Bandcamp Power Metal Roundup #4
On album art: Every month or so I dive into the world of Bandcamp power metal in order to find... View Article
On album art: Every month or so I dive into the world of Bandcamp power metal in order to find... View Article
This article acts as my inauguration into the world of tabletop articles and reviews. For the past few years, I... View Article
Some of my fascination with dungeon synth comes from how small of a genre it is. This may seem trivial... View Article
The Masmorra Zine was an important development, for me, in my understanding of dungeon synth. A little over a year... View Article
Far Cry Primal is the latest Ubisoft sandbox. It’s getting to be a genre of its own. You know the... View Article
Disgaea was a cult JRPG in the era where you could talk about a game being on the Playstation without... View Article
The Loudun Possessions was a notorious witchcraft trial in Loudun, France in 1634. A convent of Ursuline nuns said they... View Article
Our editor Brendan is really into Black Sails. In fact he has fallen so in love with this show he... View Article
Okay let us be really honest here. We know that you are here because you like fantasy comics and we... View Article
In an effort to keep up with power metal as much as other genres this year, I have decided to comb through Bandcamp each month and listen to a variety of albums pulled from it. It is my hope that by the end of this year I will reach some sort of opinion on the state of power metal. This will be, of course, subject to whether or not the album is on Bandcamp, which may only paint a select portrait but I can only do so much. In fact, Bandcamp power metal may be a smaller genre than power metal as a whole, full of unsigned and upcoming power metal albums that could be wholly different than the titans of the genre who may not even bother with the site. Perhaps we will find the next Blind Guardian or Stratovarius lying under these rocks.
This particular review exists because of my insatiable lust for all things BLACK SAILS. If you’re unfamiliar, that is perfectly... View Article
A deep-seated regret I have in life is missing the boat on Magic: The Gathering. Unlike most D&D players, who... View Article
One of my dreams is to become an expert on dungeon synth, or at least talk about it enough that... View Article
If ever there was a book that could be classified as prog metal this is it. Set in Bern, Switzerland, in the year 1905, Physicist Alan Lightman’s Einstein’s Dreams explores the literal consequences of hypothetical postulates derived from Albert Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity and some deep thought about the nature of space and time. The vehicle for this exploration is a series of dreams that occur to a certain youthful patent clerk that take place in the two months leading up to June 30th. The day the journal Annalen der Physik would receive the paradigm-shifting paper. (The third of four he published that year as part of his Annus Mirabilis or “miracle year”.) It’s a quick read, about 140 pages, but that’s all Lightman needed to create myriad of mind bending worlds by modifying the physics of time, space, and entropy.