![]() ![]() I'm personally a philosopher, but I also got too much sparetime at the moment, but not enough to spend large amounts of not only time, but also energy on learning to find pointers in games. I'm just frustrated rarely to find the good tutorials one may only use these tutorials (such as this one) to find the software and some basics to explore oneself, spending hours, days, reading Wiki/documentation, I'm just a "lazy" person: I have better things to do. It's me personally that are requesting "more professional" articles as you call it, or "big picture"ish tutorials, I'm though sorry interfering with the community at large (even though I did comment exactly that) - that mosts here might find it usefull. Rather, what I am criticising at minimum, is that the article doesn't state/warn in the start already who this article is for.Īlso, this article was linked from another thread in context that this was a tutorial to "find pointers" beyond numerical values (HP, Mana, Skills, Positions), such as the map pointer. I might have a point, but it's not that specific and not necessarily criticising the tutorial alone. I wanna state at once that my feedback were more the necessity of releasing personal frustration, not specific and professional critics. I guess I should rather search for "game memory address tutorials BIG PICTURE" next time :PĪnd I'm happy for all of those whom this tutorial worked for, and excuse my poor criticism. This is also how our educational system works: learn (memorize) these math formulas and these historical facts, don't question it, and you win. Go read reviews of books on amazon, and you'll see that the books concerning technical issues (teaching something) with a high rating, is commented by people that it is insightfull philosophically, that it teaches you to think like a technician, rather than being told what to do cluelessly. ![]() Really stupid.Įither that, or this tutorial is mixing feeding-child-with-spoon-terms and insinuations, and technical terms, just to confuse the reader (me in this case). ![]() This tutorial, as mosts, do this, do that, remember how to do it next time - but don't learn anything philosophical about it.Īnd thus, if you encounter a different problem, you'll have to look through another tutorial for that specific problem, and so it goes on. God damn it, can't someone ever describe thing more deeply? ![]()
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