Subject: Pluggage!
Author:
Posted on: 2018-07-30 18:34:00 UTC

Do I have plugs? Oh boy...

Okay, so, in no particular order:

Pern - Did you love late Discworld? Are you tired of grimdark nonsense crowding up your shelf, and do you really just want to read some classically optimistic Sci-Fi/Fantasy? Do you want to read something that is just straight up weird and a bit outside your traditional Sci-Fi/Fantasy? Pick up Pern. It's fantastic and amazing. In particular, pick up the Harper Hall trilogy, and then The White Dragon. Those books are perhaps the most beloved of the Pern series, and they're also just... fantastic. Especially Harper Hall. This is a book about people who love music written by someone who clearly shares that love, and wow does it show. Unfortunately, you have to read Dragonflight and Dragonquest first, which... aren't as good? Okay, Dragonquest is pretty good, but Dragonflight is... not. At least, not at first. By the end, it's excellent, but the beginning is weak, if not actually bad, and you can tell it's some of McCaffrey's earliest work. There are also issues with... okay, I'm not doing any of my rants right now. Not even the Dragonseye rant that's actually about Pern being awesome. Another time.

Discworld - okay, I mentioned late Discworld above, so... right. Excuse me for a moment...

Grabs Megaphone

IF YOU HAVE NOT YET AT LEAST ATTEMPTED TO GO READ DISCWORLD, YOU SHOULD GO READ DISCWORLD.

Sorry, but I had to make that eminently clear. If that's all you need, pick one of Guards! Guards!, Wyrd Sisters, Mort, or Going Postal to start with (or any number of others, but those are the classic starting points. Go. Now, really! I mean it!

It's sort of hard to understate Discworld's influence. The series is utterly brilliant, and Pratchett has inspired more people than I can count. Also, he's a direct influence on us. As in, the PPC. Pratchett's in the blood of this place, and that's reason enough to read him. And on top of that... I mean, I said utterly brilliant, I'm not sure that's even enough. It's smart, funny, poignant, and just a delight in every sense of the word. I'm sorry if I'm going on a bit, but it's just that good.

Amon Amarth - Not a book, but a band. If you like Metal, Amon Amarth does viking metal. It's kinda cheesy. It's also sorta awesome.

Doom (1993) - In my opinion, both the first id Software game and the first FPS that stands the test of time. Sorry Twisty. Go grab a copy of GZDoom so you can rebind the keyboard controls to something sane if you want to play it now, but the fact that that's all it takes to make the game feel pretty much modern is impressive, especially compared to its forebears, and even to some of its contemporaries (lookin' at you, System Shock).

By the way, I have a fully-working Apple IIgs at home, and that was the system that id's very earliest games ran on, before they even WERE id Software. So when my data transfer cables and such come in, I intend to try a hand a reviewing some of those.

NetHack - The DevTeam thinks of everything. NetHack is the oldest roguelike still in active development. Depending on how you count it, Nethack either begin development in 1981 (one year after Rogue's release), or in 1987. Either way, it's old, deep, complicated, and extremely absorbing. Also really really really hard. But still, if you want to get a feel for what a real Roguelike is like, this is the game to try. Well, this or Angband, being as they are the primary endpoints of the two oldest branches of the Roguelike family tree. Plus, both games are totally free.

The Zachtronics Game - For while it comes in many incarnations, there is only one Zachtronics game. If you like puzzles, get one (probably SpaceChem or Opus Magnum). If you're a programmer... ho boy. Zachtronics game us basically crack for programmers.

Homestuck...'s Soundtrack - Don't read Homestuck. Really, don't. Sure, it's alright, but it's not worth the investment it'll take. Especially after Act 5 Part 2, at which point what little degree of good pacing the comic had up to that point goes to hell and the whole thing ends with the most anticlimactic final battle I've ever seen.

But if there's one thing that is actually completely great about Homestuck, no compromises or asterisks, it's the soundtrack. "Sburban Jungle." "Explore." "Descend." "Savior of the Waking World." All of "Cascade." "Black." "Midnight Crew (Acapella)." "Unite/Synchronization." And that's just off the top of my head. It's one of the best soundtracks I've ever heard, and I've heard some pretty bangin' soundracks.

The Irresponsible Captain Tylor - It wouldn't be a Thoth recommendation list without SOMETHING obscure. So here you go. a mid-90s anime that parodies Space Operas and just... oh my god this show is funny. I'm not even kidding. It's one of the funniest things I've seen. Seriously, go watch it.

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - I'm not sure I have to post this one, but just in case... Well, it's H2G2. It's brilliant. Douglas Adams is a comic genius, and so long as you don't watch the awful movie, it really shows here. If you don't know what H2G2 is, I'll be glad to explain, but only if someone asks. I'm really assuming everyone knows and just putting this here to hedge my bets.

Snow Crash - if Cyberpunk is the house Neuromancer built, than Snow Crash did a lot of work on the house afterwards. This is one of the foundational texts of Cyberpunk and Post-Cyberpunk, and it's a heck of a lot more readable than Neuromancer. And more fun. And more technologically accurate. And just... it's good, okay? Well, good if you like Stephenson. You'll see what I mean if you read it.

2112 - Rush's Magnum Opus, 2112 is a great album start to finish, and is absolutely required listening for anyone who likes prog rock. Or anyone else for that matter. How many albums have their entire first half dedicated to seven-part rock opera detailing a story set in the distant sci-fi future? It's awesome!

1974 - Now's my chance to plug someone REALLY obscure. 1974 (not to be confused with The 1974) is a local band. As in, local to my state. I stumbled across them selling their albums in a tiny booth at a Con, shrugged, said, "what they hell, I like Prog Rock," and bought a copy of "1974 & The Death of The Herald," which the band recommended as the first one to pick up.

And that was arguably the best purchase I made at that con. We'll get to the other thing I bought fighting for that title next on this list, but I have listened to that album waaay too many times. It's stupidly good. Better than anything by just some random local band has any right to be. And it's another prog-rock sci-fi rock opera! (man, I love those things)... I think it's about... human clones revolting? Or not? And there's a galactic war that ended? Maybe? It's... really confusing. I'll have to ask the band when I see them again.

Atomic Robo - This is a comic book series about a sentient robot powered by nuclear power created by Nicola Tesla in the 1930s, that takes place all over time and space following Robo on his adventures. It also includes the line "When you return to you unobservable but empirically determined dimension of origin... tell them Carl Sagan sent you." (in The Shadow From Beyond Time, a good adventure to start with, and one of the best ones period so far) If that doesn't sell it, I don't know what will. It also has a spinoff called "Real Science Adventures", which shows adventures set in the same universe that don't involve Robo.

Did I mention that the writing's by the guy who did 8-bit Theater? It is. And that's great. Also, the comic's philosophy: "No Angst, No Cheesecake, No Reboots, No Filler, The Main Robot Punches A Different Robot (or Maybe a Monster)." That should tell you what sort of fun this comic is.

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