I really wish there were more viable alternatives to Youtube, but since so many peoples’ livelihoods rely on having the largest audience possible, they’re pretty much forced to use YouTube.
I really wish there were more viable alternatives to Youtube, but since so many peoples’ livelihoods rely on having the largest audience possible, they’re pretty much forced to use YouTube.
Imaginary Characters was always a big source of inspiration for me while writing. Glad to see them exploring the transition to Lemmy / kbin
I only read the first in the series (though I’ve heard the whole series is great), but I was really surprised by how much I liked All Systems Red. Really entertaining quick read.
As far as the wider world is concerned, there’s not much of a difference between a pre recorded event and a recording of a live event. We watched for the announcements, and those are going to come out with or without E3
I’ve been playing the GameCube original on Steam Deck and Can confirm it’s a perfect game for the system
To expand a bit on point 1 - you won’t truly know what you are until you try. I wanted desperately to be a pantser, wrote a terrible novel, and hated every moment of it. Then I tried planning and I’m having a much better time.
I feel like it’s a whole new world of social media for me. I’ve found myself joining smaller communities across the Lemmyverse and in Discord, and it feels more engaging and less toxic. I’ve even picked up Tik Tok after years of Redditors telling me it’s the plague, and I’ve found that it has more welcoming niche communities (like Booktok, Writertok, Tears of the Kingdom) than Reddit ever had.
I’ve been LOVING SF6. It’s the first fighting game that has ever truly clicked with me.
I really need to pick up Diablo 4, but I’m spoiled by Diablo 3 on the Switch for portable play while my wife watches TV. I’d love to get D4 on the Steam Deck, but the setup seems a bit intimidating, and I’d worry that future updates would break it.
I was totally the same way when I wrote my first novel. I had the general flow of the story in my head with a few scenes, and somehow ended up with a 65k word manuscript just out of my head. It was a disjointed, poorly paced, poorly written, character arc-less, boring mess of a story.
It was a good learning experience though. I found out that I’m not a pantser. After learning some frameworks (Abbie Emmons on YouTube has some really helpful resources for Planners to use) and getting a full outline written, I’ve found writing my third novel to be so much easier.
I haven’t heard of Fabula cards, I’ll have to check it out. I’ve honestly just been using the sticky notes app on my Mac and the card-based overview in Scrivener.
Alternative title: some nobody on the internet has too much free time
I enjoyed NMS more and more each year. I wish I didn’t instantly get migraines from VR headsets or I’d get a PSVR2 just for NMS.
For me, weirdly, it’s a tie between TotK and Street Fighter 6. Every time I sit at my couch, it’s a coin toss of which one I’ll be feeling. I’ve never been that into fighting games, but SF6 is really clicking with me. Then of course is the unbridled freedom and creativity of TotK. It’s a tough choice.
I also need to download the FF16 demo. Heard it’s amazing.
TBH, the thing I disliked most about Reddit ended up being the community. It was nice having little niche communities, but wisps of inceldom, hivemind, and that general air of arrogance permeated the entire site. Killing the apps that made the site tolerable to use (Apollo, in my case) was just the last straw. I already used a plugin that deleted all of my posted content from the past 5 years, so I’m officially out, and it’s kind of a relief. I’ll stick to Discord interest servers and small communities like this one from now on.
Blogging was my entry point to writing. It’s useful to see what kind of content people are interested in. Plus they say that you need to write some 100,000 words before you’re half decent at grammar, sentence structure, style, tone, etc. and blog writing is a fairly safe way to get the hang of it.
Sometimes I’ll read my old blog posts and laugh at how bad they are, but that’s ok. I’m a better writer now as a result.
When in doubt, I refer to my outlines. I’ll find the next story beat and skip to it, then find a way to bridge the gap later. I’m definitely more of a plotter than pantser (a painful lesson to learn btw), so having a roadmap really helps.
Like most others, I use Scrivener for long-form content like novels.
For short-form content and general notes, I was one of those people that bounced around to a million different apps (I tried Apple Notes, Bear, Upnote, Evernote, OneNote, Craft, Obsidian, Notion, Logseq, Roam, etc.) but I just ended up landing on Apple Notes. Every app had its drawbacks, but the biggest drawback of all was the constant switching. So many hours wasted testing word processing software.
I went straight for the Steam Deck version and it is a perfect handheld game. The fights don’t drag on too long, and the suspend / resume is really nice to have.