Usually, Denuvo is mentioned in the EULA of the games, so going by this metric, it’s unlikely for it to have Denuvo since there’s no mention of it.
Usually, Denuvo is mentioned in the EULA of the games, so going by this metric, it’s unlikely for it to have Denuvo since there’s no mention of it.
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Nvm, I misread your question. Using a VPN is only necessary if your server is behind a CGNAT or your ISP disallows you to open ports manually.
No, you don’t need a VPN If you open the port that plex uses. Then users can just log on their accounts and it should pull everything!
Edit for accuracy.
Anyone has a link to what prompted this response?
At first, I was running in a Raspberry Pi 4B 8GB model, and it ran fine but my ISP provided router is terrible and is also behind a CGNAT, so for it to work was always a pain.
Now, I’ve picked up a VPS, it’s running:
And the media is still in my raspberry pi, running a 4TB HDD, and is connect to the VPS via a samba share folder.
I have Plex Pass, since the early days when lifetime was much cheaper, and never had any trouble with HDR specifically like you said. And I’m the only one with Plex Pass, everyone else in the free tier.
Hardware transcoding, if your hardware has support for it, the ability to analyse media and skip intros and HDR tone mapping mostly.
Also adding Lutris, it’s a wrapper for wine, and with it, you can download game normally like you would in windows, run the installer and then play it.
No, you’re not. It’s for whenever you’re browsing games on steam, like the discovery queue or when there’s a big sale, it will show up before the description if it has, like this.
For steam, there is also this curator that marks it.
I started first in 2012-ish with Linux. That’s when I first heard of it, and decided to spin an VM with Ubuntu 12.04. Though initially I didn’t use it in real hardware for sometime, eventually I did install Fedora and been pretty happy ever since. Nowadays mostly use openSUSE and Arch.