• Tapletop gaming is my preferred leisure time. Some of my favorite nights with friends have been spent playing board games, and recently my social calendar has been spent playing D&D. But one of the great things about being a geek is it’s easy to find joy in others geeking out too.

    So even though I’ve never played in a LARP, the webseries LARPs caught my attention right away. Maybe not right away. Season One was originally released in February-March 2014, and had critical acclaim but wasn’t widely distributed. I started watching when it re-released on Geek & Sundry in January 2015.

    True to the Geeks

    It’s not easy to capture geek cultures in media. It’s too easy to portray the people involved as less-than-normal, making those who engage in activities like role play seem eccentric (at best) or downright strange (at worst.) But downplaying the fantasy and focusing on LARPers as just people with the normal problems of everyone else also belittles the magic the activity can provide. Some amount of balance must be struck.

    LARPs: The Series finds this balance well. The show gives equal interest to its characters who have normal drama and happen to enjoy LARP, along with letting us watch the unfolding story of the Guardians of the Eleventh Eye. Whether they’re playing the game or living their real life becomes secondary to the series. It’s more staging than anything else.

    That feeling of role play being part of real life is what makes it ring true to the fellow geeks who are watching it. It feels real because the games we play really become staging to our lives too. Sure, we know it’s a game, but playing that game with our friends becomes just as much a part of who we are as where we work or the habits we form. The story in LARPs lets that notion develop naturally for the characters and the viewer.

    Season 2

    The first season of LARPs ended with me gasping for air. I moaned out loud wanting to know what would happen next. Everyone had so much still hanging out there. It was so… awkward! In a dramatic irony way, not the socially awkward geek way you normally get when hanging out with me. But it was also so right. The story was meant to pause there.

    Season 2 picks up right where the first left off. There’s lots of tense ideas in play but the story developed much more slowly and thought-out. Every episode still has it’s amazing moments, but there’s no filler at all. The first nine episodes are just a crescendo to an amazing half-hour season finale in episode 10. All the little hanging bits of tension left for us seem to pay off. Everything works out so well, but not as we’d expect at the end of season 1.

    I cried at more than one moment.

    No More Waiting

    While we were still in the middle of season 2, I found myself actually recommending to my friends who were still uninitiated with LARPs to hold off on watching until they could watch both seasons all at once. Because the waits between episodes were really crushing me. I couldn’t wait for them to enjoy the series as much as I had, but I could tell that both seasons combined would make such a beautiful product. The remainder of season 2 didn’t let me down.

    Now is the time! No more waiting! If you’ve not watched LARPs, you have no reason to hold off any longer!

    Binge It

    I made a playlist of all the LARPs: The Series episodes from both seasons in order. So you can binge them all, start to finish, right here:

    Season 3 and the Future of LARPs

    Jon Verrall (writer for the series and the actor who plays Evan) says there’s nothing to announce for a possible season 3 yet. But there’s obviously good potential for that if you watch the conclusion of season 2.  They crowd-funded the second season, but that was before Geek & Sundry went into their new setup as a part of Legendary. Since Tabletop season 4 and Titansgrave season 2 aren’t being crowdfunded I doubt LARPs season 3 will be either.

    However, LARPs also has a different production arrangement from other G&S programming, so I could be way-off. For now it seems the best thing you and I can do to make season 3 happen is to watch the LARPs we’ve got.

    Did You Enjoy LARPs? Why not try:

    • More LARPs
    • Share LARPs
    • Watch LARPs everyday

    Did You Blog About It?

    Please let me know in the comments if you’ve blogged about LARPs: The Series. I keep my posts spoiler-free for the most part, so I’ve decided not to share too many specifics about the episodes. But I’d love to join the conversation on your site if you do!

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  • Some books just grab you and don’t let go. I wasn’t even expecting to read this book last weekend. On Friday I got an email saying my library’s ebook version of The Martian was now available and was automatically checked out for my account. All I had to do was open up my Kindle and let it download. I got hardly any sleep after that until I finished the book.

    https://twitter.com/alexjgustafson/status/675665420754513920

    A Perfect Story?

    Picking out favorite parts of this plot is nothing but spoiler country, so I won’t get into details. Thanks to the movie that came out, everyone knows the story is about astronaut Matt Damon Mark Watney being marooned on mars. The book could have a much worse plot and still be entertaining for most because of the humor Watney uses to make light of his unconscionably hopeless scenario, but that’s not what makes the book great.

    What makes the book so appealing is that Weir lets the plot do its own development. Everything that seems to work well carries with it the seed of another problem. The book could’ve gone any number of directions because it’s amazing anything Mark does works at all. Every little victory carries so much risk it’s easy to rejoice for today and have your heart torn out tomorrow. Your blood will pump hoping for Mark’s safety to the very last page.

    There’s little need for suspension of disbelief, because the problem-solving sounds like an annoying process you’d face at work. Little details you’d never consider except in a weird edge case. Mark just faces them while alone on Mars with limited supplies. Even the technical language doesn’t come off  as mumbo-jumbo like the stuff you’d read in a Star Trek novel, it’s basic ideas that need grappling. How efficient can a solar panel be? How do you make water from scratch? These aren’t scientific ideas that need faking, they just need to be explained in an entertaining context.

    Not a Perfect Book

    2015-12-18 15.42.51.jpg
    The Martian Kindle Edition with avid reader cat, Bagheera

    The book still falls short in a lot of little moments. Almost every bit of dialogue (this doesn’t include Watney’s narration that drives most of the book) felt flat. Even when Watney does the talking, half the time it bits of moaning like ‘well, shit’ or a string of expletives.

    I get it, it’s an impossible situation and your mad and mad people swear a lot. But this is the fifth time I had to hear it. Stop trying to talk at me, make a joke, then get back to trying to build a radio out of coconuts. I like coconut radios way more than your soliloquy.

    Thankfully Weir limits the amount of interaction we have with other characters, so we don’t listen to their crappy dialogue any more than necessary. It’s this reason the movie may actually be better than the book, because there’s no reason the movie can’t have the same amazing plot, but good actors and screenwriter’s view of dialogue could really whoop it into shape. I’ve not seen the film yet, so feel free to tell me I’m wrong.

    Making Up For It

    Don’t let the thought of poor dialogue get you down though – the majority of the book is just so much stinking fun you’ll not give it another thought until you need to write a book review. The first night I was reading, I kept telling Ber, “You really need to read this book.” Over and over.

    Eventually I had quoted so many little lines to her she said, “turns out I just have to listen to you read it!” I tried to stop, but I couldn’t completely.

    Weir originally wrote The Martian as a series of blog posts. Arguably, what makes a blogger a blogger is the desire to share information, and this book is a joy to share. I’m not surprised it spread as quickly as it did and eventually got picked up for full-on publishing. I think it spread well even early on because the story comes off as so likeable. And Watney’s humor and wit are almost assuredly just moments of Weir projected into the work. It’s a book that makes you want to grab coffee with its author.

    And that’s why I’m here with you, too. As soon as I finished it I wanted to share the experience of it.

    https://twitter.com/alexjgustafson/status/676263250007343104


    The Martian by Andy Weir

    Amazon ; Goodreads ; Wikipedia

    andyweirauthor.com

  • There were two daily streaks I’ve been managing for months. One was posting daily here on my blog, and the other was hacking daily on Ingress. WordPress.com gives you a cool little notification every time you post if you’re on a posting a streak. Ingress rewards you with a badge, an award they call “Sojourner.”

    In March both of these streaks started. In December, both of them ended.

    The Sojourner Streak

    ‘Hacking’ is the primary game mechanic of Ingress. The game is augmented reality, meaning you play on your phone or tablet but to move around in the game you must move around in real life. Objects of interest in real life like art, historical markers, and churches are ‘portals’ on your phone. If you’re within range of a portal you can hack it and earn some loot.

    soujourner badge
    Ingress Sojourner Badge at 274 days

    In March 2015, Ingress got a new badge called Sojourner. To earn the badge an Ingress agent must hack at least one portal within 24 hours of their last hack. Essentially, it’s a nudge for a daily streak — it’d be odd for someone to play Ingress and not be hacking portals; play Ingress everyday and earn your badge. But the specifics of Sojourner are more than play Ingress everyday, it’s play ‘within 24 hours of your last hack.’

    Imagine your last hack was at 9am Monday on your way into work, then you didn’t play the rest of your day. Then it just so happens you arrive late to work on Tuesday, hacking at 9:15am. You’re out of luck for Sojourner because 9:15 am Tuesday is more than 24 hours after 9am Monday, even though you hacked everyday. Some folks around the internet are reporting there is more buffer than this built-in because Sojourners weren’t ending when they expected, but I’ve not seen anyone replicating that buffer reliably.

    A few days after the Sojourner announcement I decided this was a badge I could get behind. At the time I was playing for 30 minutes minimum everyday, and I have several portals less than 5 minutes walk from my home. There are lots of hacking opportunities around my other local haunts as well. I setup a recurring todo in my Wunderlist for my Sojourner hack. I installed a separate application to show a 24-hour timer since my last hack. This became a pretty easy badge: never let the time hit zero and I’ll make it all the way.

    And for 274 days, it was easy. There were a couple close calls, but for the most part it didn’t require attention or thought. I would do at least a hack in the morning and a hack in the evening and it was just a part of my daily habits. I’d have days where I’d play more Ingress, but everyday I’d at least get my Sojourner hack done.

    The streak ended on Sunday, December 6th,  because I wasn’t thinking about Ingress at all. My mind was swimming with nothing but our Dungeons & Dragons group. That focused attention really paid off. Finishing our campaign on a high note made for a great day of writing and preparation, and then amazing gameplay from the crew. But as we were cleaning up late that evening it dawned on me that I had not stepped outside all day. I hadn’t checked my phone all day; it was still hooked up to the charger from the night before. No number of notifications and reminders and systems would’ve saved me because my attention was totally devoted elsewhere. The Sojourner streak had been dead for nearly 8 hours and there was nothing to do about it.

    And I was okay with that. I’m still okay with that.

    The Blogging Streak

    The first post of what became eight months of daily blogging was published on March 26th, 2015. It was my wrap-up of WordCamp Dayton that happened about a week before. WordPress.com had started sending you an acheivement notification if you had a daily streak going on an individual blog, and Matt was pretty proud of his streak. With the recent excitement from WordCamp I decided to be more deliberate with my blogging.

    wordpress-post-streak
    Notification for 260-day posting streak

    Once I committed to blogging daily the majority of posts were pretty simple. Their value wasn’t much to anyone besides my immediate friends and family. But I also became more likely to work on that big post that takes a lot of time and really wanted to share. Those posts may only happen every other week, but before I started the daily blogging they weren’t happening at all.

    This extended period of working on my blog everyday helped me understand something that we hear from our users all the time. Blogging is helpful force in one’s life. Writing for the public to read is almost therapeutic, and it certainly helps one become a better communicator. Any time spent working on my blog felt like a net-positive, and I don’t feel that way about how I contribute to other social parts of the web. Blogging doesn’t feel like timewasting the same way scrolling through Twitter does.

    Two hundred sixty days is a long streak. About a month ago I posted that I was having hard time keeping up. Thinking up posts is getting harder, and that’s mostly because I’ve been spending most of my time trying to get things off my plate. Finishing up work projects and doing chores isn’t really great blog fodder, but it’s the best thing for me to be doing since we expect the baby any day now. That’s not what ended the streak though.

    In fact, the day my streak ended was a very exciting one for me. My creative juices were flowing and I felt good about everything. I could’ve very well cranked out three or four posts that night had it crossed my mind. It just didn’t. I did a full day’s work, I worked on my theme while watching Jessica Jones on Netflix with Amber, then stayed up late reading The Martian by Andy Weir. I slept well and woke up Saturday morning to the realization that Friday had no scheduled posts, and I didn’t so much as think about blogging all day.

    It’s especially awesome that this is what greeted me when I double-checked my site to see if I had a scheduled post on Friday:

    alton-brown-fail.png

    You said it, Alton.

    Lessons Learned

    The biggest danger to my consistency is my excitement. These two streaks were something I had no problems with developing on a daily basis for two-thirds of a year. I worked around plenty of external obstacles and chaotic, unexpected interruptions during that time – but those never broke my daily habits. It was my own interests that defeated me. Shiny objects in my peripheral vision grabbing my attention.

    Thankfully the world doesn’t end when any streak breaks. My blog is still here and all those posts are still published. My drafts are still waiting there turn. Those Ingress portals haven’t moved and I can hack any day I want. And the things I did instead weren’t bad uses of time by any means. Maintaining a streak shouldn’t cost you an interesting life, or even an interesting day.

    But it’s worth noting that for the most part – my systems worked. I’ve figured out how make myself do something everyday if I want it to be done. And it took these lessons to figure out where the system will fail.

    Going Forward

    Ingress has already started taking a back seat. I have a Guardian portal I’m recharging (which can be done from home) and I still play when I can, but it’s mostly when I walk the dog. For a fun little cell phone game, that seems like enough.

    Blogging will continue. You’re reading this post, right? But I’m only going to schedule/plan on posting on Mondays and Fridays. Anything else is gravy and I’m sure they’ll still happen, but I don’t see another daily streak as something I want to strive for. I’m also considering starting a second blog and doing a more rigorous posting schedule there, and reserving my personal blog here more for on-a-whim updates.

    I’ve had some recent successes with fitness. Maybe my daily habit tracking will switch to obsessing with that instead. Pushups and and steps replacing blog posts and hacks.

    Or cat pictures. Everyone loves cat pictures.

     

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  • Our household loves Alton Brown. He’s the kind of nerd that reminds the rest of us nerds that we can still be charismatic if we work at it really hard. Having tasty food around helps too. Anyway, Ber found this video today and we both cracked up at it. Enjoy!

     

  • Just got done telling everybody at WordPress Louisville about the new WordPress.com and the WordPress.com Mac app last night.

    Today the app for Windows got released!

    You can download the app for Windows (or Mac) at https://desktop.wordpress.com/

  • I like Treehouse. Most of the education that got me ready for Automattic, the first job I’ve felt truly suited me, came from lessons there. But I think this was a bad move on their part. Zac is handling this well and I’ll be looking for his resources because he’s a skilled teacher. I encourage you to do the same!

    Zac's avatarEducator Zac Gordon

    This last week has been quite a week for me.  Treehouse, The online learning company where I have been teaching WordPress for the last 3+ years told me that they were going to stop teaching WordPress, give my salary to a .NET teacher, and fire me.  That was Monday.

    On Friday the same week, WordCamp US started.  Between Monday and Thursday I knew I had to come up with some new idea of how to support myself and then get to WordCamp US to connect with the community about the idea and see if it would work.

    My idea is simple, keep teaching WordPress.  I have been teaching WordPress long before Treehouse and apparently I will be teaching WordPress long after Treehouse too 😉

    What I really want to share in this post though is the love and support and sustaining energy I felt from attending WordCamp US, sharing my idea with people, and getting their feedback.

    View original post 434 more words

  • It was a pleasure to speak on The New WordPress.com, “Calypso,” at our December meetup for WordPress Louisville. I didn’t do much by way of slides, but if you’d like to run through them again or would like access to some of the links I mentioned, I’ve got them after the jump.

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  • A couple weeks ago we launched the New WordPress.com, a project we code-named “Calypso” at Automattic.

    If you’d like to hear more about Calypso, I’ll be speaking about it for tomorrow’s meeting of WordPress Louisville.

    The meeting starts at 6:15pm on Tuesday, Dec. 8th. Hosted by Mirazon Group at 1640 Lyndon Farm Court #102, Louisville, KY, 40223. It’s free to attend, but it’s helpful if you’ll join the WordPress Louisville meetup and RSVP to the night’s event. If you have any questions, please comment here or join the #wordpress channel in the louisville.io Slack.

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  • It’s like finishing a really good book.-My friend Kirsten after tonight’s game

    It’s an odd feeling to finish this campaign. Our group started playing Dungeons and Dragons together two years ago and I never would guessed it would become our regular thing. The friendships have stayed close and we all liked gaming, so this every-other-week role play has turned into the highlight of my social schedule. This campaign finishing up is ending the first chapter of my Dungeon Master career.

    Seeing the story complete makes me so proud of what we made together. So many moments paid off. Everyone was smiles and laughs at the end. Some thought they might die during the final battle. When it was all done we all just stood around in the glow of how cool it was.

    It’ll make our fresh start in 2016 all the better.