By Jonathan Bilski
Who wasn't reading more during the pandemic? I know I grabbed everything I wanted to read off of Amazon. A few new titles just hit the shelves or are about too. And some came out you may have missed. I'm going over a few I just started reading and a few I just finished.
by Jason Schreier
$15.49
Couldn't put this one down when I first got it, learning about the insider woes about making video games for the big studios or trying to make it as an indie. I saw an excerpt on Polygon and was hooked.
Jason Schreier breaks down a person's past, tells you how they got their dream gig working on or making a big game like Bioshock Infinite or Epic Mickey and than just slams the breaks as everything crashes to an inevitable end. You feel their despair, but luckily it's not you. I've only done four chapters so far, but each goes in length of the nightmares of people just trying to get funding or dealing with the corporate side of 2k and Disney. Treating people like cogs in a machine and not like people seems like a unending trend. Can't wait to finish and read even more depressing tales of woe on how some of my favorite video games were made and their awful sequels were churned out.
Jason Schreier breaks down a person's past, tells you how they got their dream gig working on or making a big game like Bioshock Infinite or Epic Mickey and than just slams the breaks as everything crashes to an inevitable end. You feel their despair, but luckily it's not you. I've only done four chapters so far, but each goes in length of the nightmares of people just trying to get funding or dealing with the corporate side of 2k and Disney. Treating people like cogs in a machine and not like people seems like a unending trend. Can't wait to finish and read even more depressing tales of woe on how some of my favorite video games were made and their awful sequels were churned out.
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by Sarah Andersen
$11.46
For any horror fan a book about the burgeoning relationship between a vampire girl and werewolf guy might have never been as spoopy. And that means cute scary. These two monsters of the night are kind of like a young couple, though one is more than 300 years old. It's like a beautiful sitcom that never aired with many jokes based on all we fear and make fun of these monster tropes. And this vampire chick loves her doggy woggy boyfriend when he transforms. It's a series of black and white comics that have such a cute macabre feel that you can't pass them up.
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