Frostilyte says Vultures smartly fuses turn-based tactics with survival horror, using cramped zombie encounters to keep the tension humming.
Sey calls Replaced a stylish cyberpunk must-play, pairing cinematic pixel platforming with an AI-fueled story about Phoenix Corporation’s brutal control.
Marc discovers Paddle Mania isn’t really tennis at all, but a weird 1988 arcade mashup closer to Olympic air hockey than Pong.
Sweetie is firmly against Dragon Quest X adding Google Gemini’s Chatty Slimey, arguing AI companionship and generated voices are a bad fit for games.
Wilhelm notes EVE Online’s Jita is now under CONCORD control, a lore-and-gameplay shift that should spare Caldari enemies from getting shot on arrival.
The Chronicler’s sixth Kingdom of Heaven session digs into the Seventh Crusade, praising its tense card-driven play, sieges, and historical what-ifs.
Emily finds Britney Spears’ memoir The Woman in Me an absorbing, personal read focused more on Britney’s life and control than music-making.
Roger compares AI to the helpful IT mentors he misses, finding Google Gemini useful for technical troubleshooting despite its quirks.
Jamie Zawinski points to Lake Tahoe’s power crunch as another ugly AI cost, with data centers threatening electricity for resorts, casinos, and residents.
Warner recommends Indigo as a polished way to merge Mastodon and Bluesky timelines, especially if crossposting and feed browsing are your thing.
Dave Winer gripes about getting stuck paying for X Premium on two accounts, then dives back into fast JSONL streaming via FeedLand websockets.
Michael argues experimental art in games, music, and storytelling should be appreciated on its own terms, not weaponized to dunk on mainstream work.