It’s the beginning of the month, which means new stuff is on Criterion Channel. It’s also when The Collection Chamber uploads new abandonware games that has been configured to work on modern versions of Windows and man there’s some real weird ones this time. I hope you find some new sites to add to your RSS feed reader this week. If you have a website, consider adding a RSS button to your site so people can easily add it to their reader.
TTRPGs
Over at Mindstorm they write about creating settlement-oriented sandboxes that players will find engaging.
Photography
I liked these photos taken of a snowstorm on the 3DS at The Works of Egan and I wish we got one final snowstorm for the year here too.
Politics
Sarah Gailey writes about the horrible H.R. 7661 bill and how folks in the US can fight it from passing.
Video Games
I subscribed to Jank and Mothership this week, which means I’ll probably be posting a lot about them for a long time. Did you know Jank had a nice writeup about the very good Treachery In Beatdown City?
I also loved Video games need to do better than treating skin like skins by Wallace Truesdale on Mothership this week.
Anyway, with games outlets and journalism just going through…..a lot, it’s fun subscribing to some writers to support them and also get a lot of nice benefits at the same time.
No Escape writes about that Marathon game that’s coming out very soon and its weird history. Even though PVP fps games aren’t for me at all, I’m still hoping it shapes up to be something interesting. Also come hang out on the No Escape forums and post about indie games. I would like to see more folks there.
I’m a big fan of Read Only Memo, a newsletter about emulation that comes out twice a month. The most recent one is about the Triforce arcade hardware platform that Nintendo made with Namco and Sega.
Jordan Minor at PC Mag writes about 24 Indie Video Games From Developers of Color. Fun to see some games I love being highlighted and plenty of games I never knew about. Adventure game fans, listen to this list and go play the free game Dot’s Home.
Andrew Plotkin has been Infocom releases into context and talks about what was going on with the company in 1989.
Over at The Imaginary Engine Review (and yes, I copied their text from their bluesky post) ‘Librarian and researcher Talita Valle delves into “the rolling stacks of digital archives” and offers a nuanced analysis of B.J. Best’s LAKE Adventure. They remind us of the importance of paratexts and Barthes’ concept of the indexicality of a cultural object of expression, such as the IF.’
Ok, the bit I won’t steal from their post is that TIER has been doing a lot of good interactive fiction crit and people should go check it out. It feels so rare IMO for any games outlet to talk about interactive fiction so I really appreciate when we see it.
RoJo Aventuras covers a lot of the adventure game demos in Steam Next Fest.
Chuck Jordan, who has worked on games such as The Curse of Monkey Island, Sim City 4, and Sasquatchers, has a big blog post on his blog about the Sim City series and how much single changes can impact the whole game.
Writing
I also like the newsletter by Charlie Jane Anders and in her most recent one, she talks about how book criticism has been dying. Not the most fun topic but an important one.
Robert Tinney recently passed away so 70s Sci-Fi Art collected a lot of his covers he created by BYTE Magazine.
That’s all for today! Maybe you’ll find a new website to get excited about and tell your friends.





























