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Top 25 Gaming Articles on Substack

Latest Gaming Articles


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 ∙ 11 LIKES
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!

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!

Video Games are not an Artform

The Apotheosis of Pornography (Updated version)
Video games are a sophisticated form of pornography. They are not, despite many protestations to the contrary, art. To understand this unfashionable claim we need to first understand what art is, which is impossible to do literally. In fact art, great art,
Darren Allen ∙ 1 LIKES

some personal news

on career changes and creative evolution.
Some personal news: Today is my last day at Vox, where I’ve worked as an editor for the past seven years. In the fall, I’m going to grad school, to a master’s program in creative technology at NYU. I’m very, very excited; I’m also quite sad. In my experience, that feeling is worth chasing.
Alanna Okun ∙ 16 LIKES
Summer
congratulations, alanna! what a wonderful opportunity ❤️❤️
Maryn McKenna
"textiles" made me perk up extremely. very best wishes!

Apr 20

Why Everything is Becoming a Game

All the better to control you
I. The Happiness of Pursuit For years, some of the world’s sharpest minds have been quietly turning your life into a series of games. Not merely to amuse you, but because they realized that the easiest way to make you do what they want is to make it fun. To escape their control, you must understand the creeping phenomenon of gamification, and how it make…
Gurwinder ∙ 1827 LIKES
rickster
Feels almost grubby to click the like button after that but what an excellent read, thank you
Adrian Hon
Interesting piece! I’m co-creator of Zombies, Run! so I’m glad to see it mentioned here - we designed it to be in the best interests of players, which is why it doesn’t feature streaks or leaderboards or other ways to manipulate you into overexercising or playing more than you want to.
That said, I’m more sanguine about gamification than the author. There are indeed many games to choose from, but the ones that are most concerning that those we have little choice but to play, whether they’re from our employers or in our schools and colleges, or built into devices and platforms like the Apple Watch and iOS.
If you’re interested in this subject, I wrote a book critiquing gamification called “You’ve Been Played” - the NYT called it illuminating and persuasive!

Stop Blaming Men For The Marriage Crisis

Social changes and female choice are bigger factors than guys playing video games
Charlie Kirk upset a lot of women last week. In a discussion on unmarried women preferring Democrats, he said that ladies in their 30s are past their prime and struggle to find a husband. This is obviously true, but impolite to say. Kirk’s statement naturally inspired outrage among liberals, as well as among conservatives. That shouldn’t surprise anyone…
Scott Greer ∙ 69 LIKES
Dave49
The conservative inc. brain trust is brain dead when it comes to analyzing relationships between straight men and women. Blaming and shaming men or derisively referring to them as "incels" isn't going to make things better or move the needle towards higher marriage rates. They fail to take in to account ridiculously high standards of today's women and act as if they are all innocent damsels in distress.
We mock the left for their inability to deal with reality but conservatives are just has bad when it comes to dating and relationships and race relations. On dating men just need to "man up" while women are blameless and lack agency. On race they think heavy duty pandering will encourage blacks to leave the Democrat party en masse and begin donning red MAGA hats and cheering for corporate tax cuts and endless wars for Israel.
I think the other issue is that many men probably know at least one guy who's had his life nearly ruined in a divorce since the divorce laws are so lopsided in favor of women. This fact coupled with the struggles of many younger men in the dating market has caused men to check out and do their own thing since it is becoming a waste of time with little to show for it other than frustration and heart break.
Men should not be pursuing women in the workplace in today's HR climate. Most companies have adopted a zero tolerance policy towards sexual harassment and even innocently showing interest in a girl beyond work can be construed as "sexual harassment".
Carl
Gosh I’m a sucker for all your GOOD MEN scarcity notes, mostly because you hit the freaking mail on the head perfectly.
I have so many things I wanna say but I’ll just name a few.
It sucks, but as you mentioned, meeting women at work is probably the better (100% riskiest) option, because a) with smaller social circles it’s a way to engage b) more time spent with coworkers can help dilute some of the Chad expectations that most women have. But then there’s the whole MeToo thing and awkwardness if things go south
Even going out to stuff is hard nowadays and shows how much Hawley is out of touch. I try to do things like sports leagues, spin classes, dance classes, church groups but 1) usually about a million dudes competing for the 3 chicks 2) women just are so not talkative (I guess it’s my looks) Even the church groups I go to, it’s usually mostly dudes, some have bad hygiene, some have good values but they are kinda awkward, 30% normal dudes but the women are all either a) multicultural b) fat and ugly c) young 30’s but still have the Chad delusion.
Last thing, a scary trend with college aged Zoomers, it’s seems like they are getting less and less pussy. I still keep in contact with my fraternity chapter and go to events, but I notice that even the good looking dudes in Greek life don’t pull as much tail as they used to back in the day. Could be a regional thing, maybe SEC Greek life is still like it used to be, but also it doesn’t help that these sorority chapters push and indoctrinate Girl Boss and we love Planned Parenthood bullshit.
Sorry for the rant, but this article was amazing Scott

A Time We Never Knew

"Phones? No. We had each other."
Introduction from Jon Haidt: Freya India is one of the most sensitive and perceptive Gen Z writers. She went through the social media maelstrom herself and now chronicles its effects on her generation. She writes widely, especially on her Substack,
Freya India ∙ 858 LIKES
Sarah Coogan
I don't ordinarily comment on Substack posts, but as a millennial, I just want to say: Freya, there are so many people older than you who understand and resonate with what you say here. Some may "cringe at Gen Z for not coping," but many others fully understand why you feel the way you do. It's unfair that Gen Zers couldn't enjoy screen-free childhoods. Your willingness to speak on this subject is a gift to Gen Alpha, who can still be spared much of that technocratic infection. And it's a gift to our society more broadly.
The good news is that embodied presence is always available to those who make the conscious choice to fight for it. And one of the glorious parts of adulthood is learning to recognise and prioritise the things you need to flourish—including freedom from screens. I hope that Gen Z increasingly finds that to be true in the coming years.
Thank you for sharing your perspective.
Amelia Buzzard
I got Instagram at 13 and just got off it just a couple months ago at 24. Having a baby daughter of my own made me see the sickness of pixelating your identity. I imagined going online as a teenager and being able to watch her life story unfold from day one through my social accounts—and I didn't want that for her. I want her to tell her own stories and hold onto her own memories and to own her own life. I want her to be able to be a joyous nobody. Undocumented and free. Because I didn't have that. I hope my gift to her at 18 will be zero search results on the internet for her name.

Panem et Circenses et Ludi Obtentibus

Otiumque
A note I recently published got a good bit of attention and motivated no small amount of commentary and I thought I might address some of the points I made at greater length. I was also inspired by a recent baby-adjacent podcast by The Storyteller's Corner
Librarian of Celaeno ∙ 106 LIKES
William Hunter Duncan
The transhumanists who rule the technocracy want the useless eaters to be lost in drugs, porn and video games/VR. That, or kill you off, democide you. It doesn't seem like rebellion to do what they want.
Also, I can't fathom a worse fate, dying realizing you have never really lived.
That said, this is much the failure of men not providing worthy life experience for boys to become men.
Randall Burchell
We need an education secretary with your philosophy.

Who Sparks the Mood More Often, and 20 Other Questions About Love, Life and Family

Like what our manscape routines are and our advice for couples who are both tops
Watch The Idea of You/Anyone But You. Two romantic comedies for the price of you! I don’t think it’s a secret that romantic comedies (let’s stop calling them romcoms, please, at the insistence of Nancy Meyers herself) are my favorite genre of movie, and two were just released on streaming recently.
PJ and Thomas ∙ 30 LIKES
Richard
Always look forward to the newsletter! Thank you for being fantastic role models to someone like me, who felt isolated and alone for so long in my queerness! Now I have a wonderful fiancé, and seeing the two of you gives me hope! 🥰
Shawn
Loved your answers to our questions, my husband read the newsletter to me how romantic.

What do Devolver's results tell us about game discovery in 2024?

Also: how Dungeon Clawler gets 'hook' right, and lots of discovery 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 another week in game discovery! We’re starting by covering
Simon Carless ∙ 22 LIKES
Mata Haggis-Burridge
Love the sneaky Buffy peeking out on the right hand side of that LAN party picture.
Gamecordia
Great article and analysis, been following Devolver for quite some time and your take is on point.

Start Here: Mid Quest

hello there!
WELCOME TO MY SUBSTACK! Here are the first 2 sentences of my bio in other worlds: “Jia Yi (Judy) Luo is a Chinese-Canadian dance artist based in Toronto, Canada. She finds intrigue in people, patterns, puzzles, and play.”
Judy Luo ∙ 5 LIKES
Dreamwalker
Ooh Jia Yi (Judy)
!gniticxe os si sihT
Congratulations!
ox
Rachel Duan
I AM SO EXCITED FOR THESE BI-WEEKLY NEWSLETTERS <3 Love that you've embarked on the journey and thank you for sharing it with us so we can tag along.

Big HBCU news, the Grio layoffs, Kendrick responds

Friday, May 3, 2024.
What I’m Reading Is new AP African American Studies course too woke? We attended class to find out, USA TODAY With all of the fake concern of “critical race theory” spreading across the United States, USA TODAY interviewed students and teachers directly involved in the AP African American Studies course — many of whom de…
Phil Lewis ∙ 12 LIKES
Pablo Manríquez
Great news roundup, Phil. Excited to find your newsletter

Apr 29

Nintendo’s innovative, ingenious, nearly extinct StreetPass games

An unusual blend of single- and multiplayer that Nintendo never brought to the Switch.
In today’s era of interactive entertainment, you can play video games on your own, or with a friend sitting next to you on a couch, or on…
Stephen Totilo ∙ 23 LIKES
Ross Llewallyn
I love this story. Walking around the big convention DragonCon in Atlanta a decade ago would fill up your StreetPass faster than you could possibly play through the games. It was really fun. I bet this could remain a trend within video game conferences if you made a push for it.
I'm really compelled by the fact that this is a peer-to-peer system, and therefore durable to the whims of a company not wanting to pay for server upkeep. That feels rare and special, and worth preserving in spirit.
I wonder if the Playdate can do something like this...
Joel Eblin
I would love if Nintendo had some Streetpass successor in the next Switch. I would gladly carry around a joycon or something like the Pokeball Plus for it to work

Yes, People Do Buy Books

Despite viral claims, Americans buy over a billion books a year
This week fellow Substacker Elle Griffin published “No one buys books,” which looks at quotes and stats from the DOJ vs. PRH (Penguin Random House) trial where the government successfully blocked PRH’s $2.2 billion purchase of Simon & Schuster. Griffin’s article has gone viral for its near apocalyptic portrait of publ…
Lincoln Michel ∙ 605 LIKES
Brooke Warner
I'm so happy you wrote this counter-piece. I read @kathleenschmidt's great response to that other post and basically agreed with everything she said, and was hoping for a better breakdown of what was so incredibly off about it—and here you are. It presents to us some of pitfalls of Substack, too, which is that everyone is a reporter(!), and there's no fact-checking(!). There was so much missing context, too, like the fact that book publishing is a giant ecosystem with the Big Five, yes, but also indies, and hybrids, and self-published authors. And what did any of it have to do with people not buying books? I'm a hybrid book publisher, and people are not only buying our books; they're buying books that big houses passed on because the Big Five didn't think these titles had a big enough readership. We are not aspiring to sell even 10,000 copies. That would be awesome, but our average sales are more like 1000-4000 per title, and we are still a $1 million dollar publisher. There is much about book publishing that people do not understand. It takes work to get under the hood. The DOJ didn't get it. And that other piece certainly got it wrong. Grateful for your work, Lincoln!
Elizabeth Winthrop Alsop
Thanks for this more nuanced analysis. I’ve been in the business of writing since the 1970s so I can remember the good old days of mass market paperbacks. One of my novels sold 340,000 copies in paperback. That would be considered an astonishing number these days. But of course, back then we didn’t have all the other temptations screaming to tablets to smart phones , etc.

How user reviews affect your game's Month 1 sales

Also: GDC Vault recommendations & 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.] We’re back, and thanks for all the great feedback on
Simon Carless ∙ 15 LIKES

Ex noumena

In a recent piece for the New Yorker about Unreal Engine, which is used to render the graphics in video games and virtual sets for film productions, Anna Wiener paraphrases film studies professor Julie Turnock, who makes the point that visual realism isn’t always about imitating “what the eye sees in real life.” She brought up filmmakers’ use of visual …
Rob Horning ∙ 25 LIKES
Darren Haber
This is a terrific piece, with uncanny (as it were) parallels to psychotherapy, especially this quote, which summarizes subtle disjunctions between therapists and patients around conceptualized emotional experience. Some patients are so caught up in intellectualization that this becomes a distinction without a difference, a kind of “virtual” concept replacing lived presence: “In Critique of Judgment, Kant develops his argument from the first critique that there are “no rules for judgment” — no way to simulate the process of “experiencing” things before the fact — and more or less equates the ability to tentatively conceptualize things in a state of “free play” with the possibility of aesthetic experience, of pleasure in the endless effort of balancing sensation with comprehension. “
Kevin Munger
Ripe for a Flusserian interpretation! The “iconic” trees are a perfect example of the technical image pointing not towards reality but to concepts

Every Job I've Ever Had, Ranked

Read to the end for a movie I liked
I have been unemployed, or at least underemployed, for about 18 months now. It can be very unmooring. I have no routine, no obligations that repeat day by day or week by week. On good days, I find myself exercising, writing, hanging with friends, taking walks, reading books. On bad days, I sleep. Sometimes I sleep and watch TV.
Alex Goldman ∙ 24 LIKES
Andrew Wilhelme
I remember walking your paper route with you and Campbell. Making fun of a customer we called "priesty boy" or something like that. I also recall watching you leap over the counter at Liberty Street to chase down someone who'd absconded with a video. Salad days.
Devin
It’s weird to be envious of a job at Subway, but a well-staffed restaurant sounds wonderful. There’s something about food service that brings people together. If it weren’t for all the periphery reasons why working at a restaurant sucks (unstable hours, no healthcare, etc.), it would be my dream job.

How Sker Ritual's 1.0 release redefined 'sleeper hit'

Also: some estimates on players for Epic Games Store & 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.] Greetings, all, to this week’s set of GameDiscoverCo newsletters. And
Simon Carless ∙ 11 LIKES

Throwaway1234
I suggest that these are people experiencing epistemic learned helplessness.
> "And there are people who can argue circles around me. Maybe not on every topic, but on topics where they are experts and have spent their whole lives honing their arguments. When I was young I used to read pseudohistory books; Immanuel Velikovsky’s Ages in Chaos is a good example of the best this genre has to offer. I read it and it seemed so obviously correct, so perfect, that I could barely bring myself to bother to search out rebuttals."
> "And then I read the rebuttals, and they were so obviously correct, so devastating, that I couldn’t believe I had ever been so dumb as to believe Velikovsky."
> "And then I read the rebuttals to the rebuttals, and they were so obviously correct that I felt silly for ever doubting."
Presented with a flood of logical steps by someone capable of arguing circles around me, adding up to a conclusion that is deeply counterintuitive; and presented perhaps also with a similarly daunting flood of logical steps by someone else also capable of arguing circles around me, adding up just as convincingly to the opposite conclusion... what is one to do?
One can sway back and forth, like a reed in the wind, according to which super convincing argument one last read.
Or one can throw one's hands up in the air and say: "There are hundreds of incredibly specific assumptions combined with many logical steps here. They all look pretty convincing to me; and actually, so do the other guy's. So clearly someone made a mistake somewhere, possibly more than one person and more than one mistake; certainly that's more likely than both the mutually contradictory yet convincing arguments being right simultaneously; but I just can't see it. What now? What other information do I have? Well, approximately ten gazillion people have predicted world-ending events in the past, and yet here we all are, existing. So I conclude it's much more likely that the weirder conclusion is the one that's wrong."
Condense that to a sentence or two, couple with an average rather than expert ability to articulate, and you arrive at coffeepocalypse.
From the above essay:
> "Even the smartest people I know have a commendable tendency not to take certain ideas seriously. Bostrom’s simulation argument, the anthropic doomsday argument, Pascal’s Mugging – I’ve never heard anyone give a coherent argument against any of these, but I’ve also never met anyone who fully accepts them and lives life according to their implications."
AIpocalypse is just another idea to add to that list.
Bugmaster
> Here’s an example of a time someone was worried about something, but it didn’t happen. Therefore, AI, which you are worried about, also won’t happen.
Right, that's an obvious strawman. The real argument goes more like this:
"Here's an example of a time someone was worried about something due to employing a particular pattern of reasoning. The something didn't happen, and the manner in which it didn't happen helped to expose the flaws in the pattern of reasoning. You are worried about AI due to employing the same pattern of reasoning, riddled with the same flaws. Therefore, you are likely to be just as wrong as that other guy."

Apr 12

Why do we use social media?

Plus: whatever happened to the "intellectual dark web"?
Greetings from Read Max HQ! In this week’s newsletter: Examining Jon Haidt and Tyler Cowen’s conversation about social media, and whether or not A.I. will reduce screen time; a follow-up to last week’s post on “Substackism” with an eye to the “intellectual dark web.”
Max Read ∙ 82 LIKES
Phil
How about social media is designed to be addictive to maximize scroll time and ad revenue? It’s just capitalism, y’all.
Yes, the idea of “AI digests” misses the point, but even more fundamentally: there’s no profit motive to reduce screen time.
Jeff
"... what makes TikTok and Instagram and whatever else special is the sociality."
Here is where I think your thinking goes wrong. You're taking the "social" part of social media literally, without interrogating it. "Parasocial" was a term that was popular there for a minute, and I think that's a much better descriptor for what Tiktok and Instagram actually are.

The Not Shiny Parts

We argued tonight. You accused me of being already elevated – in a bad mood before you even walked through the door. You weren’t wrong. We had plans. Dinner with friends. I wanted to get there on time, but your class at the gym ran late. You left the kitchen to go take a shower. I followed you. On the way up the stairs, our voices took on a jagged edge.
Carrie Cariello ∙ 18 LIKES

How Backpack Battles sold 650k copies in its first month

Also: lots of platform & discovery news, as per usual.
[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.] We’re back for the middle of the week, folks. And we’re super excited that our main story for today’s GameDiscoverCo newsletter is about
Simon Carless ∙ 24 LIKES

guys, i can't believe they fixed the freaking spaceship

holy crap
Space is overwhelming. There is just so much of it. Every now and then I will look up at the night sky and see all the stars and try to comprehend the thing where every one of those is kind of like another sun and then I try to stop thinking about that because the vastness of the universe is unsettling if you ponder it for too long. It’s amazing how qui…
brian grubb ∙ 15 LIKES
Sarah
That article about restaurant reservations is a nightmare.
Brandon
That Enty Lawyer story- I haven’t read the blog in years, but I remember Matthew Berry calling out reveal day a few times way back when. I always assumed it was a bit of BS but that’s…wild

Could Playing Video Games Actually Be Good for Your Mind?

I wrote this $500 piece for Popular Mechanics and then it was killed after it was COMPLETELY finished, for budget/restructuring reasons, which is super fun <3
Could Playing Video Games Actually Be Good for Your Mind? // By Juno Stump // Note: This piece was originally commissioned by POPULAR MECHANICS in 2023 for $500. I worked on gathering sources and research for the first five months of 2023. Writing was completed between May and September, which is when the piece was turned in.
Juno Stump ∙ 13 LIKES

Tom White
"What if this was more common? Great writing is precious enough that I wish we had multiple interpretations of most great works. It would be a great way to see the evolution of artists."
Yes! Mark Twain on Jane Austen is a good (read as: hilarious) place to start: In his extensive correspondence with fellow author and critic William Dean Howells, Mark Twain seemed to enjoy venting his literary spleen on Jane Austen precisely because he knew her to be Howells’ favorite author, In 1909 Twain wrote that “Jane Austin” [sic] was “entirely impossible” and that he could not read her prose even if paid a salary to do so. Howells notes in My Mark Twain (1910) that in fiction Twain “had certain distinct loathings; there were certain authors whose names he seemed not so much to pronounce as to spew out of his mouth...
Rather than pitying Twain when he was sick, Howells threatened to come and read Pride and Prejudice to him.
Twain marveled that Austen had been allowed to die a natural death rather than face execution for her literary crimes. “Her books madden me so that I can’t conceal my frenzy,” Twain observed, apparently viewing an Austen novel as a book which “once you put it down you simply can’t pick it up.” ... In a letter to Joseph Twichell in 1898, Twain fumed, “I have to stop every time I begin. Everytime I read “Pride and Prejudice” I want to dig her up and beat her over the skull with her own shin-bone.” From: https://www.vqronline.org/essay/barkeeper-entering-kingdom-heaven-did-mark-twain-really-hate-jane-austen