siria: (the pitt - robby nope)
this is not in the proper spirit of rumspringa ([personal profile] siria) wrote2026-03-14 03:11 pm
Entry tags:

2598 / The Pitt, 2.10

It's Spring Break here, and I look forward to sleeping and drinking a lot of tea. Hurrah.

The Pitt, 2.10, 4:00P.M. )
pauraque: Guybrush writing in his journal adrift on the sea in a bumper car (monkey island adrift)
pauraque ([personal profile] pauraque) wrote2026-03-14 02:39 pm

Tank Wars (1990) · QBasic Gorillas (1991)

When I was a kid I had two artillery games: Tank Wars and QBasic Gorillas.

side by side screenshots of two artillery games, one on a green battlefield with visible firing arcs in a starry sky, the other with gorillas standing on skyscrapers
Left: Tank Wars. Right: QBasic Gorillas

Both games share the same basic concept. You and your opponent sit on opposite ends of a battlefield and take turns lobbing projectiles at one another in parabolic arcs, adjusting the angle and power of each shot to try to land a hit.

Tank Wars, created by Kenneth Morse, allows you to customize a myriad of game options, from windspeed to the color of the sky. You can play hotseat multiplayer, or if you have a keyboard and a mouse (fancy!) you and a friend can huddle around the computer together and split the controls. If your friends are unavailable there are CPU opponents of various levels of skill, from "Mr. Stupid" to "Wind Master". As you rack up points you can buy bombs with different blast radii, and when you win the terrain blows up in a satisfying crater and rains back down on the field in an elaborate shower of pixels.

QBasic Gorillas came with MS-DOS 5.0 and was created by Microsoft as a demonstration of the capabilities of the QBasic programming language. You and your opponent are gorillas who throw exploding bananas, and when you win, you do the Monkey.

Tank Wars is, I suppose, the "better" of the two games, in the sense of having more sophisticated graphics and gameplay. But does it have dancing gorillas? Does it have exploding bananas? Does it have a cartoon sun that makes a face like 😮 if you manage to hit it? I ask you. I did play both games a lot, but I know which one was more appealing to my sensibilities as a child of 8-9 years of age.
umadoshi: (InCryptid - Heroic Stand)
Ysabet ([personal profile] umadoshi) wrote2026-03-14 11:24 am

A scattered weekly proof of life

I have worked. Uh. A lot. Over the past three weeks. o_o But now it's the weekend, and I don't currently have a rewrite to work on, and March Break lies ahead; the spring crunch isn't finished, but it's on hiatus for the week, and a normal workweek is a breath of fresh air at this point. (Also I'm taking a couple of days off during it.)

Yesterday work wrapped up early enough that I had an actual evening, so I was finally able to start Butterfly Effects, the fifteenth (!) InCryptid book. ("Finally" is a bit of a stretch, I guess, since it's still the release week, but this is a Sarah-narrated book. Mostly. SARAH.)

So my hopes for the weekend are pretty much: avoid napping (I don't find naps restorative and feel groggier after than before I started); finish reading Butterfly Effects; watch this week's The Pitt and hopefully the temporarily-streaming production of The Importance of Being Earnest with [personal profile] scruloose; get [personal profile] scruloose to redo my undercut; and (also with [personal profile] scruloose) do a second round of advance-prepping ten or so bags of the dry ingredients for my breakfast banana bread while also baking up a new batch of loaves. I think that last will also require decanting cinnamons from bags into jars, so maybe we'll manage a bit of other spice decanting/sorting while we're at it.
michifugu: by manioo (Kitakawa - Sezaki Airi)
michifugu ([personal profile] michifugu) wrote2026-03-14 07:36 pm

(no subject)

I've been reading Kimi no Sei Nan Dakara, Sekinin Totte yo ne by Toma, I kinda fall in love with the art?
tried reading all her works and oneshot right now.
I really love how her arts have this shoujo feel
on other hand I've been re-reading Flowerchild's old work: Warikitta Kankei desukara because I planned to write review of it.
rynling: (Mog Toast)
Rynling R&D ([personal profile] rynling) wrote2026-03-14 08:08 am
Entry tags:

2026 Writing Log, Part Ten

Read more... )

It’s been a rough two weeks. Due to current events, everything feels bleak and hopeless at the moment. Much love to everyone out there making art, despite everything. Despite everything. Despite everything!!
torachan: (Default)
Travis ([personal profile] torachan) wrote2026-03-13 07:51 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Happiness

1. The store still had McConnell's peppermint stick ice cream in stock somehow, so we bought more. This is definitely the longest I've seen it in stock past Christmas, but I'm not going to complain.

2. In three weeks from today we'll be in Japan! Hopefully!

3. I'm playing another matching game, this one where you have to make 50 groups of 50. It's fun, but I shouldn't be doing this much clicking, it's not good for my wrist!

4. Gemma!

rmc28: Rachel in hockey gear on the frozen fen at Upware, near Cambridge (Default)
Rachel Coleman ([personal profile] rmc28) wrote2026-03-14 02:29 am
Entry tags:

Hockey hockey hockey

I hadn't been on the ice since last Saturday (Huskies and Women's Blues practices were all Varsity squads only, and Kodiaks practice got cancelled by the rink) but I made it to and through Warbirds practice tonight. It was so worth it. I also got my Varsity notebook from Women's Blues: every team member gets a notebook, and everyone writes a note in every teammate's notebook, and we read them before Varsity to inspire us. Mine was very sweet and I love the team very much for making me welcome.

I need to leave the house in 7.5 hours to get back to the rink for Varsity. I'm playing in alumni game 1, getting cleaned up during alumni game 2, and spending the rest of the day in the scorekeepers box with a rotating cast of some of my favourite people. The three non-alumni games will be livestreamed

  • 14:00 Mixed 2nds (Huskies v Vikings B)
  • 17:00 Women's Blues
  • 20:00 Men's Blues

I also had a little art session this evening before going to the rink, making signs for my Huskies teammates. The sign in Irish may well only be understood by the teammate who got me back into learning Irish this year - our class covered "how to cheer on your sports team" a couple weeks ago and I made careful notes - or maybe it will cause any lurking Gaeilgeoirí in the rink to make themselves known.

Two cardboard signs, hand-lettered to support the Huskies ice hockey team

I think I'm wound down enough to sleep now.

torachan: sakaki from azumanga daioh holding a cat, with the text "I like cats" in Japanese (sakaki)
Travis ([personal profile] torachan) wrote2026-03-13 05:27 pm
Entry tags:

Weekly Reading

Recently Finished
Fog
Classic middle grade novel about a girl who lives on an island and when she starts junior high, she starts boarding on the mainland with some other island kids. She's been told it's difficult to adjust, but that doesn't prepare her for the mind games and possibily supernatural powers of the principal and his wife. I didn't read this as a kid, but I must have seen someone talking about it online and decided to check it out (it's been on my to-read list for a while so I don't remember where I heard about it). However, I don't feel like it really holds up to a first-time read as an adult, and I won't be continuing the series.

The School for Good Mothers
Oof. This is a tough book to rate, because it's very well-written and interesting, but I did not enjoy it at all. Not only does it become pretty obvious early on that there's no hope of any sort of happy ending, but there are many excruciating moments when you just want to scream at the MC for making bad decisions, even while having sympathy and seeing how she's been driven to that point.

The story takes place in the near future, where her state has just introduced a new program for people who've had their kids taken away by CPS. They are sent to a "school" (basically a prison) for a full year to supposedly learn to become good parents, but they are set up at every turn for failure and constantly subjected to psychological torture in the name of training them. It's a hard read, and I don't know that I'd actually recommend it, but it's good.

The Price of Honey
Short story about a group of women, the current wife and ex-wives of a tech billionaire, meeting up at his funeral. This was a freebie through Amazon First Reads, which is why I grabbed it. I liked the twist.

Idyll Threats
First in a murder mystery series about a closeted gay cop (though he's not closeted by the end of the first book) in a small town in the late '90s. I liked it all right but I'm not sure I'll read the rest.

This Is Not the Jess Show
The Truman Show for the YA crowd. I did watch The Truman Show back in the day but remember nothing about it except the premise. I really liked this take on it, and the ending was great.

Mapmakers and the Enchanted Mountain and Mapmakers and the Flickering Fortress
Books two and three in the Mapmakers trilogy of YA graphic novels. I read the first one a while back and didn't remember too much of it, but was able to catch up without having to reread it. This is a cute series.

Huda F Are You?
YA graphic memoir about the author's high school years after moving from a city where there were very few Muslims, to Dearborn, Michigan, where many of her classmates were both Muslim and hijabi. I've read a couple of the author's non-YA graphic novels about being Muslim and liked this one a lot more. There are others in the series and I'll probably read them as well.
greetingsfrommaars: ichihara yuuko from the manga xxxholic (Default)
greetingsfrommaars ([personal profile] greetingsfrommaars) wrote2026-03-13 06:32 pm

playlist(s): if you like any other kpop demon hunters song

this is the last one! a bit of a catch-all post for the remaining songs. this one was fun for me because it got me thinking about what position each song has in the narrative of the movie. there are the in-universe hit singles ("how it's done", "soda pop"). there are also songs that operate more as a musical number and may or may not be diagetic/in-universe for the characters ("free", "what it sounds like"). it's much easier to think of similar recommendations for songs that are designed to be singles, rather than songs that build on an entire movie musical's worth of narrative and emotional context. it became an interesting exercise!

what it sounds like



speaking of songs that function purely as a plot-important musical number! there are a lot of songs that say "you can do this!" or even "i know it's been hard, but i believe in you", but it feels harder to find a song that says "i'm broken and i've messed up but i find beauty in the broken glass" in such a personal way. originally, i wasn't even going to try recommending songs for this one, but then i happened to see "howl" in one of my personal playlists while working on recs for one of the other songs. it made me realize there's another angle: cathartic songs that came out after the artists went through some shit.

there is no actual playlist here because the proposed songs here require so much context that it didn't make sense to make one without accompanying explanations. (my friend joked that you'd need the director's commentary version for the full experience.) this has sort of ended up being a collection of songs that make me emotional, but we don't need to get into all that.

"Howl" by Chuu

chuu's first release as a solo artist after she went through a lot of strife to leave her former company, which had removed her from her group, loona. a song about feeling safe.



Read more... )

previous posts: if you like "how it's done" | "your idol"
(would love feedback on "your idol" if anyone has any!)
delphi: An illustrated crow kicks a little ball of snow with a contemplative expression. (Default)
Delphi (they/them) ([personal profile] delphi) wrote2026-03-13 01:11 pm

Post and Jam: Wondering Where the Lions Are by Bruce Cockburn (1979)

Fandom 50 #3

Continuing my list of fifty Canadian songs I love from the past fifty years, 1979's is one that's probably popped into my head at least one morning a week since I was five:

Wondering Where the Lions Are by Bruce Cockburn
rynling: (Terra)
Rynling R&D ([personal profile] rynling) wrote2026-03-13 10:19 am

I 💚 Terra Branford

This is a small happiness, but I still want to celebrate it:

Terra Branford
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terra_Branford#Reception

This morning I learned that I'm extensively cited in the Wikipedia article for my favorite video game character! Amazing. What an absolute dream come true.
cimorene: Abstract painting with squiggles and blobs on a field of lavender (deconstructed)
Cimorene ([personal profile] cimorene) wrote2026-03-13 02:25 pm

Knitting update

The state of triplet sweaters when last checked on was that I finished #1 (a traditional Guernsey using PetiteKnit's Storm pattern in navy blue dk-weight Norwegian wool Sandnes Peer Gynt). Then I took over #2 (a mariniere using PetiteKnit's Marseille pattern in yellow stripes on black in dk Drops Merino Extra Fine) from [personal profile] waxjism, who had already knitted the body, and knitted the hem ribbing and sleeves and the neck ribbing while Wax started #3 (a traditional cabled Aran in forest green heather Peer Gynt). Wax got halfway up the body of #3 before stalling out in the cold snap while I knitted a little bit on a pair wool shorts for myself before giving up knitting in the cold as well.

Nobody knitted for a month or so. But all that time I knew I was going to have to unravel the neck ribbing on #2 and redo it, because it came out too tight/small.

After I ran out of wool for the shorts the other day, I unwillingly went back to the sweater. Knitting in black wool is very annoying because it's difficult to see the individual stitches. Yesterday I unraveled the collar and started over, getting through 17 rounds out of a planned 21, before I realized it was still too small and started over again. The third try is now at 18/21.

I need to order more wool for the shorts and some more needles and sock yarn and sock blockers.

We still haven't replaced the kitchen faucet, either. I asked Wax what she thought about ordering it a week and a half ago, and she said she could pick it up on her way home from work, but this hasn't happened yet.