Pleroma

Pleroma

Richard Moss | @MossRC@social.mossrc.me

Author of *Shareware Heroes: The renegades who redefined gaming at the dawn of the Internet* and *The Secret History of Mac Gaming*, as well as two upcoming books โ€” one on the creation of #AgeOfEmpires and the other about the history of football (soccer) games.

Writer/director on TerrorBytes: The Evolution of Horror Gaming, an upcoming five-part docuseries about horror games. Producer/co-writer on FPSDOC, a 4.5-hour documentary film celebrating the first-person shooter genre (with an emphasis on the 90s/early-2000s golden age) that's guided by the developers themselves.

Creates The Life & Times of Video Games and Ludiphilia podcasts.

He/him.

rich@mossrc.me
@MossRC on Twitter and @mossrc.bsky.social on Bluesky.

Posts mainly about #gamedev and #indiegames histories and stories, #retrogaming/#retrogames, #retrocomputing, #classicmac, #shareware, #tombraider, and #videogamehistory.

So word's out that Unbound are in financial trouble. Report linked below includes official info, but I can add that it's been going on over a year. I've had two payments for Shareware Heroes delayed (but later paid) due to cashflow problems and now a third is overdue.

Causes that I know of are expected funding/investment evaporating last-minute, expansion plans not going as well as hoped, and shipping costs blowouts from war and COVID (which stung them because they charged shipping upfront for upcoming crowdfunded books, then costs doubled).
https://www.thebookseller.com/news/exclusive-unbound-faces-financial-uncertainty-as-authors-wait-for-delayed-payments

Every Australian needs to read Country: Future Fire, Future Farming, a fascinating and accessible book about fire, ecology, and land management in 1788 (the year white folks came) versus today. Everything we've been told (at least in Vic & NSW) about fire in this country is wrong, essentially.

230 years ago, indigenous people used hot and "cool" fire with such scalpel-like precision that raging bushfires were rare, plants and animals thrived, food was plentiful, and instead of wilderness, everywhere was thought of and managed like parkland.

Fixing the mistakes of 240+ years of mismanagement and bad policy will be hard, but the authors are clear that without radical change the big fires will just keep getting worse. (See the third image for some of their proposed solutions.)

Front cover: FIRST KNOWLEDGES Edited by MARGO NEALE COUNTRY: Future Fire, Future Farming BILL GAMMAGE & BRUCE PASCOE Back cover text:   What do you need to know to prosper as a people for at least 65,000 years? The First Knowledges series provides a deeper understanding of the expertise and ingenuity of Indigenous Australians. For millennia, Indigenous Australians harvested this continent in ways that can offer contemporary environmental and economic solutions. Bill Gammage and Bruce Pascoe demonstrate how Aboriginal people cultivated the land through manipulation of water flows, vegetation and firestick practice. Not solely hunters and gatherers, the First Australians also farmed and stored food. They employed complex seasonal fire programs that protected Country and animals alike. In doing so, they avoided the killer fires that we fear today. Country: Future Fire, Future Farming highlights the consequences of ignoring this deep history and living in unsustainable ways. It details the remarkable agricultural and land-care techniques of First Nations peoples and shows how such practices are needed now more than ever. Bill Gammage is a historian at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University. His books include The Broken Years: Australian Soldiers in the Great War and three prize-winning titles - Narrandera Shire, The Sky Travellers: Journeys in New Guinea 1938 - 1939 and The Biggest Estate on Earth: How Aborigines Made Australia. Bruce Pascoe is an Aboriginal Australian writer of literary fiction, non-fiction, poetry, essays and children's literature. He is the enterprise professor in Indigenous Agriculture at the University of Melbourne. He is best known for his work Dark Emu: Black Seeds: Agriculture or Accident? which re-examines colonial accounts of Aboriginal people in Australia and cites evidence of pre-colonial agriculture, engineering and building construction by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. This is the third title in the First Knowledges six-book series. The fourth and fifth books in the series will be published in 2022. A page spread from the book Country on what we need to do to transition to fire management policies based on indigenous learnings.

I remain very pleased that I wrote this post gushing about Realmz earlier this year: https://frostillic.us/blog/posts/2024/3/31/realmz

@MisterArix Indeed. And I think about that every time I see an American journalist or editor say "corporations are entities, not people" in response to somebody misusing the pronouns.

On top of the legal and moral insanity of corporate personhood, clinging to the singular form in language use absolves the corporation's executives/management of responsibility for their actions and dehumanises the people who work there.

Random language oddity: Collective nouns get third-person plural pronouns (they/them) in British English but third-person singular pronouns (it/its) in US English. British English also distinguishes between organisations as legal entities (it) vs groups of individuals (they), depending on context.

Hence why it's usually correct in the UK/Australia to write, say, "[company or team name] find peace in loss of their sandwiches" whereas in the US it should always be "[company or team name] finds peace in loss of its sandwiches."

"It's like we're at the end of the 18th century, and we're realising that building cathedrals is really expensive. Can we continue to build these massive edifices to God for this incredible amount of labour and time? Or should we just build four walls and a roof, and that's a church, right? I'm afraid we've built AAA gaming into a kind of cathedral business, and it just can't grow any further. In fact, it's probably grown too far already."

https://www.eurogamer.net/there-comes-a-time-when-we-all-declare-the-war-is-over-former-playstation-studios-boss-shawn-layden-on-the-future-of-video-game-consoles

This is my phone and homescreen setup from December 2017, right down to the latest emails I had the day I switched to a new device.

The rest of my apps were accessible via a left-edge swipe into a floating sidebar. Still one of my all-time favourite homescreens.
An old Xiaomi Android phone showing a multi-coloured homescreen with various icons and a Gmail widget with two unread messages dated 20 Dec 2017

ChipWits is featured in The Secret History of Mac Gaming by @MossRC and he is offering our fans an additional ยฃ5 off with the code CHIPWITS. This excellent book takes you back to the days of in 1984. @bitmapbooks https://chipwits.com/2024/11/27/chipwits-discount-for-the-secret-history-of-mac-gaming-book/

I did an interview with Ludica about football games and A Tale of Two Halves [post is in Italian]. https://www.ludicamag.com/a-tale-of-two-halves-intervista-a-richard-moss-storia-videogiochi-di-calcio-bitmap-books/

@RobeeShepherd I find it infuriating. I'm also saddened and frustrated by the marked rise in wood-fire heating and outdoor fire pits in Australia over the past 10-15 years, filling the winter air with smoke. When I was growing up we had really clean air most of the year in Melbourne. It's not like that anymore.

One of the hidden horrors of life with asthma is having to hurriedly turn off my home's evaporative cooling on a hot evening, sending the indoor temperature rapidly upwards, because somebody in my street started burning something and smoke โ€” a major trigger of asthma โ€” was getting drawn in.

(Cooling is back on now, but we're in for a much warmer night inside because of the interruption.)

Almost-three year old calls the back of a chair a leaner, and the more I think about it the more I wonder why we don't all call it that.

For my American friends grappling with how to survive (and resist authoritarianism) through the next four years, this seems like good advice: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/nov/17/how-to-survive-the-broligarchy-20-lessons-for-the-post-truth-world-donald-trump

This new review of A Tale of Two Halves is one of my favourites. https://www.gamesfreezer.co.uk/2024/11/bitmap-books-tale-of-two-halves-history.html

All the fake birthdays I give on non-legal forms finally paid off with something fun. I got a personalised direct mail letter today offering me a free hearing test because the data broker who sold my info thinks I am in my 50s.

My book on the rise of indie games in the 90s, Shareware Heroes: The renegades who redefined gaming at the dawn of the internet, is 50% off at Unbound for a limited time. https://unbound.com/books/shareware-heroes

The moment where my worlds collided: legendary horror game composer Akira Yamaoka's brief remarks on doing a track for football game Winning Eleven 4 (ISS Pro Evo for those of us in PAL regions), in response to a question I snuck into our TerrorBytes documentary interview with him.

01:28:56.560 --> 01:29:06.280 I think it also applies to the sound design for Winning Eleven 4. What kind of sound did you create?  01:29:06.280 --> 01:29:25.220 At that time, Winning Eleven was very influenced by the popularity of Prodigy and Chemical Brothers, and there was a desire to create sounds like that.  01:29:25.220 --> 01:29:31.660 So, we incorporated the kind of music that was really popular at the time, like so-called acid techno and breakbeats, into Winning Eleven.

I had a blast talking about football (soccer) games and my new book โ€” and taking on a brutal football-themed name-the-game trivia challenge โ€” on the latest episode of The SEGA Lounge podcast. https://www.thesegalounge.com/240-a-tale-of-two-halves-the-history-of-football-video-games-with-richard-moss/

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