I hate it when the 1st falls in the middle of a busy week. Makes it hard to find time to do a proper recap, though once again I don’t have much to recap.
Playing

Coral Island — This is where I spent most of my time this month. After finishing My Time At Sandrock I apparently wasn’t done with (mostly) cozy farming sims and I rolled right into CI. I’m in my first Winter now (which is a little boring to be honest) and at about 35 hours. It is even more “Stardew Valley”-ish than Sandrock was, though again it is ‘3d’ rather than sprite-based. The characters look older too, which I prefer. I mean there are kids, young folk, old folk. Married folk, single folk. There’s a lot of stuff to acquire and upgrade, and of course people to meet and befriend and possibly marry, bed and have kids with. [Personally I keep busy enough petting my chickens, sheep and cows every day… can’t imagine adding a kid into the mix!] Apparently there’s an update coming that lets kids grow up and I hope you can assign them chores once they do. Also, there’s a whole underwater section of the game which is kind of neat. Anyway, good game so far. On console movement can be a little fiddly when it comes time to interact with things; that’s really my only complaint and it’s pretty minor.

A Game About Digging a Hole — Novelty game, really. You dig a hole in the backyard of your picturesque cottage, you find ore. You sell the ore (from a terminal in your garage) and upgrade your tools. You dig deeper. Repeat for a couple hours. It’s a $5 game and while it has good reviews on Steam, it’s kind of hard to take them too seriously. That said… I finished it (more or less) so I guess there was SOMETHING there…
Prey — I pledged to not look up how to accomplish things in Prey and so far I’m sticking to that. However there are days when I really want to get in there and search for solutions, and days where I don’t. So progress has been slow, both in terms of the hours I put into the game, and in terms of how far I’ve gotten in it. Work has been a lot and honestly by the time I flounce down on the couch the soothing rhythms of Coral Island calls to me more than problem solving.
Eternal Strands — This is still a back burner game that I pull out now and then. Ever have a game that you always enjoy playing but then forget about for days or weeks at a time? That’s Eternal Strands for me. It’s a great game. Mostly a combat game using melee, bows and magic. The world has a lot of destructibility which is fun, and there are some really huge enemies to fight: enemies so big you have to climb up them to beat them. So what’s the problem? I don’t want to get in trouble for saying this but I feel like they’ve leaned so hard into having the characters be inclusive and understanding of each other that there’re no hard edges to be seen and it all feels a little monotone, if that makes sense. I like to have a little spice in my games. A little tension. A little roughness. But this is just so smooth that it’s like I have nothing to grab onto. [I’m speaking in narrative terms, not the actual gameplay.] Still, I WOULD definitely recommend the game!
Watching
This was a good month for TV!
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms [HBO] was amazing! I’d read the first book (not sure if there are more than one) but PartPurple went in blind, and we both really enjoyed it. The only fault I can find is that it was too short. Just 6 episodes and some of them were only 30 minutes or so. I signed up to HBO Max for $18 just to watch this show and it was SO good that I think it was worth it. It takes place in the world of A Game of Thrones only before all the happenings in that show, and the scale of it is much smaller. It’s about a hedge knight and his squire trying to catch a break in a tough world. Unlike Thrones its a much ‘nicer’ show in a lot of ways.
Pluribus [Apple TV+] was great. Imagine a zombie apocalypse only instead of everyone being turned into zombies they’re turned into a really, really nice hive mind. This happened to all but about 12 people in the world, and the show focuses on one of these people. The “others” just want to make her happy and they are driving her crazy. It’s a hard show to describe but well worth a watch.
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters [Apple TV+] is really fun it you’re into kaiju movies and particularly if you’ve enjoyed more recent Godzilla and King Kong films, as this show ties into those. It also stars Kurt and Wyatt Russel as the same character a few generations apart, which is really fun (Wyatt is Kurt’s son and that apple did not fall far from the tree). We bounce back and forth between the 50s and 2015. Before you watch, go watch the 2014 Godzilla movie as this takes place very soon after that one (at least the 2015 parts do).
Shrinking [Apple TV+] stars Jason Segal as a therapist who is really struggling after the death of his wife. In spite of that, it’s a heart warming, kind of raunchy, often funny show. And it has Harrison Ford in it! What more do you need to know? The cast seems to have great chemistry and every pair of characters has its own strange vibe and I just love every character in this show. As long as raunchy language doesn’t bother you, this one is worth watching.
Reading
Still working through 1990 issues of Aboriginal Science Fiction. Fun stuff!
And now I shall go and do my best to avoid all the April Fool’s pranks. Not to be a party pooper but I’m glad those seem to have settled down a bit in the past few years. Maybe the truth we’re living in is so strange that no one has much of a taste for pranks.










