u/RudeKiNG_013

I have always struggled with the concept of "light-out" codebases where we trust the AI to have generated a good piece of software by either UAT or test suites, but in real world especially in product team working on a SaaS things are always changing rapidly, so you create something today, ship it to customers and might have to scrap or change it completely based on feedback.

If I would have written it myself I would have known ins and out and would be comfortable making changes but since it's a gray box with AI mostly writing the code I have to rely on AI again to make changes which sometimes work and sometimes don't. This workflow creates a backlog and blocker on me to first understand what was done before and then make changes, which I wouldn't have to do in first place if I had written code, but that would have delayed the delivery

If anyone has faced similar issue and able to overcome please let me know, any advice would be really appreciated

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u/RudeKiNG_013 — 10 days ago

From previous posts it's clear that I have come to absolutely love this game, but since discovering it and checking content online it's heartbreaking to see so much hate around it

I have read most of the arguments and they don't make any sense

  1. Not an AC game

This is the worst one, first AC game launched in 2007, they can't keep making same shit every year, it's evolved and the narration fits perfectly with Animus being used to discover ancient world. The game itself is the testament of the might of Ubisoft's world building + shit ton of content

  1. Micro transaction

Although I hate micro transactions in a single player game, Odyssey is not pay to win in any shape or form, in last 44 hours I have played I have never once visited store. Ubisoft may have dropped the ball with next instalments but Odyssey does not have a problem

  1. Repetitive gameplay

IMHO so is every RPG, initially it was a bit painful but once you get out of kephalonia it picks up and ranking up becomes a second thought. I have thoroughly enjoyed the game and if you keep exploring and doing quest levelling up is never an issue, also visiting new places and islands have been an amazing experience so far, they felt lived in and unique in many ways

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Anyone who haven't played the game yet, I would highly recommend giving it a try even in 2026, it holds up really well, I haven't completed the main quest yet, there's still so much to do.

Ignore the hate comments and experience your EPIC Odyssey home in ancient Greece

I know it's a rant, but needed to be said, no I am not a fan of Ubisoft I haven't played every AC game, just giving credit where it's due

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u/RudeKiNG_013 — 14 days ago