

But the lengths people went to criticize forbidden West truly is baffling unless I and all of my friends were just the lucky ones.Īnd it seems quite obvious to me that the quality of the common fan has diminished so greatly due in part to the increase in gamers from covid as well as the prevalence of social media and the mass quantity of propaganda penetrating people’s minds. Cyberpunk was quite literally virtually unplayable.
CARDBOARD PHOTOFRAME PRO
The Witcher 3 years after release on PS4 Pro was still a technical disaster. On the other hand I did play Elden ring when it came out and that was a true technical embarrassment. For a massive open-world triple A compared to the rest of the industry forbidden West was absolutely. One time an enemy was floating literally once. I never got stuck in a wall and I never had a weird bug. I had zero crashes and zero frame rate issues. That and poses in photo mode early on had a slight motion blur. I am truly baffled at how overhyped the technical issues were for forbidden West because quite frankly I had almost no issues besides very occasional pop in.
CARDBOARD PHOTOFRAME PATCH
It had a minor anti-aliasing issue with grass in performance mode that quite frankly is very similar to what other games have in particular Elden ring has this problem and it was mostly fixed shortly after launch and I believe they just issued a patch to further address the issue. You could even get your kids to do some paintings and frame those.Horizon forbidden West ran with a near flawless frame rate in both performance and fidelity. The heart DIY photo frame didn’t fit a photo very well so we used a little drawing instead.
CARDBOARD PHOTOFRAME MOD
I then stuck the photos on the back using my glue gun.Ĭherry also had a go at making some, she painted hers and covered them in glitter, no surprise there! I say it every time but to avoid glitter falling off everywhere either mix it with glue and paint it on or seal it with Mod Podge / watered down PVA. Obviously if using a circular frame that wouldn’t be an issue. I didn’t do the corners as the yarn kept slipping but I was thinking you could make little snips in the cardboard to hold it in place, you could then do the corners different colours. The wrapping did take a bit of time as you have to cut a length of yarn then keep tying more on, it’s a good job for doing whilst sitting on the sofa in the evening watching telly. You could skip that step though if you were happy you had tied them tightly. I decided to wrap yarn around my frames to decorate them, I secured the ends with a glue gun just to make sure they stayed in place.

Once you’ve made the first one you can just draw around the outside and inside so you know where to cut the lines on the second one, you don’t need to measure it all out again, unless you are making different sized frames. You could do this any size you like and in any shape you like, we also did a heart but circles would work too. I then used scissors to cut around the outside line leaving you with a frame. I used a craft knife to cut around the middle line revealing the hole that the photo will be seen through. I started by drawing around the photo onto the cardboard then marked another line a bit further out.


– Paint / Glitter for kids to do some too I’ve been meaning to get some photos up on my walls for ages and I had lots of polaroid sized Instagram photos that I needed to do something with so decided to make these DIY photo frames using cardboard. I’m a tiny bit obsessed with the colours of the yarn I used, in fact I used them in my crochet bunting too so they match. I think this DIY Photo Frame post might be one of my favourites to date.
