Stargrace’s WoW gold log: 4.4 million this week thanks to better sales as Remix ends, mostly pets/transmog/recipes, plus a side quest of spending big on housing collectibles and letting auctions lapse
Syp hits level 20 on a TBC Shaman in WoW Classic, raves about Joana’s in-game leveling guide and friendly small-scale community moments, then groans at the marathon water totem quest.
Roger commits to a magic build in Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon and is pleasantly surprised it’s not just glass-cannon stuff—spells, cubes, and wands can put out DPS and stay alive.
Nimgimli finally finishes Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 and loves it—if you play it in focused bursts—because the dodge/parry timing skills get rusty fast, especially across Xbox vs PC.
Kimimi’s Resident Evil Village write-up is more diary than review, riffing on the Winters’ “post-hell” setup, the dark fairytale framing, and how the game’s vibe lands across chapters.
Krista revisits Pearl Abyss’ DokeV—open-world creature-collecting with Korean folklore flair—and wonders where it went, since the big 2021 reveal still hasn’t turned into a release date.
Shintar tests WoW’s new housing endeavours and finds the real problem isn’t “two dailies,” it’s murky UI, diminishing returns, and progress so tiny it feels like you’re pushing a boulder alone.
Wilhelm wraps up five No Man’s Sky expeditions, then hits that sandbox whiplash—so many goals (bases, freighters, achievements), but no checklist, plus some base-building quirks and bugs.
Warner tracks signs of political wobble amid winter-storm chaos and protests—reports of officials being sidelined, GOP jitters, shutdown stakes—and argues the only play is sustained public pressure.
Dave Winer uses Darkest Hour’s Churchill moment as a mirror for today: tell the public the truth, stop “clever” debates, and push big systemic fixes like Supreme Court terms and enforcing the 14th.
Jamie Zawinski’s iPad wants to jump from 18 to 26, and he’s crowdsourcing regret—complete with commenters arguing security updates while he clings proudly to an iOS 15 iPhone.
Nicole digs into the 1982 Yamaha MR-10 as a surprisingly late preset-only drum machine, contrasting analog circuit “drums” with sampled realism and spotlighting its performance-first big instrument 버튼