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Showing posts from July, 2025

Thirsty Thursday Eve - Kirkland Signature Tequila Blanco

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I'm not big on tequila, but I do like to have some on hand for the occasional margarita or for my cousin who would never be caught dead without a bottle. Hence, cheap tequila from Costco is obviously the perfect solution. Name: Tequila Blanco Source: Kirkland Signature Style: Tequila ABV: 40% Price: $25.99 Volume: 1.75 Price per oz: $0.44 I've tried to do a better job about keeping a wide variety of distilled spirits on hand recently. I'd personally be set with just bourbon and spiced rum the vast majority of the time, but obviously not everyone likes those specific styles. Add a little tequila, some vodka, and a few other styles, and I have a pretty decently stocked bar that could appeal to most guests. The mango tequila was good, but it isn't exactly made for mixing. Unless you're making a mango margarita, it's a very particular flavor profile that isn't going to go with everything. Plus, it was a good enough spirit to stand up on its own. Most of the bot...

RetroAchievements

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I'm a HUGE fan of trophies and achievements in video games and RetroAchievements has made it where I can get that same experience with games that were made well before achievements became commonplace in the industry. Don't ask my why I like achievements and trophies so much. I genuinely don't know, I just get a little dopamine hit every time I see one pop up. And I realize that a lot of people don't really like achievements, some even go so far as to hate them, so systems that allow you to turn them on or off really are the best of both worlds.  Furthermore, I do want to explicitly say that these games were not incomplete or inferior WITHOUT achievements. I'm not going to tell you that Super Mario World became a better game with achievements. It's just a neat thing for me to be able to see individual accomplishments listed together in a single place across all my games on that platform. So what IS RetroAchievements? It's a site that tracks tasks for older...

N64 Recompiled and Majora's Mask

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I recently discovered a project that allows Nintendo 64 games to be recompiled and personally got The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask running on my Steam Deck natively. It is absolutely insane, and I think it could breathe new life into playing N64 games on modern hardware. Back in May, I came across a reddit post in the r/SteamDeck subreddit about Majora's Mask Recomp. The post mentioned mod support (for an N64 game???), so I was both puzzled and intrigued. I decided to do a little research. It turns out, there has been a project running over the past year or so that allows  the user to "recompile N64 binaries into C code that can be compiled for any platform." To flex the Computer Science degree a bit here, a binary (file) is a program that has been converted into the necessary 0s and 1s to run on a particular computer architecture. Computer architectures vary wildly between different processors and platforms, so a binary for one chipset is unlikely or even impossi...

Book Report - 'Thirteen Reasons Why' by Jay Asher

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I tend to avoid trending books and BookTok recommendations, but I was drawn to "Thirteen Reasons Why" by Jay Asher out of a contrarian mood. I read an article that South Carolina recently became the state with the greatest number of banned books. Always one to oppose the banning of books and support the reading of banned books, I decided to look up some of the most banned books in the United States. The full list is included at the end for posterity. If you're looking for something to read, it's a good place to start. The first on the list, "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian," seemed like a decent place to start but my local library didn't have it in circulation as an audio book. The second book (or rather, series) was "Captain Underpants." I'm not opposed to reading books intended for children , but I wasn't committing to an entire series, and the fact that "Captain Underpants" even made this list is frankly as...

Review - Half-Life

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“ Half-Life ” is a first-person shooter released on PC in 1998. Both Half-Life and its sequel Half-Life 2 have long been considered legendary shooters and established PC superiority in the shooter genre long before consoles even had a chance. Over a quarter of a century later, does Half-Life still hold up as a decent game, or is it a relic of its generation? After I found out that my old Surface Pro 7 could emulate some PS2 games and I started leaning into Steam a little more, I started looking through Steam games that I already owned but never experienced. In particular, I bought a whole bundle of Valve games (I think it was The Orange Box ) including $115 worth of games for $5.19 back in March 2023. Man, I love Steam sales. Although Half-Life 2 is probably the game that I hear discussed more, I figured it made more sense to start with the first game in the series. Plus, with a game that came out in 1998, I figured my laptop should have no issue running it. Like... at all. Fortunate...