forget/decide not to lock down the bootable device. The extremeness of this option comes fro the fact that a) your screen would almost always look distinctly different from what anyone else could possibly have on theirs. b) you will need to know a lot of the hardware specifics in order to get your bootable working well enough to use factorio. c) there would likely be some sort of trouble/alert code thrown because the computer is running, but the monitoring software isn't, assuming they do any level of active monitoring. d)getting caught doing this all but guarantees a full understanding of your actions, thereby making you fully accountable for your actions, as opposed to the others, which could just be a newbie trying to make the computer work.
Alternatively, and of practically no risk, you could buy a copy of Factorio, stick it on a geeky flash drive, and give it to someone in your IT department that isn't a grunt.
The final option is the most likely to succeed, but also the most likely to fail disastrously. The last is the least likely to succeed, most likely to put your name on a list (although not a bad one, it means a shorter list for future mysterious problems.) And the rest are moderately safe, with a moderate chance of ending up on a bad list, but unlikely to be terminated, etc.
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Re: Good way to spread the game
...n9103 wrote:Ah, corporate, well there are problems there. Can't help you without possibly endangering your job.
If you're not phased by that, there are a few ways to combat this.
First is just renaming the .exe's to something else. I tend to use .bak or .cop
Second is keeping the zip password protected. Almost all scanners will default-safe/cancel on password requirements.
Third would be some sort of remote connection setup. Teamviewer is useful enough for this. There are other hurdles with the processes, but they're different ones, and not all companies treat all hurdles the same.
Lastly, and most extreme, would to make a bootable disk (USB or CD) for booting into a temporary OS to run Factorio from. Most computers, even in corporate environments aren't protected from booting from disk, since it's the most reliable way of getting a system to run if it can't be recovered. Even environments that prohibit the use of exes and other hefty user restrictions will often forget/decide not to lock down the bootable device. The extremeness of this option comes fro the fact that a) your screen would almost always look distinctly different from what anyone else could possibly have on theirs. b) you will need to know a lot of the hardware specifics in order to get your bootable working well enough to use factorio. c) there would likely be some sort of trouble/alert code thrown because the computer is running, but the monitoring software isn't, assuming they do any level of active monitoring. d)getting caught doing this all but guarantees a full understanding of your actions, thereby making you fully accountable for your actions, as opposed to the others, which could just be a newbie trying to make the computer work.
Alternatively, and of practically no risk, you could buy a copy of Factorio, stick it on a geeky flash drive, and give it to someone in your IT department that isn't a grunt.
The final option is the most likely to succeed, but also the most likely to fail disastrously. The last is the least likely to succeed, most likely to put your name on a list (although not a bad one, it means a shorter list for future mysterious problems.) And the rest are moderately safe, with a moderate chance of ending up on a bad list, but unlikely to be terminated, etc.
I know all this since I work in a computer relatead company (hardware, software and programming). And sure there are ways to get around this. But if I cought in such things I have to search for a new job . And with an wife, 4 Kids and an unpaid house this would be very inconvincible moneywise ... aaaaannnnddd if I get *not* cought this would be contraindictive to the OPs intension to spread the word, since no one have to see me play
Re: Good way to spread the game
Yea, I'm not surprised, and I know I went overboard, but I was in a hypothesizing mood