Well, I’ve done it again. I forgot to start a placeholder post for the February recap, so here I am doing the whole thing from memory. HOWEVER, it won’t be so bad since for the most part I played one game all month: My Time At Sandrock, and I just wrote about that yesterday.
I didn’t expect to do this. I had no inkling it would take me so long to finish, but I did WANT to finish so it was by far my main game. I played other things for rewards points and so forth, in particular Ball X Pit which I also finished (which was a suprise.. I didn’t expect it to have an ‘ending’ any more than I expect Tetris to have an ending).
I eased back into social media this month, which led to noticing some buzz around Kevin Brill’s TempusGameit which I’d kind of forgotten about while I was away from PC gaming. But I got back into that and can see that I played a bit of The First Descendant and Eternal Strands. The latter was the game I was going to focus on once I finished Sandrock but… the best laid plans, am I right?
Ball X Pit was really good, by the way. Imagine Breakout only it’s an RPG. Instead of a paddle you control a character who is shooting the balls, and who has stats that contribute to how effective the balls are. There are a bunch of characters all with special abilities, and a bunch of balls and powerups that you gather while playing the Breakout portion of the game. There’s even some city building mixed in. If you enjoy Breakout, give Ball X Pit a try. It’s pretty cheap ($15 at full price) and if you get into it you can play it for a LONG time.
Watching
I don’t have any kind of reminders for this category so I bet I’ll miss something.
Pluribus (Apple TV) — This is such an odd show and we’re still in the thick of it so, if I’m wrong, no spoilers please. The basic premise is, what if the population was taken over by pod people that formed all of humanity into a hive mind? The protagonist is one of a handful of people who escaped this fate. Sounds rote, right? Except the twist is that all the ‘pod people’ seems really happy and genuinely nice. They are aware of the protagonist and just want to help her and make her comfortable, but she is so mean and angry and bitter that she tends to end up looking like ‘the bad guy’. Her intent is sound: she wants to undo what’s been done and give people their individuality back. But she keeps doing awful things along the way. Right now we’re kind of on the side of the pod people, but we’ll see if that changes by the end of the series. I assume it will. Anyway if you like dark, dry humor, you’ll like this.
Man on the Inside S2 (Netflix) — Ted Danson is back as a retired professor who gets a second lease on life via becoming a detective. In season 1 he was undercover in an Elderly Care Facility (is that the polite term? My instinct is to say “Old Folk’s Home”) but in Season 2 he is back on campus as a ‘visiting professor’ who is really undercover. This show is just marvelous. Season 1 was great and Season 2 was, if anything, maybe better. Some of his friends he made in S1 are back, and of course we now know his family and friends. I’ve read a third season has been greenlit and I can’t wait to watch!
Sanctuary (Prime Video or Peacock) — Our lunchtime habit is to re-watch an old show we liked. It’s been working well. We re-watched all the Star Trek shows, we’ve re-watched Stargate SG1. We re-watched Warehouse 13 and Haven and Defiance. All great times. Then we decided to re-watch Sanctuary and…. it is not good. It has not held up well, or maybe (probably) it was never very good. I would NOT suggest watching this show, unfortunately. To jog your memory it’s the one that stars Amanda Tapping as the head of a Sanctuary that protects ‘abnormals’, including one of her staff who is a sasquatch. One of its claims to fame back in the day was that it was almost all CGI with very few physical sets. Like yeah, that was something to brag about once upon a time, I guess. But no… it looks bad. A lot of the acting is bad. Tapping is OK but she can’t carry the whole thing. Avoid this one.
Reading
Still on the old sci-fi magazines, currently working through a small stack of Aboriginal Science Fiction, published in 1991 (the issues I have, I mean). Some of the stories are really good. Others not so much, but it’s still fun reading old sci-fi to see the kinds of future we thought would manifest back then. One thing I almost never see if the basic death of paper. Even on starships moving between solar systems characters are always reading printouts of something.
So that was February. Things are going OK. [knock on wood]. We’ve been basically healthy, we’re settling into the new location, getting driver’s licenses updated, finding new doctors and all that jazz. Work is work, nothing terrible there. It has been delightfully dull, to be honest. After the past few months I can deal with a month or two of quiet routine.











