The only problem with loops so far is its full of reuploads of other people's content which I consider bad and also boring. Folks should make their own stuff.
FYI Tesseract as implemented on e.g. dubvee.org, an alternative front-end UI for Lemmy made by Admiral Patrick, has an embedded player already, which doesn't need an account to play the videos. See it in action at https://tesseract.dubvee.org/c/loops@midwest.social, or read more about Tesseract at https://dubvee.org/post/2453173. I hope to see even greater levels of integration soon, perhaps in PieFed!:-)
I always like to promote cool stuff, and your stuff is so freaking cool:-).
Good point about it not working natively inside Beehaw but I just wanted to clarify for anyone reading that even so, they can still click the link https://tesseract.dubvee.org/c/loops@midwest.social and see the loops videos in action - they can't comment or vote, either on the Lemmy post or for the Loops video, but for read-only mode it works very well.
I don't have a Loops account myself so haven't compared the experiences for that vs. Tesseract but regardless it's kinda neat to be able to do something like sort that community by Top Week or something and then go through the videos one by one, reading comments if desired also.
So far, so good. The software works. You're able to watch videos, comment, follow people etc. There are minor glitches here and there, but there are also lots of updates all the time.
It reminds me of something I've read about Mastodon. That place was designed to be less addictive than Twitter, so feeling a little bored after a while is a feature, not a bug. Loops gives me that same vibe, although it's probably caused by the the small number of videos and people making them.
I've known people who played FPS like that... they beat us all "normal distance" folk. Likely wouldn't work at pro levels, but definitely worked at semi-casual.
I suspect it has to do with larger field of view and quick eye accomodation (aka: young).
So far nothing. Last time I checked (back when loops.video was released), their domain had no SPF nor DKIM, so most of the mail providers wouldn't receive their email.