This feature proposal from the VNDB beta has made it into the live site! We can now start tagging VNs known to have DRM:
Alrighty, still not really polished or finished yet, but it doesn't look like the main data model or guidelines will change much so I've pushed it live now.
If you want to filter for DRM-free visual novel releases, you can do that now.
I consider this mission accomplished. \o/
The wording "Digital Restrictions Management" was almost snuck into the guidelines proposal, and unfortunately I can't claim to have had anything to do with that :)
The official guidelines are available here. Interestingly, the final wording is:
Some releases have DRM (Digital Rights Management or, more accurately, Restrictions Management)
We've been working on a guide to help players on all major GNU/Linux distributions play visual novels for the past few weeks. This guide is designed to be used by both beginners and experts, with minimal need to touch the command line.
openSUSE wins the award for "never had to touch the terminal" and "simplest setup instructions", but Fedora is a close second.
While there are a few existing visual novel guides for GNU/Linux around, we've tried to fill in the gaps we noticed. We've put a lot of research into this guide and ensured it is accurate while remaining simple and approachable.
I also had the 2017 edition floating around, so I figured I'd upload it, too. There are 'some' differences between the 2015 and 2017 versions, after all.
Welcome to the first Nook News of July! This week is visual novels only and covers the announcements of Anime Expo 2023 and more. We’re bringing it to you a day early, but please make sure to click the notification button to hear about our regular weekly updates on Monday. MangaGamer MangaGamer anno...
Today I learned that Saiya-Saiga has a ディスクレス field for all the visual novels listed on the site. The field essentially labels whether the release is encumbered by DRM or not; whether it performs a check to ensure the disk is in the drive on first startup.
Anime has slowly grown into a global phenomenon, but visual novels are far more niche. Many visual novels remain untouched by localization companies, and sometimes the localizations we do get are…lackluster.
Often, the best way to experience a visual novel is in the original language—Japanese. Whether you’re already interested in learning Japanese, or want to learn Japanese purely to play visual novels in their original language, both motivations are perfectly valid. Visual novels are a great way to learn Japanese, because you get exposure to both the written and spoken language.
I've written a guide on how you can learn Japanese by playing visual novels with the help of a friend who made some suggestions to improve it, and it's available on our wiki, [wiki.comfysnug.space](https://wiki.comfysnug.space/doku.php?id=visualnovel:re
Where would I go about looking for banner images in these relative form factors for visual novels in general? My lutris screen looks pretty ugly right now and I'd like to pretty it up some.
Per https://lemmy.comfysnug.space/post/22200, I have gone and made a DokuWiki that we as a community can build together. I, unfortunately, know very little about what specifically I'm doing with wiki software, particularly when it comes to making things look pretty.
For now, the to-do list looks like:
make sure others can sign up and contribute
initialize visualnovels namespace with placeholder content
What realistic options do we have for making a copy of this wiki here on lemmy? Am I going to have to spin up a DokiWiki? Repurpose my WordPress blog to post some of these articles? I'm open to suggestions, too.