I did some more consultant work this month: I gave a small team a very nice website they can pick up and run with by themselves, which they desperately needed. At the day job, there's a big trade show coming up, so there's been tonnes of design and photography work to get shot/built/designed/printed in the creative half of my job. I also need to prepare to migrate a massive backbone system to the EU this coming September, so the sysadmin half continues to please.
I picked up the Make Your Own One-Page Roleplaying Game zine from Exeunt Press, which was super inspiring. It put me onto a bunch of indie outlets, solo creators and tiny RPGs I'd never seen before, all of which got me fired up and made me want to pick up my dormant, tentpole TTRPG project again. Fortunately, I've held off on because I have other things I need to finish. I did indulge in some one-page design ideas, with one I really like, but I didn't let myself get too distracted by it. To tide me over, I wrote out some design notes on some of the new systems I read about, which is a good way to trick a hyperfixation phase into not letting you rabbit-hole too far.
Koriko and Orbital from Jack Harrison's Mousehole Press are the two I'm super interested in at the moment. I love their premises and I love the No Dice, No Masters ruleset Orbital uses. A mechanical system for GM-less and RNG-less collaboration designed, almost entirely, for telling stories about marginalised or fringe communities and the lives of their inhabitants is a hell of a premise and I can't wait to devise some of my own stories with it.
Also, Koriko and Orbital resemble Kiki's Delivery Service and Record of a Spaceborn Few respectively. Kiki needs no introduction, but Spaceborn Few is part of the wonderful Wayfarers slice-of-life sci-fi series by Becky Chambers. Just read Becky Chambers, you won't regret it. Oh yeah, and Koriko was illustrated by Deb Lee, whose work I adore, so I'm pretty sure Jack Harrison is just making games for me, personally.

I bought a Steamdeck this month in a fit of pique. It was a lapse into retail therapy because I was having a pretty bad time in the middle of this month, but I don't regret it at all. I struggle to sit at my PC to play games these days because something about sitting in the same chair I work in all day makes playing through my games library feel like a job. Now, I've not only finally got a handheld to sit somewhere comfy and play the twenty-something indie titles I desperately want to finish, but I'm also emulating a number of N64, GameCube, PS2 and PS3 titles on it that I either haven't played for nearly twenty years or never got to play at the time.

Finally, I refurbished my Obsidian vault and wrote about it, because I've been delving back into building a toolkit around myself to help with my mental health, daily happiness and productivity. I went to the doctor, started something of a diet, made a new habit tracker (currently not in Obsidian, but I'll probably merge it in at some point) and got recommended or sought out some new resources to try and help with my mental energy levels, focus and anxiety. I've been climbing out of a very deep, black hole for a long time now and I've stalled repeatedly this year... but I feel like I'm ready to push for some more progress.
I'm a bit bummed about summer coming to an end, but I also thrive in the cold weather. The forests around me have just recovered from being absolutely butchered by forestry management — I'm assured the trees had it coming, but I'm not so sure. It felt like a dead place for a while, but just this past week, it's been lovely to walk in them all dense and overgrown again. In some places, you'd never even know what had happened just months ago. I'm going to enjoy the dying days of the season there.
Everything I tended to this month —
I've made a hundred tiny design tweaks, including a version one dark mode that launches with this post! It doesn't automatically enable itself yet because it's not 100% there, so you'll just need to find the button for it. Regardless, I'm getting really happy with how this site looks now, even if it's not 100% what I envisioned. I'm just going to keep iterating on it and trust the process.
A final surprise right before publishing this was getting accepted into the XXIIVV webring! I've been super inspired by all of its members, and especially its founders, for a long time, so it's something of an honour to be there. Devine Lu Linvega's personal wiki is what inspired me to write Spindle back in 2019, thus beginning my dark descent into the inescapable hobby of tinkering on the small web.
Some links and interesting reading from August —
- Why you need a WTF notebook, some brilliant advice I used on that gig this month. It was very useful when I discovered a bunch of pre-work I was expecting hadn't been done.
- From Atlas Obscura, the Aarne-Thompson Uther Fable Index, a brilliant resource for understanding European folk tales and their history. The full index has made for some fantastic reading.
- A collection of programming examples for UXN, Hundred Rabbits' virtual machine and a constant permacomputing inspiration. These exercises happened to introduce me to the concept of 'literate' Programming. While I won't be making it my primary way of expressing code any time soon, it did inspire some notes on interesting programming styles.
- AI robots.txt, a comprehensive list of bots to add to your
robots.txt file. A fair few of these will still ignore them, necessitating other server-level defensive tools if you really want to prevent bots from scraping you. Sadly, these are just more damage we're seeing happening to the open web, from bad corporate actors and legislators alike, and it sucks. I hope the bubble pops soon. - In the Future All Food Will Be Cooked in the Microwave. Just read it.