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The everyday blog of Richard Bartle.

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9:29am on Monday, 15th December, 2025:

AI Everywhere

Miscellaneous

On the left, a scan of a photograph of my paternal grandmother, which I helpfully uploaded to Ancestry.com a few years ago,

On the right, what someone is claiming is a photograph of my paternal grandmother on Ancestry.com .



Thanks to AI "enhancements", a hundred years from now no-one will know what any of us actually looked like.

My grandmother's eyes were very, very dark brown.



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8:45am on Sunday, 14th December, 2025:

Holly Skirt

Weird

I'm not up to speed on fairy yuletide fashion, but it seems to me that wearing skirts made of holly leaves will inevitably lead to serious leg injuries.





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8:37am on Saturday, 13th December, 2025:

Boop

Weird





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8:38am on Friday, 12th December, 2025:

Colours of the Year

Weird





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8:46am on Thursday, 11th December, 2025:

Lego Games

Weird

It's nice to see games competing with Disney movies for Lego sets.



Fortnite has a PEGI 12 rating, but the Lego sets are for children aged 7+, 9+ and 10+.

I'm sure there's a Games Studies paper in the making called "Lego: Gateway to Violent Video Games", although you could replace the word "Lego" in that with pretty well any toy and still have a publishable Games Studies paper.



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11:36am on Wednesday, 10th December, 2025:

BAFTA Longlist

Comment

The longlist of the games that are up for BAFTA's Best Game award is now out. There are 64 games in the running for at least one award (whatever "in the running" means), and ten that could win Best Game. The ten are:
    ARC Raiders
    Blue Prince
    Clair Obscur: Expedition 33
    Death Stranding 2: On The Beach
    Dispatch
    Ghost of Yotei
    Hades II
    Hollow Knight: Silksong
    Indiana Jones and the Great Circle
    Split Fiction

I voted for two of those (Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 and Dispatch). I won't say what the other three I voted for are, because you might have worked on one, but two of them aren't up for any awards at all.

As a guideline as to the merit of these nominations, here are the Steam ratings for these games as given by English-language players (rather than all players), ordered by overall rating then number of reviews:
    Dispatch overwhelmingly positive 81k+
    Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 overwhelmingly positive 80k+
    Hades II overwhelmingly positive 56k+
    Split Fiction overwhelmingly positive 19k+
    Hollow Knight: Silksong very positive 126k+
    ARC Raiders very positive 101k+
    Blue Prince very positive 10k+
    Indiana Jones and the Great Circle very positive 6k+
    Death Stranding 2: On The Beach [not on Steam, PS5 only]
    Ghost of Yotei [not on Steam, PS5 only]

From this, I assume that a good many BAFTA voters didn't actually play all the games for which they voted; Indiana Jones and the Great Circle stands out as something of an anomaly. I couldn't vote for DS2 or GoY because I don't have a Playstation, so I didn't; I know they're highly-rated on Metacritic, but (like Steam) Metacritic doesn't get a vote. I guess some people don't have PCs, so only voted for the console games they could play. That would explain the disparity.

As with movies, games that are released when the electoral college is making its decision will score higher, but unlike movies, games aren't released in the hope of winning an award and thereby boosting sales. Hollow Knight: Silksong might have been getting award-friendly publicity by releasing when it did, but it wasn't released then in a cynical attempt to win any awards.

The US Game Awards have a shortlist of six games up for Game of the Year. Here they are with their Steam ratings:
    Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 overwhelmingly positive 80k+
    Hades II overwhelmingly positive 56k+
    Hollow Knight: Silksong very positive 126k+
    Kingdom Come: Deliverance II very positive 52k
    Death Stranding 2: On The Beach [not on Steam]
    Donkey Kong Bananza [not on Steam, Switch only]

I don't know how much of this is down to lobbying or not, because I don't vote in the US awards, but I can say I wasn't lobbied at all for the BAFTA votes. I think more US voters use consoles than in the UK, which would explain how Kingdom Come: Deliverance II made the final six.

It'll be interesting to see who wins, anyway.

I abstained from the music category as I don't feel qualified to vote on it, but given that the soundtrack for Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 topped the Billboard classical chart for ten weeks, I think it's safe to say that if it doesn't win the music BAFTA there's something seriously wrong.



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9:06am on Tuesday, 9th December, 2025:

Know your Leopards

Weird





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10:21am on Monday, 8th December, 2025:

Miracles

Weird

I have to say, the definition of what a miracle is has become diluted over the years.





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8:54am on Sunday, 7th December, 2025:

First Doll

Weird

Knowing it's going to be someone's first doll is clearly a cause for concern.



That's one apprehensive doll.



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8:57am on Saturday, 6th December, 2025:

Adding Up

Weird

I saw this in Asturias a week after I saw the wide typewriter in Poland. It's from the days before calculators.



The keyboard at the bottom explains why the carriage is wider than the three-inch roll of paper installed.

Machines like this should be in a museum, which is why it is.



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8:41am on Friday, 5th December, 2025:

Large Type

Weird

I saw this in a museum in Poland when I was there in October.



It's the perfect gift for anyone who needs to type on size A2 paper.



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9:02am on Thursday, 4th December, 2025:

Bow Tie

Weird

I was thinking of getting myself a statement bow tie for the next time I'm invited somewhere posh, but sadly they don't do them in black.





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8:43am on Wednesday, 3rd December, 2025:

Penguins

Weird

In olden times, the heads of rebel penguins were displayed on spikes outside city walls as a warning to other rebel penguins, but nowadays we skin and hang them.





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9:33am on Tuesday, 2nd December, 2025:

Knots

Weird

Our washing machine does a great jjob of tying shirts in knots.



Given a big enough washing machine, a vast supply of shirts and millions of years, I can imagine primitive shirt-based life forms developing from this.



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9:35am on Monday, 1st December, 2025:

Fridtjof Nansen

Weird

Gosh, these 1950s books for boys were more open-minded than I thought.





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Copyright © 2025 Richard Bartle (richard@mud.co.uk).