That’s them saying “I love you!”
That’s them saying “I love you!”


I don’t really like the vibe of this article, mainly because it feels (to me at least) motivated by modern neo-puritanical thinking.
Having said that, I do resonate with some of what it’s saying. In recent years with those bodycam-FPS games specifically, I’ve found myself disturbed by the fidelity of violence, at times. I grew up playing shooters like Titanfall, Halo 3, Battlefield 4 - realistic in their own right, but no matter how often the adults in my life would tell me that they were too violent, they were always cartoonish and comfortably distanced from reality in my mind.
We are now hitting the era where photoreal gameplay is becoming feasible, and I don’t think I’m comfortable engaging with violence on that graphical level, at least not for mindless entertainment. That’s just my personal preference, and I understand others can choose what they’re comfortable with. I do however think that we’re gonna be seeing a lot more crackdowns and censorship in gaming in the near future - I think that’s already started with adult/sexual indie games being banned from sites like itch.io, and I wouldn’t be surprised if anything labeled “violent” will be the next target.


That’s definitely part of it. I think I also like to consider my pictures as representations of memories/moments, instead of chasing the fidelity to make them as close to reality as possible. My photos don’t need to look 1:1 to real life - because they aren’t real life!


Maybe it’s weird of me, but I think most photos look better with older digital cameras. I don’t need my home pictures looking 4k-crisp personally
Realistically? I’m a dragon who hoards old cables (I’ve become my dad 😭), pieces of art from my friends, animal bones and teeth, and cassette tapes. A very eclectic hoard if I do say so myself