The Great Album Project (2024-09-24)

My journey to listen to every record I have continues!

cover of the album King's Chill vol. 2, featuring an old desktop computer by some music equipment

Dr. Pete Larson: Field Drift 2 (2023, Bandcamp)
For some reason I thought this was going to be field recordings but it’s actually minimalist electronic music. I think it’s pretty great. It was created by Dr. Pete Larson, a local musician in Ann Arbor. I got this one for free when I bought a different record and got this as an unexpected bonus.

Various Artists: Dropchord sountrack (2013, Bandcamp)
Soundtrack for a now unavailable game. I remember enjoying the game and this is a nice soundtrack that fits it. It’s just a solid compilation of noisy, danceable electronic music with maybe a small dubstep influence to it as well since it was published in 2013.

Mint Mile: Roughrider (2024, Bandcamp)
The latest and best (imo) album by them. Tim Midyett’s (most famous for Silkworm) current band. I think they’re great

The Fall: The Frenz Experiment (1988, YouTube)
I don’t actually have that many The Fall records and this was a pickup I got about half a year ago. I really enjoyed this one. The reviews for this one were positive but I saw one or two that think the band went on autopilot for this one. I can maybe see that for one or two of the songs but it also has some of their most well known songs like Victoria and Hit the North, two of my favorites.

Various Artists, produced by Space Quest Historian: King’s Chill Vol. 2 (2021, Bandcamp)
A collection of chill and electronic covers (remixes?) of songs from the King’s Quest series. To be honest, I don’t actually know a lot of songs on this one that well since a lot are from KQ 5 and 8, which I haven’t played in a long time, but I still think it’s pretty great.

Mary Timony: Untame the Tiger (2024, Bandcamp)
I really only know Mary’s stuff in her heavier rock bands like Ex Hex, Wild Flag, and Helium but the songwriting in here is excellent. I’ve have one of her solo albums from 20 years ago, but even that has a very different sound. This almost has more of a country sound in parts. I think it’s cool that all of her bands and solo work are all under the Rock genre but still have very different sounds.

Blog Roundup (2024-09-23)

With us now entering the last week of Cohost posting, I’ve been making an effort to follow more blogs and sites through my RSS feed reader. Here are some I would recommend!

Katherine Morayati has bee posting old postcards and the history behind them in postcardposting one and two.

ALOCASIA is a journal queer plant-based writing and issue #10 just came out. They’re free to read but donations are always appreciated.

Ephemeral Enigmas regularly covers older and more obscure video games. This time it’s about Game Boy game Battle Unit Zeoth.

Interactive fiction writer Andrew Plotkin goes into the history of a sea shanty. It’s maybe not safe for work.

I love personal blogs too. This one is a shorter post on the thoughts when getting into blogging.

If you want to see an example of Tosting, posting directly into the RSS feed so the post doesn’t show up on the site, add this site to your RSS feed reader.

Indie Game Roundup (Sept. 20, 2024)

Moved these to Friday because it felt weird doing them on Monday. Anyway, video games. So much has come out in the last two weeks and I cannot play it all so I’m just going to breeze through it. Multiple things I’ve been waiting a long time for too. The last month has been ridiculous.

UFO 50 (Steam) is probably the big one. Everyone probably knows about this one but it’s nice seeing it finally come out and being so well received too.

TTRPGs for Accessible Gaming Charity Bundle (Itch) will let you buy a bunch of TTRPGs for $10 or more and the money goes to charity.

isometric view of a town by the water

Judero (Steam) is another one I’ve been waiting for a long time too. Action rpg with stop-motion art is so laser targeted towards my interests.

I was a big Void Bastards fan so it’s really nice to see the devs do a spiritual sequel with a western theme with Wild Bastards (Steam).

Every version of the Videotome engine results in some cool interactive fiction games so I’m happy we now have a new version (Itch.io) that adds some dating sim inspired functionality.

The new remaster of the first Broken Sword game (Steam) looks pretty snazzy.

a black and white desktop resembling the macintosh

EyeOS (Itch.io) combines two of my favorite things, fake OS desktops and games made in Decker.

retro pixel man standing in a fork in a path

We got two King’s Quest fan games recently! One is a demake (site) of the classic King’s Quest 6 and it’s really well done and a fan project that took many years for the dev to create.

cartoon man standing in the woods outside of a tree home

It Takes Two to Tangle (site) is a fan game sequel to the game King’s Quest 7. It does an incredible job emulating the art style from that game and feels like an evolution of the mid-90s style of Sierra point-and-click adventures, which I’ve always been a fan of. The production values for this game, which I believe was mostly by one developer but had a small time outside of it, is astonishing.

Computer Store Photo Dump: Scrubbin’ Bubbles

Since Cohost has now been confirmed to be winding down and will be read only until the end of the year before shutting down, I will start posting here (hopefully almost daily) with all the stuff that I posted on the CompStoreVisuals account there. I think most, if not all, of this should already be on the Mastodon account but I wanted to have something more permanent for the photos and videos I’m posting. Apologies for what will feel like computer store spam for a while. The “Thoughts on Cohost” post will arrive eventually (TLDR: Not a perfect site but I’m sad) but until then, enjoy?

This photo is one I actually took a long time ago on my phone. The place is now gone.

Sign for Scrubbin Bubbles
Westland, Michigan, United States

a sign saying Scrubbing Bubbles Coin Laundry Tanning & Computer Cafe

What I’m Up To (2024-09-18)

Last week I did a check-in post and here I am, doing another one. Here’s what’s going on in my life:

  • I mentioned last week that I paused all my game dev projects because of potential contract game dev work coming up and good news, it’s here! I can’t talk about it yet but I am cramming as much GB Studio knowledge as possible and it’s very exciting. It’s not a big project at all but I think it will be fun.
  • This weekend I got to volunteer with Friends of the Rouge to replace a bunch of boring grass near me with a rain garden that will be good for pollinators and reduce runoff. It was a great experience but the workout kicked my butt and I’m finally healing from that. But if you’re feeling down about the world, go volunteer at a thing! It helped me a lot anyway.
  • I’m going to attempt to listen to my entire record collection and my previous blog post is about that.

So sort of a busy week but at the same time, not a lot to talk about either. But I’m doing well and excited to work on things I can’t talk about for a few months! Here’s photos of the rain garden in Plymouth.

Rain garden extending between a pickleball court and baseball field
Rain garden next to a pickleball court

The Great Album Project (2024-09-17)

album cover for Same Eyes's album "parties to end" that shows a collage of photos including a city skyline, a radio tower, and a woman's face with another eye pasted over it

Inspired by the Aaron Giles page where he talks about ripping his entire cd collection, I have decided to listen to every record (and CDs and Bandcamp purchases) and give tiny blurbs on them. I’ll do these posts on a weekly basis so they won’t get overwhelming and people can just skip them. Collecting records for 15 years and marrying someone who also collects them means I have a pretty decently sized music collection in my basement, with a lot of records I haven’t heard in a long time or have never listened to. I can’t imagine this will be interesting to most people but it will be a lot of fun for me since I listen to a ton of music while programming or after work anyway. Plus maybe it will help people find new music to listen to. I actually already ripped all my CDs earlier this year so I’m not getting to those yet. Most of these reviews will have links to Bandcamp pages as well. I’m also working on a page where all of these reviews will be listed.

His Name is Alive: How Ghosts Affect Relations 1990-1993 (2024, Bandcamp)
This preorder actually arrived a bit early so I got to listen to it on vinyl before I can listen my download of it. An incredible box set containing 3 albums I love, along with some bonus tracks and booklet. The remasters sound fantastic and I can’t recommend these albums enough to people who are a fan of the dream pop/shoegaze sound that a lot of 4AD bands had at the time. It will never be weird to me that these albums were being recorded almost directly behind my childhood home while I was a kid. The main person behind this band, Warren Defever, apparently lived grew up here and then bought the home from his parents to use as a studio up until the mid 90s and I was just riding my bike by it every day. Weird! All 3 albums are great but I think my ranking of them is 1. Livonia 2. Mouth by Mouth 3. Home is in Your Head. Livonia is the first album released and named after the city where I grew up. It probably has the the most experimental sound, with the albums drifting to a more radio friendly sound with Mouth by Mouth sounding the most approachable to me.

Jean-Michel Jarre: Magnetic Fields (1981, YouTube)
I’m not an expert on him by any means and he definitely has more famous albums, but this is still a good one IMO. Just some nice electronic bleeps and bloops. It sounds more poppy and dance than I would expect from him, but again, I’ve only heard a tiny bit of his work (the Oxygene albums).

Love Spirals Downwards: Flux (1998, Bandcamp)
I feel like with the resurgence of Y2K nostalgia, especially among Gen Z folks, this seems like an album that they would be really into. This drum & bass and ambient album was released in 1998 but the version I listened to is the vinyl rerelease that came out in 2024. I think the rerelease sounds great. City Moon is the first song I heard by LSD so it will always have a soft spot for it, but I think all the songs on here are solid. To be honest, I don’t actually know the band’s discography that well outside of this and their compilation Temporal. I should probably listen to more of them since I like these two releases and have a lot of nostalgia for this era of music. I’m linking to the vinyl rerelease but there’s also a deluxe digital edition on Bandcamp that has a lot of bonus tracks. The vinyl release also features an essay and thoughts about the album too.

Mint Mile: The Bliss Point (2016, Bandcamp)
I believe this is the first EP by Tim Midyett’s band Mint Mile. Tim is more famous for being a member of Silkworm, but I really like this band too. This was not the first album I heard by them, but I think it’s a good intro for anyone curious. It’s just a very good and straightforward rock album consisting of 4 songs, maybe with the tiniest bit of a country sound in some songs

Same Eyes: “Parties to End” (2021, Bandcamp)
A synth pop/dark wave band from Ann Arbor, Michigan. I think it’s an enjoyable collection of songs if you’re a fan of 80s new wave bands. I hesitate to call it synth pop since it’s a little darker, but I think there’s also an element of cheese that makes me want to associate them with that genre too. Even though it’s clearly inspired by a lot of classic new wave/dark wave bands, I still think they have their own sound. It’s not like when a vaporwave band is just copying the same sounds as many other vaporwave bands and ends up sounding like “generic 80s synth song” (I know that’s not all vaporwave btw). Lots of Michigan connections with this album too. I discovered them through my local NPR station, local musician legend Fred Thomas helped record the album, and Warren Defever from local band His Name is Alive mastered the album at Third Man Records in Detroit

Blogging on the Phone

People on the blogosphere right now are talking about how you should post on your blog through the phone. They’re even reblogging posts saying you should post from your phone. Well I’m here to draw the line in the sand and say I will NEVER post from my phone. In fact, maybe I’ll post exclusively from my desktop computer. I don’t care if this starts discourse, I will never use my cellular phone to make a blog post.

Here is a picture of my cat

a photo of a cat looking up at you with big eyes and expecting a snack

Blog Roundup (2024-16-9)

Inspired by this post (I know it mentions my blog but that’s not why I’m linking to it), I thought it would be fun to start doing regular roundups of blog and site posts that I enjoyed. I kinda did these before a while ago but I thought it would be good to do them again now that I’m following so many different blogs through my RSS feed now that Cohost is shutting down. Google search sucks now so the only way people can see cool stuff is from others sharing it. So if you enjoy these posts, subscribe to their RSS feeds through your reader of choice.

Eniko reflects on her history with the Ultima franchise and what it means to her on her personal blog.

The developer of classic Macintosh games like Glider and Glypha goes through his history of abandoned games.

I’ve enjoyed following along with David Lindsey Pittman’s blog updates on the development of Eldritch 2. I was a fan of the first game and this looks good too.

Renga in Blue is a blog devoted to attempting to play through every single adventure game in order of release. The most recent post about is about Dungeon Adventure (1982).

Thanks to Cohost, I’ve become aware of the concept of Rosting. They’re posts directly to the RSS feed, meaning they only show up in the feed of your reader and nowhere else. It’s a lot of fun whenever I see one popping into my feed, like it’s a post just for me. If you’d like to see some, consider subscriber to the inventor(?) of Rosting, Adam Ledoux’s (Bitsy creator) blog, and Nicky Flowers on your RSS feed.

Misty has a very good post about some fonts that were on a floppy disk.

Indie Tsushin has an interview with the developer of Missile Dancer 2.

Gretchen has a post about how the internet is getting worse. Maybe we can all work together to make it a little better and feel less small.

Books Read in August 2024

Oops, a few days behind on this. I went a bit overboard reading in August and September is definitely slower. Almost all of these books were from my library since I wanted to keep participating in my summer reading program there, which is partially why my reading in September is slower. Also because my kids are back in school and all the Internet Archive discourse on Bluesky (not getting into it) was very annoying to me as well. Even the conversations around “real” libraries have been annoying and heavily focused on how libraries are good because they give authors money which, sure, that’s nice, but there’s lots of other reasons why they’re good.

This is How You Lose the Time War by Max Gladstone, Amal El-Mohtar – After hearing this books described as a modern classic in the last few years I finally read it. It’s really good! Not a whole lot to say past that but I recommend it if you like gay time travel stories.

1984 by George Orwell – It’s weird having an opinion on this book after reading it for the first time. I’ve seen it referenced billions of times and the influence that it had on pop culture that I mostly knew it all anyway. But I think it’s good?

Orbital by Samantha Harvey – I really liked this one. It’s just about the lives of people in the last days of the International Space Station before it’s decommissioned. I absolutely love sci-fi stories that feel like they are heavy on vibes and there aren’t explosions and punching and this one delivers since there’s not really a “plot.” The novella did well with critics but it explains why opinions on places like Storygraph are more divided.

Welcome to Wine: An Illustrated Guide to All You Really Need to Know by Madelyne Meyer – Yep lol, I just wanted to know more about wine. This was a good intro to that and not too long.

Red Rising by Pierce Brown – Apparently this is a massively popular series but I didn’t really care for it. Not “bad” but nothing exciting to me either.

Some Are Always Hungry by Jihyun Yun – Just a really good collection of poetry by a local author in Ann Arbor. I picked this one up about a year ago at Booksweet, which has now changed ownership but still seems very good.

Artificial Condition by Martha Wells – The second Murderbot novella. I’ve read this one before but just really like Murderbot and wanted to read it again. I think I’ve only read the first 3 books so I’m looking forward to getting to the new stories soon.

Captain Disaster: The Dark Side of the Moon by Dave Seaman – This is a short story novelization of his free point-and-click adventure, both are available on Itch. Fun, quick read. Most people should do novelizations of their games.

The Fireborne Blade by Charlotte Bond – Very enjoyable fantasy novella. The middle drags a bit and it spends time setting up more interesting things in the sequel book instead of doing it here, but I had fun reading it.

Venus in Furs by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch – Public domain read on my Kindle. I don’t know, shrug. I get why it’s important but don’t think I would recommend it to others.

Babel-17 by Samuel R. Delany – My first Delany book! Liked it but probably wouldn’t recommend the audiobook to others since I feel like you need to take your time with it and parts and possibly even reread things?

The Brides of High Hill by Nghi Vo – Another novella in the Singing Hills cycle. I’m glad I kept reading these. Wonderful series.

Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros – Good book. Don’t have a lot to say about this one. It’s not really the kind of book I would normally read but checked it out since it’s popular and was part of a recommendation post from my library. Won’t read the sequels but that doesn’t mean it’s bad.

Nothing But Blackened Teeth by Cassandra Khaw – It’s fine. I like Cass Khaw but this didn’t work as well for me like their other books. Even my review seemed to be more positive than most on Storygraph, but I didn’t think it was bad. I think a lot of people felt pulled in by the fantastic cover art. Like everyone says, the characters are just kinda annoying, but not in a way that’s interesting. Oh well. Go read their other stuff though!

Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne – I listened to the audiobook by Tim Curry and man, absolutely incredible. The story itself is good but Tim Curry really elevates everything.

Nine Princes in Amber by Roger Zelazny – My first Zelazny book and it won’t be the last. I actually started reading this because we were playing Chronomaster in Adventure Game Club, which he worked on, and I wanted to actually read one of his books. Good stuff.

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne – I guess I am a big Jules Verne fan and I’m fully onboard with Captain Nemo’s bullshit.

Tom Baker at 80 – Ok lol, this is an audio release I bought from Big Finish about 10 years ago and I have the signed cd. I finally listened to it. It’s fine! It’s just a 2 hour long interview with Tom Baker and his career. He’s still working with Big Finish and doing more 4th Doctor stories to this day!

Into the Riverlands by Nghi Vo – There’s one more of these that I also read in September. Highly recommend the whole thing.

The Bad Beginning by Lemony Snicket – Listened to this because Tim Curry does the narration. He’s great, I thought the actual book was whatever and then I read the Wikipedia page for the author and he seems very annoying so I don’t think I’ll do the sequels.

Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie – Another story I listened to because of Tim Curry! He’s good in this and so is the story. It’s worth reading even if you’ve seen the Disney movie a bunch. It’s not drastically darker like some Disney source material is, but it is a little bit and it’s just interesting.

A Spell for Chameleon by Piers Anthony – Oof, OOF. I read this because I eventually wanted to play the adventure game by Legend and wanted some context. I’ve even been warned about this book before, the AV Club famously has a very negative review of the book. I should have listened. It’s so frustrating. There’s some really fun ideas in here but it’s so aggressively sexist. It really can’t stop itself from saying something awful every once in a while once you think the book stopped being sexist.

A Mastodon Test

I just installed a new plug-in that should post this over to my Mastodon account here. Before this became self-hosted, the blog would post to its own account but I dropped that as soon as Automattic got into AI scraping crap. I also deleted my Tumblr soon after. Oh well, their loss. Apologies if you follow this through RSS and care about none of this!