Okay, fair, upgrading and clean installs take a while. Specially on slow internet connections. But it doesnt really compile much, we have cache.nixos.org with prebuilt binaries for most packages.
Aw, don't dump Minecraft with those trash games (roblox and fortnite), modded Minecraft (And vanilla) is amazing, i personally like the Create mod and its addons, they allow to do very advanced things like storage systems and factories (Not that you cant do that in vanilla Minecraft, but it is more compact and sometimes complex too), i recently found the Create: Power Grid addon which adds realistic electricity to the game as an addon for Create, every electrical block has a rated Voltage (And more) that if you go above of by too much it will break and/or explode.
There have been some reports that choosing to Repair the Terminal application has restored it to working order.
... Or, you know, dont hook that shit so tight into your store that it breaks if the store is offline or something gets messed up? I have personally never seen applications randomly stop working on Linux (Unless i did something stupid, i once fucked up glibc for all flatpaks system-wide on Fedora), specially now that im on NixOS, its just not possible for a program's files to get corrupted on NixOS since the store is read-only (Of course if it doesnt gracefully handle config errors and the config gets corrupted then it will break, but often times it would just be deleting the file and letting it create a new one, not reinstalling the application).
It could be possible if they decide to implement that, since the TOR browser tells you the circuit (The path your connection takes) it could theoretically just request a new circuit until it gets an exit node that matches your preference. At least with the most basic implementation that's what could be done, not very optimized though.
Okay, fair, upgrading and clean installs take a while. Specially on slow internet connections. But it doesnt really compile much, we have cache.nixos.org with prebuilt binaries for most packages.