The Daily Blogroll — Friday, 15 May 2026
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A Pixel Nomad Stargrace finds ten lousy relic sites in an EVE wormhole, but the quiet beauty, danger, and solitude make the treasureless run feel worth it.
Aywren's Nook Aywren cheers FFXIV Patch 7.5 for finally easing retainer pain with bigger housing storage and dye consolidation, even if hoarders will still fill it all.
Inventory Full Bhagpuss uses Neverness To Everness to unpack gacha basics, odds, and why chasing Hotori still isn’t enough to make him care much about pulls.
Kimimi the Game Eating She-Monster Kimimi digs into Jungle Park’s gloriously weird Saturn-era energy, from Cubivore-like animals to a giant foldout map and baffling early monkey puzzles.
Luna's Gaming Log Luna finds inKONBINI’s 1990s konbini vibe charming and checkout oddly satisfying, but says the overall cozy slice-of-life package felt too bland.
Priest with a Cause Shintar joins Turtle WoW’s shutdown farewell, where DJs, fireworks, turtle mounts, and Closing Time turned a private server goodbye into a surprisingly emotional sendoff.
The Ancient Gaming Noob Wilhelm previews EVE Fanfest streams, expects June expansion news, side-eyes EVE Classic nostalgia, and grumbles that EVE Frontier prize money beats supporting fan sites.
Musing over Pints and Coffee Joar reflects on retirement’s odd tradeoff: losing the status and shorthand of being known, but also the exhausting obligation to always play the role.
Tobold's Blog Tobold argues AI debate is stuck in hype, doom, and board-game YouTube purity tests instead of any useful middle-ground conversation about tools.
Schneier on Security Bruce Schneier highlights how AI video age checks can apparently be fooled by something as low-tech as a fake mustache.
Scripting News Dave Winer notes RSS feeds already have avatars via the image element, and says Claude Code poking around Chrome’s DOM could make UI work much nicer.
brennan.day Brennan turns rivers into a meditation on civilization, blood, and the body, drawing a calm, flowing line between human history and human fragility.