It technically started as an MMO. That was their initial idea, but after they started development, they changed direction. That shows in the game to some extent, because the quests are kinda scattered and there is not always linearity, sometimes you get quests out of nowhere which doesn't make sense. There are some short fedex type quests or tasks, too, but at the same time playing Crimson Desert does not feel like a single player MMO. Exploration is fantastic, but you should know that this game doesn't hold your hand. You are free to do whatever and to discover the mechanics on your own. There are puzzles with no explanation whatsoever. Sometimes you'll stumble on some hidden area with an environmental puzzle and no idea what to do. The last game like that was last year's Hell is Us (a highly recommended hidden gem). Crimson Desert is just fun.
Why are you talking about player retention in context of a single player game? Perhaps you mixed it with their previous game — Black Desert – which is an MMO.
Being a Linux newbie that idea did not even cross my mind. MIND BLOWN. In all seriousness, though, are there ever user secrets in ~/.config? It seems like a crazy & genius idea at the same time.
For shopping lists I use Listonic. It's easy to use and better suited for shopping because it groups products into categories, so you don't have to sort them yourself and don't have to walk around the store back and forth because you picked up strawberries, moved to the toilet paper section and diary and then noticed you didn't pick apples. :) It syncs, so if you go shopping with somebody else, you can split and see what the other person already grabbed (as long as there's connectivity, of course).
That's fair. I myself migrated from Google Keep to Standard Notes and later to Joplin. I never thought that I needed for it to look like post-its :) But now that you said that I see why you wouldn't be happy with either of the non-alternatives.
What problem do you have? I use OneDrive sync, which is not even recommended, because OneDrive doesn't work well with syncing many tiny files, but it works surprisingly good. If I need to sync NOW (rarely), there's a menu item for that. Otherwise the automated sync was good for me.
Joplin not mentioned. It's like Standard Notes, but FREE, including cloud sync (many targets available). I used Standard Notes but their business model changed which drove me to look for alternatives and I landed with Joplin. Highly recommended!
By "same platform" do you mean keeping them in the same app or the same system (e.g., my Android smartphone)? I used to use Authy, but after I bought the paid subscription for Bitwarden I moved my TOTP codes there (and later to Proton Pass) because it was so convenient.
That's fair, but I want it, just not for the public. I want to remove Exif rarely, by default I like to have that metadata.