Weird. (a game)

Dec. 12th, 2025 10:53 am
radiantfracture: The word Weird. superimposed on a blueblack forest scene with odd figure circled (Weird)
[personal profile] radiantfracture
Hey, I posted my game! You can find it here.

Playtests welcome. It is a solo storytelling/journalling/story creation horror game. Enjoy bringing about your character's nearly inevitable and almost certainly miserable end. And yet: the sun rises.

Title-wise, I went with Weird, as an archaic synonym for fate, styled with a period: Weird.

I liked the suggestion of Patience quite a bit, but this isn't really a game about being patient. I'd want waiting, duration, something like that, in the mechanics somewhere. Actually, maybe I'll try to make such a game, since I still seem to have Game Fever. Maybe it's to play in waiting rooms.

As predicted, the game jam I made has not posted to the Itch calendar, so I am the only person who knows about it or has submitted anything. But I tried!

Thoughts on the possibilities of this mechanic )

§rf§

Recent reading

Dec. 12th, 2025 05:54 pm
regshoe: (Reading 1)
[personal profile] regshoe
A Murder of Quality by John le Carré (1962). The second Smiley novel is a murder mystery rather than a spy story—the spy thing is only directly relevant because Smiley is dragged into the murder mystery by a former spy colleague—and I like murder mysteries better than spy novels on the whole, so I liked this. It's set at a public school and is very interesting as a portrayal of that setting in the post-war period, though it's not at all a school story, the major characters being mostly teachers and their wives. It's also very much About Class: the murder victim is the wife of a teacher from an unusually lowly background, and much of the dramatic backstory revealed as the murder is investigated involves the tension around the husband having done his best to forget his origins and integrate into the public-schoolmaster class while the wife did not (religion is part of this: they were both originally Nonconformists, but he converted to the CoE while she continued to attend the local chapel until her death). I was annoyed by how everyone, including characters from the Midlands, kept referring to the Midlands as the North, and disappointed by the lack of Mendel (does he reappear in any later books?), and also what's with saying at the start that the action takes place 'as the Lent Half (as the Easter term was called) drew to its close' and then it later becomes clear from various seasonal references that it's actually not only (the equivalent of) Lent term but fairly early on in Lent term, what term/half system is this place using?, but otherwise enjoyed this one very much as a well-constructed twisty mystery with interesting setting and themes.

The History of Miss Betsy Thoughtless by Eliza Haywood (1751). A solid eighteenth-century brick following the adventures in London society and courtship of the young protagonist, who is kind, generous, good-hearted and not at all vicious but who is nevertheless rather—you'll never guess what Betsy's central character flaw is. (There is a lot of extremely unsubtle character naming in this book.) It's one of those books that I found interesting rather than liking exactly. Much of it is an illustration of a contemporary sexual morality which can accurately be described as victim-blaming and double standards and not much else; the early part of the book seems to shy away from portraying controversial subjects (one character attempts abortion but fails; another sets in motion legal proceedings to divorce his wife, but dies before the divorce can be completed), and later on there's a sequence which is kind of a shockingly bold repudiation of conventional morality and also kind of really isn't, which was a bit frustrating. Betsy is really a very likeable character, though, and there's a lot of enjoyable overwrought drama and fun eighteenth-century language. (Haywood consistently spells the possessive 'its' with an apostrophe, among other things.)

The Garden God: A Tale of Two Boys by Forrest Reid (1906). A strange, dreamy, virtually-textually queer book that isn't a school story at all despite being about the relationship between two boys at school and very little else. (We see almost nothing of other boys, teachers, lessons, painstakingly-detailed cricket matches or school affairs in general; the one time the book acknowledges the wider world it's to comment 'democracy, how ghastly' and then move straight on.) The writing style is strikingly modern. I enjoyed it, although neither the style nor the relationship development is the sort of thing I really get attached to. Also, a gay relationship beginning with one character confessing to the other that they've already met them in a dream as a child is a weird thing for a book like this to have in common with Carmilla.

Amateur City by Katherine V. Forrest (1984). I had to know what this lesbian detective genre was all about, but this book—in which lesbian police detective Kate Delafield solves the mystery of who murdered the world's worst boss in a big corporate office building, and also isn't the main witness in the case cute?—was a bit of a disappointment. I don't get on with Forrest's writing, I think; then police procedurals are not the kind of detective story I like, and the characters and relationships in this one were not appealing to me. (I can't say I was contrary enough to like Ellen's horrible girlfriend, who does treat her pretty badly, but I was annoyed on her behalf because Forrest was so clearly writing her as a cardboard villain and Ellen just blithely cheats on her and still hasn't come clean and/or broken up with her by the end of the book. That's not a happy ending!)

Nothing much to see

Dec. 12th, 2025 05:48 pm
tig_b: cartoon from nMC set (Default)
[personal profile] tig_b
 Instead of editing or finishing a book, I've been busy catching up on missed deadlines after an Oct mainly spent feeling ill.

So I wrote and delivered a training course and am partway through 4 more.
Plus too many school appeals.
In the middle were other bits and pieces connected to various voluntary posts.
And a little paid work in refill the financial hole left by vet bills and teeth.
[syndicated profile] grrm_feed

Posted by grrmminion

On the road to greatness, they’ll take the long way…

We’re So excited for some Dunk and Egg goodness next year!

AND the official preview

ALSO,

Have you heard of this contest??

Maybe you know a real-life knight or someone who you think should be?

You could win a trip to attend the LA Fan Premiere for HBO’s A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms to see your nominee knighted by George R.R. Martin.

Using #KnightChallenge on TikTok, tag someone you know who embodies courage, valor, honor & sacrifice to nominate them.

No pur nec. Ends 12PM ET on 1/2/26. Open to Entrants/Nominees in 48 contig. US/DC, 18+ (19+ in AL&NE, 21+ in MS).

See Rules for details at www.hboknightchallenge.com

THIS MESSAGE HAS BEEN BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE MINIONS OF FEVRE RIVER

Seasons Greetings.

Dec. 12th, 2025 12:08 pm
feng_shui_house: Crossstitch Christmas Sheep text Season's Bleatings (Christmas Bleatings)
[personal profile] feng_shui_house
This is really cute- it’s a demo of an animated ecard. Some of the things on this site are viewable without an account. I don’t have an account, but sometimes I look at the freebies when a friend who does have an account sends me one.

I hope you can see this one. From a land without snow, I bring you snowmen wishing everyone holiday greetings.

https://www.jacquielawson.com/card/the-singing-snowmen/3526995

(no subject)

Dec. 12th, 2025 04:30 pm
heleninwales: (Default)
[personal profile] heleninwales
The rain had stopped yesterday but we could see by the speed the clouds were moving that it was still very windy. Unless the wind comes from one particular direction, we don't get much wind down by our house, so we can get caught out when planning a walk. There are time when it's calm as we set off, but as soon as we leave the shelter of the valley, we get the full force of the wind. Therefore our plan to walk to the coast was shelved and instead we did a circular walk round a quiet lane that forms a loop.

The weather was very grey, so the photos are not exciting. This shot was taken looking back down the winding lane we'd just walked along.

Looking back

There's really nothing in the way of arable crops grown round here, but these look like some sort of fodder beet. The sheep will no doubt be turned out in this field later this winter. More photos here... )

There's always something new to see, even when we've done a walk many times before. I'm sure this cottage has had a makeover since the last time we came this way. The windows and white paint look new. Note also the devastation wreaked by Storm Bran. The green wheelie bin has been blown over.

Cottage

Shortly after passing the cottage we saw some highland cows, but I couldn't get a decent photo due to the hedge and the fence, so you'll just have to imagine them.




In other news...

Speaking of decent photos, I looked back over the photos I've taken during 2025 and couldn't find any that I was proud of. The photos are not particularly bad but none stand out as good either. I've got into a rut again. I'm just snapping things I see while on the walks I do with G. I think I need to make more effort and go out on my own with a camera and take photos more mindfully, at least a couple of times a month.

Dept. of Memes

Dec. 12th, 2025 09:17 am
kaffy_r: Second shot of Ateez members (Eight Makes One Team)
[personal profile] kaffy_r
Music Meme, Day 14

A song that someone showed you: 

I'm going to go with one that I saw one of my favorite reactors, Roscoe, react to this morning, "Save Me" by BTS. (He actually reacted to it some time ago, but there's a "Roscoe reacts to BTS video marathon going on and I dropped in just in time to see the music video from their early days, and to listen to the song.)

The tune has an extremely catchy hook, and I'm impressed by the fact that both the camera operator(s?) and the group members were working on ground that was partly shifting sand and still managing to both sing and dance (with some pretty complicated choreography) during a number of single-shot camera works. 

I didn't enter Kpop via BTS, the way so many people, including those I've met through the Couch Crew discord community, did. I enjoy their music when I hear it, but I'm not Army (the name of BTS's fandom). Despite that, I can appreciate a well-written tune and some smart choreography, even when it's obvious the group and the producers didn't have much money which with to work. So here you go.* 


* I thought about using "Spring Day," which was part of the reaction marathon, but it's pretty intense, with regard to its subject, and I didn't want to put that into the post.  

Also, here's a link to Day 13 which in itself has a link to the previous 12 meme answers. 

Community organizations

Dec. 12th, 2025 08:43 am
hudebnik: (Default)
[personal profile] hudebnik
Last night I went to a meeting of the Richmond Hill Historical Society, most of which was given over to a presentation by another organization called Queenslink about their proposed project to revive an abandoned and overgrown train right-of-way (originally built in 1880 as the Rockaway Beach line of the LIRR, which ran until 1962), putting in a subway line (more precisely, extending the existing M subway line) with accompanying foot and bicycle trails. In this satellite map, the right-of-way is the green stripe running from Rego Park to Resorts World. The subway line would be underground in the Rego Park section, and above-ground (and cheaper) the rest of the way.

Sociological aside: the room was full of train geeks, reminiscent of the guy in the Monty Python sketch "It all happened on the 11.20 from Hainault to Redhill via Horsham and Reigate, calling at Carshalton Beeches, Malmesbury, Tooting Bec, and Croydon West". Naturally, most of them already knew in what year the line had been built, when it had been closed down, when the Richmond Hill LIRR station had closed down, when the G train stopped running to Forest Hills, etc. and were not shy about correcting every trivial misstatement anybody made.

This whole plan will of course require a few billion dollars, but oddly enough the biggest obstacle isn't elected officials unwilling to spend money but rather another organization called Queensway, whose proposed project is to revive the same abandoned and overgrown train right-of-way with foot and bicycle trails and recreational facilities ("the High Line of Queens"), but no mass transit. Notably, the Queensway project already has the approval of the current Mayor, Eric Adams, who's leaving office in three weeks. Now, Eric Adams appears to be a crook in bed with Donald Trump, and anything with his name on it is suspect, but that doesn't necessarily mean Queensway is a bad idea. However, the Queenslink people argue that once half a billion dollars has been spent building recreational facilities along the Queensway trails, it will be politically difficult to ever put in mass transit there. And building mass transit anywhere that isn't already a city-owned right of way requires the government taking people's homes and shops, which is also politically difficult.

One player with a vested interest in the project is Resorts World, a developer who's just received final approval to replace the Aqueduct horse-racing track in southern Queens with a casino, hotel, etc. There's still a lot of controversy about that project, but apparently it's going to happen. There's already a subway station at Aqueduct, but only for the A train, which runs through southern Queens and Brooklyn, through lower Manhattan, up the West Side to the northern tip of Manhattan; no straightforward way to get there from northern Queens, which Queenslink would provide. Resorts World has an incentive for as many people as possible to get to its facilities easily, so they may put some money into the project.

The New York City subway system, like most city mass-transit systems, makes it fairly easy to get from outlying areas to the densest business districts in the center of the city, but not at all easy to get from one outlying area to another: you generally have to go into the city center and switch to another line that goes out to where you want to go. One exception is the G train, the only line in the city that doesn't go into or through Manhattan at all: it runs from western Queens straight to southern Brooklyn. It used to run farther out in northern Queens until the early 2000's, and the Queenslink people claim that their project would enable the G train to be restored to where it used to go. After the meeting I asked one of them why this was, and one of the train geeks in the audience jumped in to explain. At present, four subway lines go to Forest Hills, two of them (the R and M) ending there, and the G line used to end there also. But Forest Hills doesn't have a turnaround facility (it takes a lot of space to turn around a 600-foot-long train), so any train that stops there has to go a little beyond the station, cross over two other tracks, and reverse direction before it can pick up passengers and head back towards Manhattan. Every train that does this maneuver takes a long time and blocks traffic on other lines. So the reasoning is that if the M train did that maneuver in Rockaway Beach rather than Forest Hills, there would be room for the G train to do it in Forest Hills again.

The M train is sorta weird in that it starts in Queens, goes through Manhattan and Brooklyn, and ends back in Queens less than three miles from its other end. We've often wondered why they don't just connect the two ends of the M train into a loop, which would provide another way to get from northern Queens to Brooklyn. Naturally, the same train-geek-in-the-audience explained that this is because (a) there's a cemetery in the way, where it's difficult to do underground construction, and (b) the two ends of the M line are basically perpendicular, subway trains can't make sharp turns, and there isn't room to get the two ends of the line lined up with one another.

As it turns out, there's another proposed project to connect Queens and Brooklyn: the Interborough Express, which would run 14 miles from western Brooklyn to north-central Queens along another abandoned and overgrown right-of-way. This project is farther along, with some design work done and environmental impact statements underway. It's farther west, so it wouldn't impact our lives as much as Queensway or Queenslink would.

I haven't heard from the Queensway people directly, and I like the idea of a walking-and-bicycle trail, but multi-mile-long straight-line transit routes already under city ownership are rare commodities, and it seems silly to have one and not use it for mass transit (as well as for pedestrian and bicycle trails).

As far as I can tell, Queensway has two advantages over Queenslink: it costs less money, and it provides a continuous pedestrian-and-bike trail (for about 3/4 mile south of Park Lane South, the right-of-way is too narrow to allow both an above-ground subway and pedestrian-and-bike trails, so the Queenslink people propose a parallel bike route a block away). But it seems to me that continuity is a sine qua non for mass transit, and a "nice-to-have" for trails (since there are plenty of other routes that pedestrians and bicyclists can legally take, just not as pleasant as a park).

One sleep cycle discovery

Dec. 12th, 2025 09:59 am
malada: bass guitar (Default)
[personal profile] malada
When I was still working I seemed to always have a natural wake up time of around 5 AM. This was annoying because my alarm was set for 6 and it would take me half an hour to resettle and maybe get a little snooze time.

In retirement I seem to still have that wake up at 5. Now I just get some breakfast (oatmeal!) and cozy back into bed until around 8:30. This is working for me.

And just as a reminder to you all:

Epstein files, Epstein files, Epstein files.

His victims can't forget and neither should we.
anneapocalypse: Ariane Clairière, an Elezen Warrior of Light with light skin, green eyes, and dark blonde hair. (ffxiv ariane departure)
[personal profile] anneapocalypse

Fandom: Final Fantasy XIV
Rating: Mature
Archive Warnings: Major Character Death
Relationships: Haurchefant Greystone/Warrior of Light, Alphinaud Leveilleur & Warrior of Light, Unrequited Minfilia Warde/Warrior of Light, Unrequited Aymeric de Borel/Warrior of Light, Pre-Urianger Augurelt/Warrior of Light, Alisaie Leveilleur & Warrior of Light, Warrior of Light & Thancred Waters, Y'shtola Rhul & Warrior of Light, Midgardsormr & Warrior of Light, Hydaelyn & Warrior of Light, Urianger Augurelt & Warrior of Light, Minfilia Warde & Warrior of Light, Ardbert & Warrior of Light
Characters: Warrior of Light, Haurchefant Greystone, Alphinaud Leveilleur, Urianger Augurelt, Y'shtola Rhul, Thancred Waters, Emmanellain de Fortemps, Artoirel de Fortemps, Edmont de Fortemps, Alisaie Leveilleur, Minfilia Warde, Midgardsormr (Final Fantasy XIV), Tataru Taru, Ardbert (Final Fantasy XIV), Warriors of Darkness (Final Fantasy XIV), Scions of the Seventh Dawn, Unukalhai (Final Fantasy XIV)
Additional Tags: Grief/Mourning, Survivor Guilt, Elezen Warrior of Light, Female Warrior of Light, Healer Warrior of Ligh, Angst, Suicidal Thoughts, Religious Angst, Depression, Patch 3.0: Heavensward Spoilers (Final Fantasy XIV), Patch 3.4: Soul Surrender Spoilers (Final Fantasy XIV), Canon-Typical Violence
Series: With Lilies and With Laurel
Length: 14,010 / 82,000
Chapter: 3/15

Summary:

A heartbroken Warrior of Light struggles to come to terms with loss, and the world she has been left to save.

Notes:

If you're new here, please start with Chapter 1!

Final Fantasy XIV is owned by Square Enix. This is a non-commercial work of fanfiction.

( Read on AO3 )

...or below! )

Previous Chapter | Next Chapter

[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

[This is a guest post by J. Marshall Unger]

Well, first of all, the difficulty of learning a language can only be measured relative to the language(s) the learner already knows. Japanese is easier for Koreans than for Americans; I would guess Chinese is easier for English speakers than, say, Arabic speakers. Second, language isn't writing. Learning to write Japanese or Chinese is hardly a snap even for native speakers.

As for Julesy's comments, I would just add that, as DeFrancis pointed out, the thing that really made romanization universal in Vietnam was the determination of Ho Chi Minh and his allies to educate the peasantry so they could be mobilized to drive out the colonialists. In Korea, I suspect that bad memories of the Japanese occupation gave hankul a boost it might not have enjoyed had Korea remained independent. As for why Japan still uses kanji, it started as a class thing. Lots of printed material before 1945 was produced with furigana on practically every character. Ironically, progressives who wanted to limit the number of kanji in general use and the readings kanji could take opposed such furigana use, believing that getting rid of them would force publishers to show restraint. After 1945, in theory at least, the old class structure was eliminated, and the compromise was a limited number of kanji with more or less sensible readings taught to all kids (except the blind) alike regardless of family background. That compromise will probably continue in one form or another until the aging of the population, the need for foreign workers, a severe downturn in the economy, or some other catastrophe rouses the government from its accustomed lethargy. Meantime, in computer environments, most Japanese type in romaji: they throw away the romaji input once (they think) they have the graphic output they need, but they're using romaji passively all the same.

As DeFrancis emphasized, abolishing characters isn't a realistic goal. Rather, China and Japan ought to aim for digraphia: one national standard romanization for putonghua and one for modern standard Japanese; teach that romanization without apologies in the schools alongside traditional writing; and pass laws to make sure that anyone who wants to use that romanization for any everyday purpose is not penalized for doing so.

 

Selected readings

J. Marshall Unger:

  • Studies in Early Japanese Morphophonemics (Bloomington: Indiana University Linguistics Club, 1977; 2nd ed. 1993)
  • Ideogram: Chinese Characters and the Myth of Disembodied Meaning (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2004)
  • The Role of Contact in the Origins of the Japanese and Korean Languages (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 2009)
  • Literacy and Script Reform in Occupation Japan (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996)
  • The Fifth Generation Fallacy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987)

 

John DeFrancis:

  • "Digraphia", Word, (1984) 35: 59–66
  • Nationalism and language reform in China (New York: Octagon, 1972) — many editions and reprintings available
  • Colonialism and Language Policy in Viet NamContributions to the Sociology of Language, vol. 19 (The Hague: Mouton, 1977)
  • The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy (Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, 1984)
  • Visible Speech: the Diverse Oneness of Writing Systems (Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, 1989)
  • plus dozens of language textbooks and pedagogical / reference resources written from the 1960s through the 2000s; JDF was the doyen of Chinese language teachers during that period
  • "John DeFrancis, August 31, 1911-January 2, 2009" (1/26/09)

Oh, nice!

Dec. 12th, 2025 09:32 am
julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)
[personal profile] julian
Someone anonymous bought me paid time, with the note, "I love your bird photos," which is a) kind, and b) gives me incentive to *take* some bird photos. And other photos. And, as a necessary corollary, walks.

Before that, I need to find my walking boots, one of which is in Some Bag Or Box, and also possibly buy other boots (because snow), which is always somewhat tangled because I have ridiculous calves and ankles.

But meantime, I can organize my tags! And post other things. And so on.

Anyway, thank you, Photononymous!