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Slay the Spire – The Game That Defined a Genre

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Slay the Spire may seem deceptively simple—right up until you realize how much of modern game design it quietly reshaped. There were roguelikes before Slay the Spire , and there were deckbuilders before it as well. But when MegaCrit released Slay the Spire in 2017 (early access) and fully in 2019, it felt like something clicked. The game didn’t invent the idea of combining roguelike structure with card-based combat—but it refined and popularized it to such a degree that it effectively defined a modern subgenre. In the years that followed, we saw an explosion of deckbuilding roguelites: Monster Train , Griftlands , Inscryption , Across the Obelisk , Menace from the Deep , and even oddball hybrids like Balatro .  Some lean toward spectacle ( Inscryption ), others toward complexity and long-term systems ( Across the Obelisk ), or speed and efficiency ( Monster Train ). But the underlying rhythm—fight, reward, adapt—remains unmistakably rooted in Slay the Spire. It even inspired a fr...

Golden Son: When Momentum Turns Against You

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Some sequels expand a story. Others accelerate it. Golden Son  does something more unsettling: it removes the sense that anything can still be controlled, even by the people driving events. Where  Red Rising  is structured—moving through betrayal, transformation, and the closed system of the Institute— Golden Son  opens in motion. Two years have passed. Darrow is finishing the Academy. There is no reintroduction, no gradual rebuilding of stakes. The story begins mid-stride and immediately compounds its own momentum. It does not feel like a middle book. It feels like something already spiraling. From Game to System Part of what made  Red Rising  compelling was clarity. The Institute, for all its brutality, was legible: a bounded system with rules, alliances, and outcomes that could be anticipated, even if not controlled. Golden Son  dissolves that structure. The story expands outward into fleets, politics, and layered loyalties, and with that expansion ...

Best Served Cold: Joe Abercrombie’s Brutal Grimdark Take on The Count of Monte Cristo

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Joe Abercrombie’s Best Served Cold is a revenge story, and not a subtle one. From the moment the premise becomes clear it’s obvious what tradition the book is drawing from. This is, in many ways, a grimdark retelling of The Count of Monte Cristo : betrayal, survival against impossible odds, and a long, methodical march through a list of enemies. That idea alone made the book immediately appealing to me. Revenge stories can be extremely satisfying when done well, and Monte Cristo is one of the classics of the genre. Abercrombie’s take on the formula promises something darker and more cynical: revenge stripped of romance and viewed through the lens of the brutal world he established in the First Law trilogy. The result is an entertaining but slightly uneven entry in the series. The Setup Best Served Cold takes place after the events of the original First Law trilogy and is the first of three stand-alone novels set in the same universe. The protagonist is Monzcarro “Monza” Murcatt...

The Wrong Stuff – The Space Race from the Other Side

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I’ve always been fascinated by the space race of the 1960s. The sheer audacity of it. The question of why we haven’t been back to the Moon in over half a century. The way the dream of routine space travel seemed tantalizingly close in the 1980s—only to fade toward the turn of the millennium—before being reignited by the Mars missions, the landing of Curiosity , and eventually the rise of private space companies like SpaceX and Rocket Lab . It’s a strange and exciting time to be alive. But to understand where we are now, it helps to revisit where it all began. And that’s where John Strausbaugh’s The Wrong Stuff comes in. The Soviet Story We Didn’t Grow Up With Most Western narratives of the space race are, unsurprisingly, American. Mercury. Gemini. Apollo. The triumph of Apollo 11 . Neil Armstrong. “One small step.” But The Wrong Stuff flips the lens. Strausbaugh tells the story of the space race primarily from the Soviet side, and in doing so, he brings to life a world that feels ...

The Night Agent – Season 3 and the Limits of the Twist

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Season 3 of The Night Agent delivers what the show has trained us to expect: conspiracies layered within conspiracies, shifting loyalties, and a central plot that both stands on its own and feeds into a larger, ongoing arc. At a high level, the premise remains familiar. Peter Sutherland is once again pulled into a web of national security threats, political manipulation, and shadow networks operating just beneath the surface of official Washington. The season deepens existing threads rather than rebooting the story, continuing to build the sense that we are watching one long, unfolding conflict rather than a series of disconnected crises. Without venturing into spoilers, Season 3 centers on a high-stakes intelligence threat that forces Peter and his allies into uneasy partnerships. Old secrets resurface. Characters we thought we understood reveal new dimensions. And, as always, nothing is quite what it seems. Twists, Turns, and the Cost of Cleverness There are undeniably clever twist...

Something Deeply Hidden — Quantum Mechanics, Many Worlds, and the Limits of Understanding

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I picked up Something Deeply Hidden by Sean Carroll partly out of curiosity and partly out of lingering confusion. Quantum mechanics has always been one of those areas where the explanations feel simultaneously elegant and deeply unsatisfying. The math works, the predictions are incredibly accurate, but when you ask what is actually happening underneath the equations, the answers often get vague very quickly. Carroll’s book tries to tackle exactly that question. Rather than focusing on the practical side of quantum mechanics—the calculations physicists use to predict outcomes—he dives into the underlying interpretations of the theory. Most notably, he spends a large portion of the book defending the Many-Worlds Interpretation , the idea that every quantum event causes the universe to split into multiple branches where all possible outcomes occur. It’s an idea that sounds almost absurd the first time you hear it. But what I appreciated about the book is that Carroll approaches it ...

Was Europe’s Retreat From Nuclear Power a Strategic Mistake?

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Ursula von der Leyen  recently described Europe’s decision to reduce nuclear energy as a “strategic mistake.” It’s the sort of statement that immediately provokes a reaction. Depending on who you ask, it either sounds like long-overdue realism or like a quiet attempt to rewrite recent history. But it also raises a more interesting question: how did Europe arrive at its current energy strategy in the first place? For much of the late twentieth century, nuclear power was a central pillar of European electricity production. Around 1990 it supplied roughly a third of the EU’s power. Today the figure is closer to fifteen percent. The decline didn’t happen overnight, of course. It was the result of a long series of political decisions, shaped by public opinion and occasionally by sudden events. One of the most decisive moments came after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in 2011. In the aftermath, Germany accelerated its already planned nuclear phase-out. Over the following decade the cou...