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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 30th, 2023

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  • There was so much fucking potential in this game. Execution was… meh.

    It always struck me as odd that, the pilot, the linchpin of their entire fucking plan, was CONSTANTLY in the line of fire.

    I never made it much past the white phosphorus bit. I saw the potential being squandered and the gameplay was, as OP said, textbook for shooters at the time. A bit janky, if I’m remembering right, another nail in its coffin for me.

    I saw the second one release and never bothered to look into it.






  • I would do borderline illegal things for some fucking Cra-z-bread.

    And while I understand where you’re coming from about Olive Garden’s sticks, I frankly don’t care. Those be some tasty mass produced bread product sticks, especially when dipped in their chicken & gnocchi soup. But I get it. The hype is too much for them to live up to. They were probably REALLY good about 20 or so years ago. Enshitification to cut costs.

    But today, I don’t care, I have a very unhealthy relationship with bread and will shove them in my face whenever I get the chance.




  • The movie is… fine, if you haven’t read the book. I saw the movie first myself but had a change of heart about it after reading the book. The series has more of a cult following kind of feel compared to say, Harry Potter, but I’d say it’s worth a read.

    As for To Sleep in a Sea of Stars, as it stands, I’d recommend it, despite my 18-ish hours still to listen to. It’s entertaining for what it is, even if it doesn’t seem to be breaking new ground for the genre. I’m no expert in summary or buzzword-salad tossing, nor clever enough to pick up all of the nuance on my first read, but I know what I like, and this book, I like.


  • I’m noticing similarities, as one would with the same author. I had noticed a marked improvement by the end of Inheritance compared to Eragon, and To Sleep in a Sea of Stars seems to have taken a few steps from there.

    It starts with a fairly generic sci-fi setting, humanity having colonized a handful of star systems closest to Sol, our protagonist is a xenobiologist by trade, zero-g interactions, faster than light tech, vacuum of space. Nothing really groundbreaking for the genre but the tropes of science fiction seem well done in my opinion. But it is a departure from the Inheritance Cycle, both in genre and this feels more like adult fiction, though perhaps not too far out of the young adult sphere.

    I’m enjoying the book. It’s fun, things make sense within the context of the universe that’s been created.

    Oh, and the audio book is narrated by Jennifer Hale, so there’s that.