Tipa compares Pokopia’s post-human Pokémon mystery to Horizon Zero Dawn, tracing how both worlds reveal catastrophe through records, ruins, and recovery plans.
Roger is surprised Starfield pulled him back with Shattered Space, Terran Armada, freer planet travel, and enough quality-of-life fixes to feel substantial.
Sey highlights Triple-i Initiative standouts like Neverway, Long Gone, Prove You’re Human, and Too Deep To Quit in a brisk indie showcase roundup.
Ron Gilbert says Death by Scrolling hits Xbox, PlayStation, Switch, and updated Steam on April 16 with a new character, world, powerups, and customization.
Kimimi finds Jellyfish the Healing Friend soothing in theory, but its PlayStation jellyfish care is so minimal it barely feels interactive.
Mailvaltar is having a blast revisiting Diablo II with a Poison Nova Necromancer, a gear-hungry build that finally shines for terror-zone farming.
Scopique relishes Dune: Awakening backing away from forced PvP, arguing players keep showing they’d rather build and explore than get griefed.
Wilhelm rounds up No Man’s Sky’s Xeno Arena update, which basically lets you collect, train, breed, and battle creatures in space-Pokémon style.
Thomas likes Xenonauts 2 as a refinement, but says its Cold War setting feels underused despite neat touches like the Doomsday clock and Cleaners.
Aywren ditches pricier Netflix for a DVD/Blu-ray player, arguing physical media is cheaper, ad-free, and actually yours once you buy it.
Tim Bray weighs sticking with 1Password 7 versus moving to Bitwarden, with the big concerns being sync, security, and government pressure.
Dave Winer wants WordPress as a collaborative writing back end, with APIs, smarter editors like WordLand and Gutenberg, and RSS-friendly docs users truly control.