Dénouement 2016 Part 2: No-Show List

By Shamus Posted Tuesday Jan 3, 2017

Filed under: Industry Events 96 comments

Every year there are more games to play, but the number of available gaming hours remains more or less the same. Like always, too many games dropped right at the end of the year. This year I had the added challenge that I had a big trip right in the middle of December, cutting into those precious dollars and hours available between the start of the October gaming deluge and the end of the year. Also, at the end of the year I really started to become engrossed in Factorio, and that thing ate a lot of time.

Rather than fending off wave after wave of, “Shamus, how dare you miss out on milestone game X?”, let’s talk about a few popular games and why I didn’t play them:

Continue reading ⟩⟩ “Dénouement 2016 Part 2: No-Show List”

 


 

Diecast #182: Looking Back at 2016

By Josh Posted Monday Jan 2, 2017

Filed under: Diecast 147 comments


Hosts: Josh, Rutskarn, Campster, Mumbles. Edited by Josh.

The year of 2016 is officially behind us now, and for whatever else you could say about all the crazy things that happened over the year, you can definitely say that 2016 was a year in which some video games were made. In this episode, we talk about some of those games that stood out to us.

Unfortunately, partway through, Chris had to leave; apparently he has some real life friends that came over, though I remain suspicious. Just in case you were wondering why he just stops talking halfway through.

Show notes after the jump.
Continue reading ⟩⟩ “Diecast #182: Looking Back at 2016”

 


 

New Year Resolution

By Shamus Posted Sunday Jan 1, 2017

Filed under: Random 44 comments

The old joke, “My resolution for the new year is 1080p!” is about the closest I get to anyone talking about resolutions for the new year. As far as I can tell, new year resolutions are this thing that everyone talks about and nobody does.

I get how they’re supposed to work. New year is a time of reflecting on the past. While doing so, we realize there was a bunch of important stuff you meant to, but you put it off all year because it was difficult or scary. Finish that novel. Lose some weight. Clean out the junk-filled garage. Come out to the family. Restore that old car you bought 3 years ago. Push that one really destructive person out of your life. Really make some progress paying down that college loan. So then you make a resolution to change this. You don’t want to get to the end of another year and still not have this thing done. So you make a resolution. Maybe you tell people about it, hoping the social pressure will motivate you. Maybe you write it on the fridge to you don’t forget about it.

The problem is, these sorts of tasks are the kinds of things we wish were already done, but we don’t want to have to do them. So then sometime in February that sense of determination and purpose is gone. You start putting off the job for the same reason you put it off last year: It sucks, and you’d rather be happy now than have the difficult thing done later.

That’s the stereotypical scenario, anyway. The thing is… does anyone really do this? Is this still a thing? People joke about the process all the time, but I never see people participate in it. The people I know in real life don’t ever do this. Same goes for my Facebook friends. It’s a ritual everyone talks about and nobody participates in.

This is not to say I don’t have goals. I’d like to someday make a soundtrack for a popular indie game. But I can’t make that happen by making a resolution because the thing preventing it isn’t willpower. I put a few hours into music every week, and I’m getting gradually more knowledgeable. But going pro isn’t something you can force. I can’t MAKE people like my music. I just have to get better. The masses are a heartless critic. People might say nice things about my work to my face, but the play numbers on my Soundcloud page aren’t going to sugar-coat the truth to spare my feelings. I can see how often a track gets played and downloaded, and that’s the feedback that really counts. In this case Soundcloud is telling me, “Nice try, but keep at it. You’re not there yet.”
I have other similar goals regarding accomplishments. I think they’re good goals, but I can’t advance any of them my making resolutions.

But maybe my experience is unusual? How about you. Did you make any resolutions in 2016? How did they turn out? Did you make any for 2017?

 


 

Happy New Year!

By Shamus Posted Saturday Dec 31, 2016

Filed under: Spoiler Warning 8 comments

This is it. We’re going to welcome 2017 and send 2016 on its way by playing videogames. Josh is streaming a bunch of stuff and we’re all going to hang out and have and experience that, for the sake of argument, we’re going to refer to as fun. The stream is here, or you can watch it via the embed after the jump.

Let’s do this!

EDIT: And done. Happy New Year, internet.

 


 

Crash Dot Com Part 8: Home Again

By Shamus Posted Thursday Dec 29, 2016

Filed under: Personal 39 comments

The tail end of this series overlaps with the start of another story in my life. This entry is where they intersect. So I’ve re-used a bit of text here to help set the stage. No, you’re not going mad. You’ve probably read bits of this before.

It’s midway through the year 2000. I’m 28 years old. Heather and I have been married three years. Rachel turns two this year. Our daughter Esther was just born. My dad is dying of cancer. He’s still talking about living to be 100, but the odds are so ridiculously long that I hope he’s just keeping up a brave face and a positive attitude and not in open denial. Or maybe he’s just kidding. It’s always hard to tell what’s really going on in that maddening, muddled head of his.

He’s never been very fond of going to the doctor, and by the time he got around to having himself checked it was years too late. They’re apparently calling it “intestinal cancer”, but the mass itself is a sprawling and ambitious thing that’s glommed onto his liver and a few other organs during its long and greedy lifespan. My brother explains all of this to me on the phone. I’m 600 miles away in Boston.

Continue reading ⟩⟩ “Crash Dot Com Part 8: Home Again”

 


 

New Year Stream

By Shamus Posted Wednesday Dec 28, 2016

Filed under: Notices 63 comments

Be sure to mark your calendars for… Hm.

That would be pretty stupid, wouldn’t it? You take the 2016 calendar down, write “Twenty Sided Stream” in the very last box, and then throw it in the garbage. You hang the 2017 in its place, but it doesn’t become relevant until the day after this event. I suppose you can use the box for January 1st: “Twenty Sided Stream will be yesterday”. Or something like that. It doesn’t matter.

But if you’re the sort of person who needs to remind themselves about how they plan to spend the celebration of the New Year in 3 days, than maybe you need more help than a calendar has to offer.

Whatever. I’ve gotten sidetracked. The point is, we’re doing the thing we always do every year, which is playing videogames. Josh is going to play some stuff. We’re going to hang out and make fun of the game, of him, of his choice in games, and of how he plays them.

What games? Good question. Josh promises it will be “a medley”. I know Overwatch is on the list, but that’s not going to last the entire night. Right now I’m campaigning for Grand Theft Auto V. I dunno. Nominate your choices in the comments. Or maybe don’t. Josh has a contrarian streak and will probably avoid anything that seems popular. You might think you could outwit him with reverse psychology and nominate what you don’t want him to play, but he’s clever and will simply play the requested game, which means you still end up with a game you don’t want except now it’s your own fault.

We’ll see. The event will start at 10PM on the east coast.

Of which continent?

Guess.

Or I suppose you could cheat and consult the following timer:

The stream will go until the games run out of fun, or Josh runs out of booze. It will appear on the Spoiler Warning stream at the appointed time. I hope you’ll be there.

 


 

The Race that Eats its Young

By Shamus Posted Wednesday Dec 28, 2016

Filed under: Movies 48 comments

I watched the documentary The Barkley Marathons: The Race That Eats its Young a few months ago. It describes one of the most brutal races in the world, and follows a number of contestants as they tackle the challenge in 2012. The movie has stayed with me since then. I keep thinking back to it and wondering at the strange quirks and personal drives that compel people to do this to themselves.

I know calling something “The Dark Souls of [thing]” is horribly cliché by this point, but The Barkley Marathon really is the Dark Souls of footraces. It’s a 100 mile ultramarathon race. It consists of five loops around a 20-mile course. It must be completed in 60 hours or less. The course involves a great deal of climbing and overcoming physical barriers like mud, water, rocky terrain, prickly plants, and the more general inconveniences of untamed wilderness. It has considerably more elevation change than any other 100 mile race. There are no markers denoting the boundaries of the course. Navigation is done by way of written instructions describing natural landmarks, and the course changes every year. To keep navigation interesting, runners change direction with each lap. There is no aid along the way, aside from two places where the runners can acquire water. (And on one particularly cold year, some of the water had frozen.) The race is set up so that some of the laps are run in the dark.

Continue reading ⟩⟩ “The Race that Eats its Young”