• they/them

🌙 MOON POWER 6000
video game music and shitposting,
but never in that combination*
*(not a guarantee)

I'm so tired I could sleep forever!


BlobmarleyMFA @ Twitch
twitch.tv/blobmarleymfa
arcadian.rhythm on discord
discordapp.com/users/arcadian.rhythm
@arcadianrhythm.com on bsky
bsky.app/profile/arcadianrhythm.com

Campster
@Campster

So people keep asking why I haven't joined Mastodon yet, and I thought I'd write up something I could link to. It isn't an angry screed against Mastodon or anything (if anything, I hope the platform flourishes in the wake of Twitter's slow collapse), but more just a collection of thoughts about why joining that platform for me in this particular moment is difficult.



DevilREI
@DevilREI

There has been so much drama in the game industry this year, but I think this one takes the prize for being the most bizarre. A very surface summary: a random Bulgarian guy is claiming, repeatedly, even with indisputable proof to the contrary, that he is the ghost composer for several old Japanese games, particularly on JP-exclusive PC platforms. This ongoing saga has mostly been confined to the corners of the internet where Japanese retrogame supernerds lurk, but Pat here made this fine video explainer about what's going on. Have a watch.



vectorpoem
@vectorpoem

BreezeWiki is an alternative frontend for any Fandom/Wikia wiki that removes ads and all the other clutter the accursed SEO beast adds to its wikis. so if you're searching or need to link a wiki page, a good process might be:

  • first see if there are any non-fandom wikis with the info you're looking for - some wikis have formed alliances and taken an explicitly anti-fandom stance since the company's recent acquisitions.
  • if you can only find results on a fandom wiki, search for it on breezewiki and link that.

here's an example of a typical breezewiki page - so nice and clean! like the web from 20 years ago! the only thing missing is a firefox addon that auto-redirects any clicked link to its breezewiki equivalent.



DevilREI
@DevilREI

There has been so much drama in the game industry this year, but I think this one takes the prize for being the most bizarre. A very surface summary: a random Bulgarian guy is claiming, repeatedly, even with indisputable proof to the contrary, that he is the ghost composer for several old Japanese games, particularly on JP-exclusive PC platforms. This ongoing saga has mostly been confined to the corners of the internet where Japanese retrogame supernerds lurk, but Pat here made this fine video explainer about what's going on. Have a watch.