where science meets fact meets fiction

Episode 553: Don’t Hit It With A Sword

Real Life:

This week’s episode kicks off with Devon missing in action, attending a wedding and recovering from, well… life. Also, he’s apparently deep into building off-brand LEGO, which raises some very important questions: How many pieces? How many regrets?

Meanwhile, Ben survived a 5.2 earthquake and checks in to let us know that everyone’s safe. He also shares a couple links to Desert Child, an indie hover-bike racer/RPG that mixes hip-hop, ramen, and pixel art vibes—and may or may not be rolling onto Xbox soon thanks to some juicy UI integration rumors.

https://store.steampowered.com/app/844050/Desert_Child

https://isthereanydeal.com/game/desert-child/info

https://www.theverge.com/news/633478/microsoft-xbox-steam-games-support-ui

Steven’s life update is more… fluffy. Literally. He’s in line to pick up baby chicks for the backyard flock (Black Sexlinked and Smokey Pearl, if you’re curious), and discovers that mailing baby birds is a surprisingly common thing. Also, he’s deploying next-level parenting tricks by disguising fun surprises as errands. The dad game is strong. 

Also: The Last of Us S2 premiere dropped and Steven gives it a glowing 10/10. We talk a bit about how the show mirrors the game—and why it’s working so well.

Ben also brings us something very important: The Naboo Movie. It’s real. It’s glorious. It’s here: watch it now.


Future or Now:

Ben drops some cosmic perspective with a planetary fact that blew our minds: All the planets in our solar system could line up between the Earth and the Moon. That includes Pluto, for those of you still rooting for the little guy.

Steven introduces us to Mad Mouse—no, not a Disney spinoff. This is about AI mapping mouse brains. A new model simulates how the mouse visual cortex responds to images. Basically, it’s science fiction getting closer to just… science. Read the study here.


Book Club:

This week, we took a listen to the first episode of It’s Storytime with Wil Wheaton, featuring “Rock, Paper, Scissors, Love, Death” by Caroline M. Yoachim. It’s a short, beautiful, gut-punch of a story about love across time and space—a real Gordian knot of feels. Check it out on Lightspeed Magazine.

Next week we’ll be diving into “Fragments of a Hologram Rose” by William Gibson, part of his Burning Chrome collection. It’s a short one—just 15 minutes—and dripping in cyberpunk atmosphere.

And if you’re wondering about the Star Trek side of our brains: yes, we saw the new Strange New Worlds trailer. Yes, it looks wild. Yes, we’re watching. Peep it here.

 


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