bloodbeetle

Newbie
May 13, 2018
39
60
You must collect blood from human heros (via plasma extraction) then put the tanks in the machine to create lactation serum. inject the hero and here you go.
How do you inject though? I heard something about a pistol. Which pistol and how do you equip the serum to that pistol?
 

mastajek

Newbie
Mar 11, 2023
32
43
You're a sucker if you use, or even worse, pay for a 3rd party anti-virus. If you think windows defender isn't enough to protect you, a home user, then you have a lot of learning to do. That's my 2 cents.
 

DKOC

Active Member
Feb 1, 2019
932
951
You're a sucker if you use, or even worse, pay for a 3rd party anti-virus. If you think windows defender isn't enough to protect you, a home user, then you have a lot of learning to do. That's my 2 cents.
Depends on the version of Windows. Windows 11 Defender might be reliably, but a lot of users are still using Win 7, Win 8 or Win 10, and their Defender isn't very effective.
 

.Sirene

Member
Jul 24, 2022
409
873
You're a sucker if you use, or even worse, pay for a 3rd party anti-virus. If you think windows defender isn't enough to protect you, a home user, then you have a lot of learning to do. That's my 2 cents.
Who asked for your 2 cents? Here's a refund.
 

DKOC

Active Member
Feb 1, 2019
932
951
Hey! Long time no speak!

I'm somewhat of a stickler when it comes to AV software - I've tried numerous ones and the best one I've found is Kaspersky. Out of testing it pretty much detected everything thrown at it - including the all new Python based intrusions that we're now starting to see.

I did ditch Avast also because it kept detecting something as "malicious" when it was a .dll that came packaged with a game (retail) from like 2002, so I wasn't really too convinced it knew what it was really looking for.



If you really want a good solution without buying extra software - it's going to be to actually set up a VM and use that to unpack titles and see if they do anything suspicious. Scan it in there and check it all over before anything else. I do this whenever I download from an unknown host or supplier. If something suspicious shows up, kill the VM and restart - no harm done, only a few minutes of time lost.

If you're running Windows - it actually has the ability to install VM's right in the OS itself. "Hyper-V Manager" & "Hyper-V Quick Create" allow you to pretty much do everything you need.
Have not tried Kaspersky. I tend to avoid the Old-School ones as they just haven't kept up with the times. Like Norton AV or McAfee. Great AVs in the 90s and early 2000s, but not so much anymore.

Well I've yet to encounter a python-based intrusion, mostly because I run AdBlockPlus everywhere. The last three major viruses that infected my machine, came from auto-playing video ads; two from YouTube and one from NexusMods, surprisingly. Thing is these services use unencrypted ads (to save on bandwidth and load times), which don't have the virus, but a virus maker could hack their virus into it as its not encrypted.

Avast does seem to not like .dlls, in general. All the games it had issues with had .dlls. Its a decent AV if you want something free and aren't playing many video games or don't care about whitelisting the ones that do present issues.

How goes Call of Beyond? Was a bit disappointed that V0.6 didn't have any GhostFrontier to do (even if it was janky in V0.5)
 
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