Tipa’s Frosthaven run through Ruins of the Equinox sounds gloriously mean: wind, fire, traps, challenge rules, and a Banner Spear exhausting heroically—very goblin-adjacent.
Roger slips back into Star Trek Online and finds the old comforts still work: alts, ship builds, story arcs, Tribble breeding, and endless tinkering.
Krista finds Moomintroll: Winter’s Warmth a cozy, story-driven trek through snowy Moominvalley, with gentle puzzles, self-discovery, and warmth instead of goblins.
Luna rounds up an April packed with Death Howl, Titanium Court, and Lil Gator Game while rethinking the blog’s voice through reviews, drawings, and experiments.
Wilhelm says EVE Online’s Vexor War has cooled after the 4-HWWF Keepstar kill, with cheap hull swarms reshaping Geminate and no goblins in sight.
Brennan opens with the life and murder of fusion physicist Nuno Loureiro, framing magnetic reconnection, scientific brilliance, and tragedy with stark seriousness.
Tim Bray argues runaway wealth inequality is hardening into hereditary aristocracy, using Vancouver, the Whitecaps, and class war language with zero patience for billionaire goblins.
Belghast’s latest cancer update says chemo round three went better thanks to iron infusions, though the post is more treatment diary than Diablo IV or goblins.
Jamie Zawinski asks the eternal Mac storage question: for a big external spinning USB disk, should you trust HFS or APFS, and can anyone prove it?
Mike tears into a dead Samsung SyncMaster 245B, chasing cooked resistors, bad caps, and terrible thermal design in a satisfyingly hands-on repair saga.
Dave Winer nods at WordPress Reader’s ActivityPub and AT Proto hookups, then pivots to Jeff Bezos as celebrity—more fediverse than goblins, sadly.
Juhis wants game writing to feel more human than score-driven, using the Helmet Gaming Challenge to practice writing from emotion, experience, and curiosity.