This week’s episode drifts from real-life chaos into full-on simulation theory territory—because apparently that’s just how things go now.
Real Life
Ben’s week kicks off with a perfect storm: his mom’s in town, the power steering pump dies, and suddenly he’s asking the very real question—is it finally time to go electric? In the middle of all that, he stumbles across 1D Chess (https://rowan441.github.io/1dchess/chess.html), which somehow takes chess, removes a dimension, and still manages to be confusing.
Devon spent the week getting absolutely wrecked by a mystery illness that took out the whole family. Not COVID, not the flu—just one of those “you’re not in control” reminders from the universe.
Steven brings the nerd balance: Star Wars: Shatterpoint with Greg, continued love for Project Hail Mary, and early buzz that Avengers: Doomsday might actually land with that Infinity War-level impact. He also highlights Vantage (https://vantage.rulepop.com/#), a sci-fi card game that plays like a choose-your-own-adventure.
Future or Now
Ben highlights Phyphox (https://phyphox.org/), an app that turns your phone into a portable science lab. It’s one of those tools that quietly reminds you how powerful your everyday tech really is—especially when people are using it for real experiments (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47737376).
Steven brings the heavy hitter this week: scientists have successfully mapped and simulated the brain of a fruit fly—Drosophila melanogaster—and used it to control a virtual version of it. Not full human emulation, but it’s a serious step in that direction. If you want to go down the rabbit hole, check out the coverage (https://www.profolus.com/topics/scientists-copied-fruit-fly-brain-put-inside-computer/, https://futurism.com/science-energy/research-fly-brain-matrix) and the demo itself (https://youtu.be/e21OUXPlnhk?si=GdB3dY-aY_12SIt9).
Devon wisely sits this one out before things get too existential.
Book Club
This week’s story is “Terms of Enlightenment” by Patrick Hurley (https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/default/terms-of-enlightenment/), and the discussion goes deep.
We get into the “matrix-ness” of the story—what it means to live in a constructed reality and whether enlightenment is about escaping it or understanding it. There’s a strong thread of Eastern philosophy throughout, especially when Ben dives into Zen koans and the idea that truth isn’t something you’re told—it’s something you experience by breaking your own thinking patterns.
The conversation circles around illusion, perception, and whether “hacking reality” is just metaphor… or something closer than we think.
Next Week’s Book Club
We’re reading “Morning Shed” by Namita Krishnamurthy (https://strangehorizons.com/wordpress/fiction/morning-shed/).
Every few years, the narrator’s face erupts in eyes.
So… yeah. That’s where we’re headed next.
If nothing else, this episode makes a pretty strong case that the line between science fiction and reality is getting thinner by the week—and we’re all just trying to keep up.


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