Based on our record, Agar.io seems to be a lot more popular than Send Anywhere. While we know about 289 links to Agar.io, we've tracked only 15 mentions of Send Anywhere. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Yeah thanks that would be awesome. You can upload it on https://send-anywhere.com/ or something like that. Source: about 1 year ago
I personally use sendanywhere. https://send-anywhere.com/. Source: over 1 year ago
In order to send the image or video exactly as it was taken then the best options from the S22 are QuickShare where the files are uploaded to the cloud and a link is shared or via a third partly like https://send-anywhere.com/. Source: over 1 year ago
Use https://send-anywhere.com/ to send files to and from your machine to the attack machine. It has worked for me multiple times. Source: over 1 year ago
I mainly use Godot on my Desktop PC at home. But I would also like to be able to work on my Projects via my Laptop because I often get Ideas while away from home. I once used send anywhere to copy a couple of scripts onto my Laptop to work on them and just replace the Files afterwards, but I'm unsure if this approach would work well with an entire Project. Source: over 1 year ago
Hey, the game I am looking for was from when agar.io was popular. It was a singleplayer game where your cursor was a little dot. Bigger dots would fly into the screen from every side and you had to avoid them, as if you touched them with your small dot you would die. However, there were also some smaller dots coming that you could touch to get bigger. So you basically had to eat the smaller dots and avoid the... Source: 8 months ago
Question: Is it possible to use the "High-Level Multiplayer API" to implement different "game rooms" from the same server? For example, in the case of agar.io, you can create different game rooms that can be joined by you're friends with a code. From what I can tell, when a client connects to the server using MultiplayerPeer, the server acts as another peer in the game, so I can't tell if it's possible to let that... Source: 10 months ago
So, my question is: What kind of servers do IO games like agar.io, diep.io or slither.io typically use? (I'm not talking about the ones who are faking multiplayer of course. Source: 10 months ago
Its annoying that you as a normal player don't has a chance anymore. What can we do so agar.io will be as fun as back in the day when it was 2016 and there was no teaming? Source: 12 months ago
I remember it being an agar.io style game, but you were blocks and might have become littler blocks when you died. I think the name started with a k, or one of the skins had the letter k in it. I remember playing it 2-3 years ago. Source: about 1 year ago
WeTransfer - WeTransfer is a free service to send big or small files from A to B.
Slither.io - Slither.io is a multiplayer online video game. Players control an avatar resembling a worm, which consumes multicolored pellets, both from other players and ones that naturally spawn on the map in the game, to grow in size.
ShareDrop - HTML5 clone of Apple's AirDrop - easy P2P file transfer powered by WebRTC
Diep.io - Diep.io is a multiplayer action game available for web browsers, Android, and iOS, created by Brazilian developer Matheus Valadares. Players control tanks and earn points by destroying shapes and killing other players in a 2D arena.
SHAREit - SHAREit allows you to transfer files and data from your phone to another device without having to rely on WiFi or a data plan.
Osmos - The full game includes 47 levels (plus "infinite" bonus content) across 8 distinct level...