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Steven Weill logoSteven Weill
Nintendo Gamecube

Nintendo Gamecube

I think we're all biased to the console that we spent the most time with as kids. I have a hard time separating that bias from some objective facts. This thing played games and was a cube. Honest marketing. The controller, which looks absolutely wild, is just about the best functioning and most comfortable ever made. The console has a handle on the back to make it easy to carry around like a tote bag. It just works. No system updates, no game updates, no connection to the internet. No red ring of death. Honestly I think beyond all of that the game catalogue is so strong. We all know Nintendo makes the best first party games. And Gamecube's were incredible. Pikmin, SSB Melee (I mean...), Twilight Princess, Luigi's Mansion, Metroid Prime, Super Mario Sunshine (favorite game all time), Wind Waker, Kirby Air Ride, Mario Superstar Baseball, Pokémon Colosseum, Mario Power Tennis, Four Swords, Super Mario Strikers, Mario Party 6, Mario Kart Double Dash. THESE ARE JUST THE FIRST PARTY GAMES. If half of these came out on another console it would immediately be in the conversation for greatest game library ever. What makes Gamecube special is that it nailed something that Nintendo usually drops the ball on. Quality and quantity of third party titles. Sonic Adventure 2, Billy Hatcher, TimeSplitters, Viewtiful Joe, NBA Street, Resident Evil 4, Soul Calibur 2, Tales of Symphonia, the Star Wars Rogue Squadrons and so very many more. Long live Gamecube. Oh wow also how did I forget the instantly iconic power on animation/song. Incredible. Burned into my brain forever.

Steven Weill logoSteven Weill
Speedrunning

Speedrunning

I've always had some sort of positive relationship with video games, though there's never really been a moment where I would have considered myself a 'gamer'. I never played PC games and was more of a casual Nintendo-first kind of guy. So then why the hell have I spent so much time watching speedrunning videos on YouTube this past year? One day the algorithm recommended a recording of the world record 100% run of what might be my favorite game ever — Super Mario Sunshine. I figured I'd give it a minute or two. What a sick joke that was. Over two hours later I found myself entirely entranced while watching someone engage with a game I had previously thought to be at least decent at (hilarious), in ways I never thought possible. These are people pushing the games they love to their furthest logical extremes over and over again — not for our entertainment but for their own freakish desires. And even more than that, I was captivated by the lore. They're doing these record breaking runs WHILE talking at great length about the game, what it is they're doing at any given moment, often times reading and reacting to a live chat or chatting with cohosts of the streams. This became my new trash tv. Who needs 90 day fiancé when you have Super Monkey Ball speedrun compilations. If I'm being honest, I became a little too into speedrunning videos. Not that I was spending too much time watching them or anything but in that I have simply exhausted all the content there is to consume relevant to the games I'm interested in. I've seen it all! Thankfully I have no interest in watching games I haven't played or enjoyed otherwise I would never watch a great film or TV show again. Put on a run of a game you've once loved and see if it's for you. But be prepared for a slippery slope.

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