To be fair, you can have two products that uses different technologies but have a similar UI/UX, and in a way BlueSky is more similar to Twitter than to Mastodon, UI/UX-wise.
And to be honest it's a good thing: many non-tech friends were a bit confused about Mastodon, where you have to understand parts of the technology behind to do basic things (like follow someone from another instance, IIRC). BlueSky is (currently) a bit more friendly UI/UX-wise. I don't know how that will evolve with more instances, though. I also found that discovering people was easier, but YMMV.
If I'm not mistaken, Diablo 2 Resurrected is not a 20 year old game, since it is a remaster of the original Diablo 2. It has been released ~two years ago.(21/08/2021)
Steam reviews seem to highlight documentation and development issues! It is sad, the tool seems to be fine. Reminds me of aseprite (which is more 2d): https://www.aseprite.org/
I've been using a Polyend Tracker for ~6 months and it's been such a fun experience. I'm by no means someone old enough to have been using trackers back then but the Polyend Tracker is has a really thought out interface enabling rapid prototyping as well as whole song production on it.
I just finished an internship at a research lab and was completely dazzled by the lack of control on the code people write.
The reasoning is that since it's research code that is used to get results only and not be used in a product, doing tests is not useful. I disagree completely: being sure that your implementation of your model or equations is exactly doing what is should is very important to evaluate your model, and yield correct results.
Some people just like tiny keyboards.
Moreover, keyboards are quite fun to build and typing on a keyboard you built yourself is satisfying : you have so much choice regarding components.
I think that very tiny boards are not really used by their owners (see the Gherkin board for example), but they still are a lot of fun to build. Just don't take it too seriously.
The OLKB Planck seems to be a nice tradeoff between usability and space efficiency.
What about power consumption?
I have a RPI 3B+ at house that runs Docker containers, these would be a major step up in terms of image compatibility, but I'm worried about a major step up in terms of electricity cost too.
I found mermaidjs to be interesting in cases where you want to put down some diagrams quickly.
However the renders/SVG export are really wonky at the moment.
The only thing I don't like about SSGs is the need to be on a computer that have the right software installed: I use different computers and sometimes I just want to add some link into my website. This leads to too much work for just a link.
I've been interested in [1], that is written in Rust and is available in a single binary. This eases the installation process.
Something interesting to consider are client-side site generators. I don't think there's a lot of them, but if you want to write your articles on markdown files on github/vim and update your website with a git push, it's a nice thing to consider. I wrote my own tiny one because it's fun (and it works just right for me), but see [2] and [3] if you're interested in these type of solutions. They work well with Github Pages.
And to be honest it's a good thing: many non-tech friends were a bit confused about Mastodon, where you have to understand parts of the technology behind to do basic things (like follow someone from another instance, IIRC). BlueSky is (currently) a bit more friendly UI/UX-wise. I don't know how that will evolve with more instances, though. I also found that discovering people was easier, but YMMV.