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Top 25 Gaming Articles on Substack

Latest Gaming Articles


May 13

Nintendo, Microsoft, Square welcome us to the era of fewer big video games

Data shows that Nintendo was ahead of the curve on this one.
Like big-budget video games? Hope you like waiting for them. (And hope there are enough developers left in this industry to make them.) There are abundant signs that we have entered an era that will see fewer major new video games from big game publishers.
Stephen Totilo ∙ 34 LIKES

How Gaming Helped The Ink Spots Gain 1 Million New Listeners [Game Music Digest May 24]

The sync success stories from Amazon's Fallout TV series and Bethesda's video games
Game Music Digest is a wrap-up of the most interesting stories at the intersection of video games and music, brought to you by MusicEXP. This newsletter is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, please consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Paid subscribers can leave questions/comments and suggest topics they’d li…
MusicEXP ∙ 1 LIKES

Welcome to Read Rodge!

After a long journey, it's time for me to start writing stuff again. Here's where I'm gonna write it.
To explain why I’m starting a Substack, let me tell you about the two things I can’t stop doing. The first is watching sports. Some people are interested in particular sports. Not me. I’m pansportsual. If there are sports on, I’m probably watching them. I am literally years behind on television and movies and video games, forcing me to nod my head and f…
Rodger Sherman ∙ 14 LIKES
Gregg Saunders
as my good friend shea says, support people who do cool shit so they can keep doing cool shit. looking forward to your posts about arcane olympic sports that i'll immediately fall in love with.

The Youth Rebellion Is Growing

Seven Gen Z Leaders Working to Reduce the Harms Caused by the Phone-Based Childhood
Intro from Zach Rausch and Jon Haidt: The most common argument among the critics of our work is that we are fomenting a groundless moral panic that is no different from earlier panics—from radio and television to comic books and violent video games. It’s a reasonable starting hypothesis, but you can’t cling to it as evidence mounts that
Zach Rausch and Jon Haidt ∙ 179 LIKES
Ruth Gaskovski
What a breath of fresh air to read of these Gen Z leaders pushing back. In our writings on how to navigate life in a digital age, my husband Peco and I noted that in addition to practical advice, people are in search of inspiring personal accounts that model a different relationship with technology. As such we have been planning a post for the end of May calling for submissions of stories that offer insight into how some young people, especially teens, choose to live life differently in a digital age. We will curate a collection of these stories that readers can freely access to gain encouragement for change and inspiration to apply to their own unique circumstances. We hope that this will add momentum to turning the tide.
Anne Lutz Fernandez
Ben's interview speaks volumes to me as a high school English teacher. I keep banging the drum that the problem is not just phones, it's overuse of tech more broadly in schools.
I wrote a bit about my experience this year, which has been to make paper, not machines, the default in my classroom. Ben's attic discovery can happen in schools.

2024: what the ****'s going on? (In PC games?)

A general market musing, plus Team17 financials and lots of news.
[The GameDiscoverCo game discovery newsletter is written by ‘how people find your game’ expert & company founder Simon Carless, and is a regular look at how people discover and buy video games in the 2020s.] Welcome back, folks, and it’s another week on the
Simon Carless ∙ 20 LIKES
James Francis
Thanks for bringing up that indie games are not necessarily the counterpoint to AAA woes (a topic you've covered and illustrated well in the past).
I'm seeing a lot of gaming commentators, especially on YouTube, try to build a narrative about the indie market as the shining light to gaming industry woes. But none of them point out, as you have in the past, that the majority of indie games fail because it's a very crowded and demanding market right now. I look at a lot of demos - the quality out there is astounding. But getting people to notice your game is so hard. These days, if you can manage getting 300 reviews on Steam, that's a big deal!
There is this narrative that indie is the new saviour of gaming. But I think it's primarily encouraged by people who don't have a lot of exposure to the absolutely saturated market - and that's just Steam. Let's not talk about getting noticed on something like Itch!
Eliza Crichton-Stuart
💚🔥🌟

Why Some U.S. Border Agents Are Contemplating Suicide. Plus. . .

The ‘Butcher of Tehran’ is dead. A backlash in Portland. Harvard capitulates to the student intifada. Harrison Butker’s commencement speech. And much more.
On today’s Front Page from The Free Press: The Butcher of Tehran is dead; Francesca Block r…
Oliver Wiseman ∙ 494 LIKES
Running Burning Man
The only thing offensive about the Butker speech was the parade of outrage by idiot leftists. Lead of course by the once again dunce of the year NFL “DEI” official who denounced Butker.
WTF does the NFL have a DEI official for? To try to get more white players into the league?
PSW
I’m sure if Butker had been named Mohammed and given a speech about Sharia law and the subservience of women and the evils of homosexuality, the MSM would be cheering him on, right?

Anti-Dating Apps and Zyn Rewards

ban "journey"
Beabadoobee announces Rick Rubin-produced album This Is How Tomorrow Moves; Lauren Sánchez’s son could be fashion’s new it boy; Charli XCX sets off it girl explosion in “360” music video; and zoomer indie film Gasoline Rainbow is a postcard from Teenage Wasteland, USA.
Casey Lewis ∙ 33 LIKES
Lacey White
Omg the Instagram story hack to prevent procrastinating 😂
Lauren
So Zyn Rewards = Marlboro Miles, yes?

Cologne Boy and HIFI Obsessions

addicted to cheese
Watch Sabrina Carpenter make her musical debut on Saturday Night Live; Kai Cenat’s latest blockbuster stream is a 156-hour ‘Elden Ring’ marathon; Iris Law is the new face of Guess Jeans; and Baby Coppolas are taking over Cannes. WHEN DID TEEN BOYS GET A NOSE FOR $300 COLOGNE?
Casey Lewis ∙ 25 LIKES

Your Guide to May’s Family Friendly Video Games

Switch 2 might be months off, but Nintendo's still releasing interesting games, with summer right around the corner.
Is summer almost here? Based on what I often see outside of my window in the Chicago suburbs, the answer is no, but I’m being told that May is right before June? We’re entering a fascinating point with the Switch, where Nintendo is still releasing games—two of them this month, actually, both promising—and most, if not all, indie games continue to target …
Patrick Klepek ∙ 12 LIKES
Reyza Amri
Your take on the enduring charm of the Switch amidst the arrival of Steam Deck in your life resonates with me—I'm also juggling between the two. Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door has a special place in my game library, excited to see how it translates with the latest Switch technology. Thanks for keeping us in the loop with your thorough reviews and updates!
Walker Adamson
I wouldn’t mind seeing each game’s FGDB Skill Level in these roundups, since I usually find myself doing a lookup over there anyways!

White Bedding

Alcohol roulette & a sentencing.
The cliches are many: Till death due us part. Come hell or high water. In sickness and in health. For richer, for poorer. In house arrest or come and go as you please. I was naive to the Justice system. I knew of one Justice system for twenty-six years: one cult leader, assistant pastor (my “Dad”), three elders, and seven deacons. On multiple occasions, …
Breanna Brown ∙ 5 LIKES
Stephanie Wolfe
Jayzuz Bre !! What did the sicko do? And how is it the “cult” supported him through this? Did they give him punishment too? Or was being a man’s of god good enough? Damn you have lived through some shit! I’m so proud of you.

This green and growing earth

Against tradition
Every year, on the first Monday of May, the people of Hastings parade a man made of leaves through the streets of their town. The leaf-man spins and dances all day, wearing a crown of flowers and followed by his drummers and musicians. The people all wear green. They put garlands of leaves and flowers in their hair. Eventually, the leaf-man is taken to…
Sam Kriss

Letter #63: Commandments and Strategies

A Church Key
Splendor, Count me in. “Revitalizing something eternal… new idioms… hear Jesus speaking as if he really were alive right here, right now…” That would be my middle name if I had more room on my business card. Because, after all, the issue is never really outward forms. It’s always the life within. “Those little marks or twists on the central, inside part o…
Andrew Klavan ∙ 101 LIKES
Jacob Gray
I'd love a hard copy of these letters. You should publish a book of them every 100 exchanges.
Roddy Martinez
Question about the Livestream: Will it be available to watch after the fact? I can’t watch it in real time because of work but really want a double dose of Klavan wisdom!
Great letter as always, by the way.

How To Collect The Lost Churches Of London

A fun history project that gets you exploring the City of London.
If you enjoy exploring old building and collecting things, then today I have a new hobby for you. The Lost London Churches project features 110 collectable cards, each depicting a the City of London church. You can pick them up for free in surviving historic churches all over the Square Mile. I met the project’s creator and discovered some remarkable Lo…
Matt Brown ∙ 18 LIKES
Beatrice Osborn
Before I left my job in the summer of 2022, (I'd worked in Gresham Street, Cannon Street, Queen Victoria Street, Newgate Street and Aldgate East) I came across the Lost Churches Project and decided to visit all the churches with extant remains, in lunch hours and journeys to and from the office. Thoroughly enjoyed it. Amazing how often I was surrounded by modern buildings thinking there ia a church here somewhere, turning a corner, and there it was, hanging on amidst the changing scene.
Living in south east London I was also able to visit the spire of St Antholin in Sydenham.
Rachel Gascoigne
I love it. I work near the city so should be possible to take in a church on the commute.

"You're doing this all wrong" - Amazon SVP

How to get promotion advocacy
Welcome to this week’s free article of Level Up: Your source for career growth solutions & community by retired Amazon Vice President, Ethan Evans. If you’d like to become a paid member, see the benefits here, and feel free to use this expense template
Ethan Evans and Jason Yoong ∙ 8 LIKES

The summer reset

Avoiding the summer slump with your boy
Every year as summer approaches, I work with more and more parents of teenagers whose anxiety rises. I am bombarded with questions from them as their kids finish up a school year: Will they be laying around the house all summer? Will they work? Will they help out around the house? What’s the right tone to set? What are my expectations? Will they be depr…
Dr. John Duffy
Dr. John Duffy
Thank you, Chris. That truly means the world.

The Lost Art of Ambition: How Churches Can Inspire Young Men to Greatness

I recently had coffee with an entrepreneur friend (Nate), and we realized that many churches lack cultures for cultivating, forming, and inspiring ambition in teens and young men. After all, ambition is a positive virtue, right? At times, when a young man shows ambition, it's often labeled as idolatry, pride, or arrogance. Alternatively, his ambition of…
Anthony B. Bradley ∙ 9 LIKES
Pete Williamson
Dr. Bradley, are there some resources that you recommend about the nuts-and-bolts of mentoring someone?

Alex Goldman Reads to You

Read to the end for yet another Steve Albini eulogy
I was at my most voracious as a reader in probably 2009. I had a 45-minute subway commute to my tech support job, cell phones didn’t work in the subway at the time, and, most importantly, I didn’t have a smart phone (for whatever reputation I have as a tech person, I was a late adopter to cell phones, smart phones, twitter, instagram, and even substack)…
Alex Goldman ∙ 8 LIKES
John D.
Alex... can you elaborate about the 'disgusting porn' you mentioned in your Albini piece?
I recently came across this Medium piece via Reddit and I'm having a really hard time reconciling it. I had NO IDEA that Albini had this type of stuff in his past. Curious to hear your take, and if you were aware of the extent of it. I mean... WTF, man. I know this stuff is out there, but is there any way a grown ass man can express contrition from this, like you mentioned Albini did? It also made me cringe when I read they were "only letting kids in" to his under 20 show. (I know, not related... but still)
Edit: If this comes off as confrontational, that wasn't my intention. Just curious if you were aware of what the article delves into and your thoughts. Thanks, Alex.
Deborah Boschert
Michael Ian Black has a podcast called Obscure where he reads a book out loud. I listened to the first season where he read Jude The Obscure (thus the title, and also it's in the public domain). I loved it. The best part is that he comments as he goes -- not too much and not too little, but it kept me much more engaged with the book that I would have been if I'd just been reading it on my own. The episode where he gets to the shocking plot point (IYKYK) is one of my most memorable podcast listening experiences. He also looks up words or places that seem to need a bit more context and we learn more about the book together. Anyway, it's a great idea. You should do it.

Introducing Skillful Notes

A new project to understand how we become able to do things
Welcome to Skillful Notes, a newsletter about how people, organizations, countries, and civilizations build competence. Why write Skillful Notes? There is an increasing anxiety about our ability to do things. At a micro scale we worry that our technology is making us scattered,
Benjamin Parry ∙ 11 LIKES
Daniel
Stoked for the Bauhaus episode!

How Another Crab's Treasure goofed its way to 250k sales in <a month!

Also: a look at PlayStation's results, and a ton of news...
[The GameDiscoverCo game discovery newsletter is written by ‘how people find your game’ expert & company founder Simon Carless, and is a regular look at how people discover and buy video games in the 2020s.] Welcome to the middle of an extra-packed week, crew. What with a whole bunch of financial results hitting, and a larger amount than normal of indie …
Alejandro ∙ 18 LIKES

Are You Losing Your Child to Video Games?

Navigating the digital storm. Don’t get swept away.
Have you ever lost something that you didn’t even know was lost? As a mom of four children, I’ve become a good detective. I can find the missing baseball cleat, the lost homework, and even the missing dog—all in a day’s work. Like most moms, I don’t allow much to get past me. Yet, despite my keen eye, we lost our oldest son, Adam, to the world of video …
Melanie Hempe ∙ 20 LIKES
Jeff Griggs
Wow, Melanie pulls no punches as she candidly relives her trauma, "blindness" and optimistic attitude, "not my son".
This is a must read for ALL Parents, Grandparents, and Guardians. I am going to ask her permission to display this on our website, ParentDigitalAnswers.org
I lost my son to suicide by cyberbullying. None of us to see that happen to your youth. Take Melanie's course.
Everyone knows families that are unaware.
Just Do It. One of the most important decisions you will ever make.
Jeff Griggs. Jeff@ParentDA.org
Robert C Culwell
Very helpful testimony. 🎮🕹️😵 VID GAMES have sucked the life out of so many young people. The slow creep morphs into the snowball rolling towards the cliff. Big BUCK$ involved in the marketing and keeping kids involved with their screens; wallets 💸 and ⏰ hours fall into the abyss. Sad seeing adult men with kids playing online games instead of reading books to their children. 🇺🇲 🇯🇵 🇦🇺 🇨🇳 🇪🇺 None of our families are immune, Semper Fortis!

My Mentee Went From Junior -> Senior Engineer in less than 2 years. Here's how.

An actionable plan for promotion no matter your level
This week I received this text message from my mentee: My mentee started his engineering career 1 year and 9 months ago and is already a Senior engineer. This text message meant so much to me because I relate to my mentee’s story. While I’m not a first-generation immigrant, I am the first in my family to graduate college. It wasn’t easy to figure out the …
Jordan Cutler ∙ 171 LIKES
Petar Ivanov
Keeping a work log aka a brag list is a great addition when it comes time for performance reviews and promotions. It makes the difference.
It makes it easier for your manager to scream for you since he has a proven track record of your achievements.
Inspiring story, Jordan ! 🙌
Caleb Mellas
Awesome write up on how to grow into a senior role Jordan. It’s so true that hard work + mentorship + documenting wins + feedback iteration cycles is a great promotion path.
These are the exact steps I followed for my first promotion beyond senior. They work. 👏🏼
Huge congrats to your mentee for all the hard work they put in, and their new role! 🙌🏻

What’s the Use of the Humanities in Society?

The Perils of a Practical Education
Dear readers, after a month-long hiatus taking a rest from writing, I appreciate your readership and I have returned to my regular weekly schedule of writing! I hope that you enjoy today’s article about a pressing issue facing modern society. As always, if you have any requests for topics, please drop me a note!
Megha Lillywhite ∙ 190 LIKES
Matthew McWilliams
I very much enjoyed your latest essay. It put me in mind of my own philosophy regarding science. I myself have a degree in chemistry, but I am also a believer in Christianity. Religion is essentially a philosophical model that helps us to understand the World around us.
In the Catholic church my wife and I attend we have recently started reciting the Nicene Creed in place of the Apostles’ Creed. I much prefer the Nicene Creed because it provides such a compact and concise explanation for how the World should be viewed.
“I believe in one God, the Father almighty, maker of Heaven and Earth, of all things visible and invisible.”
Later, we recite, “I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son, who with the Father and the Son is adored and glorified, who has spoken through the prophets.”
What these words teach us is our relation to the physical universe that we inhabit. First, we are told that the universe was created, and that while we can see many things about it, there are things that are unseen and unseeable by us. Later, we are informed that there is a force that not only gives shape to the universe but gives life to everything in it. We are also told that there is a moral truth that is not created by us but is given to us by a higher power.
Many scientists make the claim that the universe is ruled by physics and mathematics. To me these people are fools. The universe is ruled by whatever rules the universe. I like to call that thing God. What many fail to understand is that science and mathematics are inventions of mankind. They are tools that we have created to help us understand our observations of the physical universe. All the physical tools we use to measure the universe were created by us. The speed of light is 186,000 miles per second, or so we are told. In fact, miles and seconds are arbitrary measures of distance and time that humans invented for our own purposes. Light travels at the speed it travels. We measure astronomical distances in light years, or how far light travels in a year, 5.88 trillion miles. Like miles, years are an arbitrary human invention. In reality the universe is as big as it is.
Our scientific and mathematical tools are excellent for describing events that have already transpired. Often, they can be used to make predictions about future events that are useful to us. But, at bottom our scientific and mathematical tools cannot explain why these events happened, or what their ultimate purpose is. They can explain the physical processes that keep us alive, but they cannot tell us why we live. They can map our brains but cannot tell us what consciousness is. Our scientific and mathematical tools have helped us to unlock the secrets of the atom, but they cannot inform the proper use of that knowledge. We can watch in real time the development of an embryo to a human baby, but our science cannot explain our attachment to that baby. These things are the realm of philosophy and religion. Science and mathematics untethered from philosophy and religion are sterile and barren.
One of my favorite lines from Clint Eastwood is one he had in his second “Dirty Harry” movie. “A good man has got to know his limitations.” Philosophy and religion place us in proper relation to the universe and thereby help us to understand exactly what our science and mathematics can and cannot do. By understanding the limitations of science and mathematics, we are able to make better use of them as tools to improve the human condition.
Lia
What a gift to find this essay in my Inbox. I for one have never regretted my liberal arts degree!

What happened in marketing: Scary GPT4o & Death of SEO, but rise of CTV + Social AdTech

Reddit is food for AI, Google vs SEO Industry and AdTech dreams at Upfront. 🧃
A lot of banter, rants and everything is happening in marketing. As my newsletter on next Friday isn’t about it. Until then, I suggest reading Bianca Dămoc’s write-up on the SEO drama. Why Join: If you are on your phone, always looking for ideas. Being in Discord Community of 300+ marketers help.
Jaskaran ∙ 11 LIKES
Lauren Gallo
Dude you really are a hero for these!
Carolynne Alexander
Amazing round up again! Thank you.

War Is At Our Doorstep

No-one wants to admit it...
…Perhaps admitting to it would lead to nuclear exchange. Previously The Daily Beagle highlighted evidence that the Baltimore Bridge collapse was most likely retaliation for the Crocus hall shooting of…
The Underdog ∙ 54 LIKES
Dave aka Geezermann
Now I hear talk about nuclear weapons not being real, but used to instill fear and further a narrative. Similar to the new thinking about viruses not being real.
Hmmmmm.
Mick From Hooe (UK)
I discussed, with my Wife, the idea that the Baltimore Bridge could have been a deliberate act . She said that was too far fetched and "nobody could be so callous to be 'bribed' or persuaded to commit such an impactful act". It's a sinister and evil world we now live in!
We then related to several other recent callous and inexplicable 'coincidences' that have occurred since the world seemingly went mad in 2020.
Millions are being killed by Experimental injections which we are told are VACCINES! This 'Depopulation Cull' is still running at full speed!
Strange coincidences like the multiple food production and storage facilities spontaneously catching fire. Damaged oil pipe lines under the oceans being destroyed. These acts all helps with the fictitious and manufactured INFLATION which is making us all poorer with each catastrophe. Like the numerous African politicians who want to oppose the World Health Organisation's (fictitious) Treaty, suddenly dying mysteriously? Like the recent assassination attempt of an eastern European Politician who wants to veto the WHO's Health Treaty.
Remember Adolf Schwab of the WEF stated "Let zem eat bugs, become cold, own nothing - zey vill be happy". Sounds like a Master Plan to me.
Even Boing executives that question their Safety ethos seem to 'mysteriously disappear'??? Probably unrelated but maybe part of the WEF's covering up exercise.
Nothing today is beyond belief. The New World Order (WEF) has no boundaries when it comes to getting their way.
Well, guess what, it's time to turn the tables. We're coming for you. Jail is too good for them that mean us no good! The REVOLOUTION is coming and it ain't gonna be pretty!
In the meantime, I'll continue to ask why deadly injections are still being peddled by super-wealthy companies that refuse LIABILITY! It's INSANE and must be reversed before they kill the rest of us.
Mick from Hooe (UK) Unjabbed to live longer!

What's the state of Switch, leading into 'Switch 2'?

Also: the biggest streamed games of April, and lots more.
[The GameDiscoverCo game discovery newsletter is written by ‘how people find your game’ expert & company founder Simon Carless, and is a regular look at how people discover and buy video games in the 2020s.] Welcome back, GameDiscoverCo aficionados. And yes, this is the heavy heavy monster newsletter, the nuttiest newsletter around, and we’re once more
Simon Carless ∙ 14 LIKES