Try Kaizoku, it’s what I’ve been using for a while.
You can rationalize it all you want, at the end of the day when you say crackpipe there’s only one thing that comes to mind.
I’m just imaging a conversation at work talking about a new game, and someone saying they haven’t picked it up yet and a colleague overhearing their co-worker say “just hit the crackpipe”.
This could just come down to the remux group using differently sourced BluRays. Not all BluRays are created equally, sometimes a US release is the best, other times it might be an ITA release, really depends. A good remux group looks at all the sources and chooses the best, sometimes they’ll combine different parts from multiple sources as well.
In my opinion, the release with the noise in the comparison shots is the better release from the details retained.
I previously used NPM, it was easy to use and simple, but more robust stuff had to be done in the config area. I ended up having to edit configs more often than not in the end, so I switched to Traefik so now I just drop some extra blocks of text directly in my compose files and it just handles it.