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Mark Sabalauskas

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Return to the Stars up for an Indie Groundbreaker award this evening

Jul. 29th, 2020 02:05 pm
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Return to the Stars is a Indie Groundbreaker nominee

Return to the Stars has been nominated in the Best Setting category

It's so nice to be recognized alongside so many other really cool games!

I mean, check out these other amazing 2020 Best Setting nominees:

Afterline: Wandering Souls
, by @angryhamsterrpg is intriguing game where your spirit journeys to recover a memories of your life, so that you can achieve your final end.


In
BALIKBAYAN: Returning Home, by @temporalhiccup you play as Enslaved Elementals struggling to bring about the return of magic in a cyberpunk Filipino setting


Dark Designs in Verdigris, found in @GauntletRPG ‘s zine Codex zine Codex is an Emerald City noir (vert?)

Lorn Song of the Bachelor by @ExaltedFuneral combines the crocodile stories of Southeast Asia with “a morally complex treatment of colonialism” and an extraplanar dungeon.

I can't wait to join with the designers of these amazing games at the awards ceremony this evening.  You can attend, there's no charge, and there's even a raffle of the nominated games.



4
 
 
FestiveNinja
 

 

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Do Rules "Matter"?

May. 9th, 2020 07:52 pm
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If you want to rile up most RPG designers, tell them “rules don’t matter”. But, occasionally, players do say this. I think they often mean perfectly understandable things:

• Rules lawyers make my table worse, and rules arguments and systems/edition wars make my online experience worse, therefore I hate rules.
• I don’t even know the term “freeform play” exists, yet it is what I actually value about the roleplaying.
• Setting, theme and/or strong adventure plots drive my purchase and play decisions, not rules.
• People who say “I loved playing Ars Magica for a decade, but it is a lousy game” are not being nearly as clever in arguing for the importance of rules as they think they are.
• My “generic” system (Fate, GURPS, D&D, Empire of the Petal Throne, Bunnies and Burrows, whatever) is good enough for *my* purposes, your bepoke system isn’t worth the cents of electricity it would take for me to read it.
• I reject the claimed continuity between explicit rules, “rules” of style, and “shared understanding at the table”
• Rules provide a minor oracular compliment to my agenda as a player; therefore, I want them light.
• I hate the way the rules I’ve encountered limit my descriptive freedom to accomplish my goals.
• Ummm, many RPG designers keep talking about how you aren’t raking in the Benjamins, and lots of us players keep telling you that rules aren’t the most important thing, yet you focus on….rules.
• If I want a structured experience that applies rules to achieve an aesthetic end, I will play a video game, thank you very much.
• Watching actors and improvisers stream playing D&D is much better than playing myself

As for myself, I think that rules clearly matter, and that this can easily be demonstrated by trying to play an rules set that that badly suits the genre of story or the creative agenda of the players at the table.

That being said, I believe the trend in the RPG creation community is imbalanced in valuing game mechanics over narrative design. Story, adventure, setting, and art direction are more than equal partners in creating meaning. Luckily, we can all make the games we want, and it is easier than ever to make them available to people.
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Serendipity Issue of the Stellar Beacon released

May. 3rd, 2020 08:28 pm
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I am excited to announce the release of a new issue of The Stellar Beacon a gaming ‘zine that’s also interested in the broader culture. This issue features:

First Contract: Petram Explore what happens when the first outsiders in over a century visit a thriving world of religious experimentalists, in this adventure for the space opera RPG Return to the Stars.

Missive from a Woman in a Room in a City in a Country in a World Not Her Own An updated essay by India’s first Hugo nominee, Mimi Mondal.

Forging Fortunes Novelist S.T. Gibson shows you how you can employ the Tarot as a tool for world building and storytelling.

Sympathetic Magic A complete guide for a Fate magic system based on symbols and relationships between things and concepts. With rules for magical actions that characters can undertake in timebound conflicts to powerful rituals that can take campaign arcs to complete.

Making Your Own Trouble Check to see if your Fate character has strong double sided aspects that can be compelled.

No Preparation Fate Accelerated One-Shots Jochem van 't Hull shares his tested method for a fun, zero-prep Fate adventures-even if your players have never played the game before!


the cover of the Stellar Beacon 'zine
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Review: Rise of Skywalker

Dec. 21st, 2019 12:43 pm
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Like most Star Wars flicks, Rise of Skywalker isn’t a good film. (1)

On the other hand, it is a decent conjuring, in modern form, of the charm of old serials. Appealing protagonists lurch from trouble to trouble, complication to complication, very occasionally pausing for a snatch of dialog or a vague gesture at character development. Then the run time is over, and things are resolved with the pleasure and grace of a Band-Aid being ripped off.

Interpolation of the story beats can reveal vestigial traces of theme. Something along the lines of “When fascists do bad things, people should come together to stop them.” One might object to this as overly simplistic; but current events have shown that even something this basic is beyond the moral capabilities of an unfortunate number of people. But fear not, even if you have the willful blindness and shriveled heart of an editor at the New York Times you can at least coo at the excellent costumes designed for the villains.

If you want a film that subtly uses character, plot and myth to explore oppression and solidarity, attraction and betrayal, go see Portrait of a Lady on Fire, which is easily one of the best films of the year.

But very few people are going to watch a French feminist historical drama, and tons will see Rise of Skywalker. Most of them will probably enjoy the uncomplicated pleasure of freebasing action scenes, even as critics deplore the absence of Last Jedi’s middlebrow affectations.


Rating: C+ execution of a B film

promotional image of the cast of Rise of Skywalker

(1) By my reckoning, the original Star Wars, Empire, and about half of Last Jedi are “good”
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Review: A Choir of Lies

Nov. 27th, 2019 03:58 pm
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In much of secondary world fantasy, following Tolkien’s example, the pleasure comes from seeing good people struggle against sinister forces to right wrongs and restore order; a sometimes-sententious pleasure not dissimilar to that found in reading a classic mystery novel. And, not unlike the way the mystery genre expanded to include film noir, in fantasy you sometimes see complicated antiheroes making existential choices in dark, brutal world—think Elric or a Song of Ice and Fire

In A Choir of Lies, Alexandra Rowland uses a secondary world to do something different, and more relevant to our lives—showing people grappling with their own messy natures and complicated relationships. Where character is revealed in the way that people choose to confront (or avert their eyes from), the way their actions have spun out of control and beyond their intentions. Where virtues and weaknesses exist not only in individuals but also in communities and social structures.

I read Choir in in a day, in great, greedy gulps. It repays re-reading, as Alex packs in not only many vividly imagined characters (some of whom you will adore, and some of whom will break your heart) but also deft worldbuilding, independent stories, and a plot that with a wry, Galbraithian twist. It takes real skill to stitch economics, gender theory, poetics, fashion into a hopepunk page turner.

You can’t talk about Choir without mentioning the true humor in its structure—one skilled storyteller writing arch commentary in the manuscript written by another spinner of tales—neither completely reliable narrators, but both altogether sympathetic.

One of the very best SFF books of the 2019.
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Arisia:makes another "inexcusable failure", It is time to end this con.

Aug. 14th, 2019 04:30 pm
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This past weekend, the Arisia Eboard sent corporate membership an e-mail concerning an “IR that involves a conviction and restraining order against a current Eboard member” The Eboard had known about this since December 6th, but because of an “error” and “the complexity of the issue” it was not dealt with for eight months, and when it was the result was that the e-board member was removed from Incident Report Management Committee where he had been serving. For the eight months after self-reporting the conviction and restraining order.
 
Everyone should understand the elephant sized context: on October 25th, 2018 Crystal Huff published “Why I’m Not At Arisia Anymore: My Rapist is President. Again.” Which led other individuals to share other incidents Arisia they felt mishandled. Guests of Honor and many volunteers, panelists and attendees announced that they would not attend the convention.

After the resignation five Eboard members, on Sunday November 11th, replacements were elected, in running for office the current president addressed the crisis stating: “We will need to make changes, and it seems clear that these will require particular attention to how we address abuse by the people in positions of power in our community”

 
On November 23rd Eboard apologized saying: ’Over a span of years, we as an organization have mishandled multiple incident reports, putting the safety of the entire community into question, and causing grave harm to several individuals.”  and noting that “Arisia withhold vital information and allow important details to slip off the radar”
 
Yet, only 16 days later, when confronted with circumstances that clearly needed to be dealt with immediately, Arisia’s leadership dithered and delayed for eight months.  
 
Given this track record, the most straightforward path to deal with the current $150,000 judgment against the convention is to dissolve the corporation. Possibly people untainted by current or former leadership in Arisia might acquire assets and raise support from the SFF community to start a new event with a clean slate. Possibly not. But at least Arisia would cease to exist, and it is clear at this point this that would be a good thing for SFF in New England.
 
There are those tempted to minimize yet another disaster. But the Eboard itself describes it as "an inexcusable failure" putting "trust in the IR process in jeopardy." 
 
Even if one didn't care at all about the substance of safety, a simple concern for appearances should have made it obvious that it was impossible to have someone with a conviction and a restraining order to be involved, for even one day, on the Incident Report Management Committee. 
 
That this happened directly on the heels of last fall’s crisis points to a general failure in the culture of the convention. It is or ought to be clear at this point that Arisia’s instinct to power through to make the convention happen at any cost is not a superpower, but a tragic flaw, a perversion of something once useful. 
 
 
There are, of course, many great things that have happened at Arisia over the years. The instinct to want to salvage that was to people's credit. This past year many people gave the con a last chance to recover and show it can do the right thing.
 
Arisia has failed that test. 
 
Arisia is past saving. Let it die. 
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Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

Jul. 24th, 2019 10:15 pm
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Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is a stylish elegy to Los Angeles and the stories spun there.

In other words, the type of tale we least need. Apart from, possibly, lit fic about a middle-aged professor having a midlife crisis and sleeping with a student.
 
And yet…  is there anyone better at conjuring pop culture to summon stylish surfaces?
 
Tarantino perfectly recreates the look of mainstream media from 1969, but his obvious affection can’t mask what a dead end the era’s westerns, war movies, cop shows, and comedies were. We note the care he takes, but can’t help but laugh at what he cares for.
 
Many boomers, no doubt, will eat this stuff up. After all, it’s been days since the anniversary coverage of the moon landing, and they’ll be hungry to have their youth centered again.
 
But the nostalgia is underpinned by well crafted characters. Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) a fading star and his BBF/stunt double Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) struggle to stay relevant in an industry looking to extract the last value from their careers, and they navigate a city and society changing around them. Their lives contrast with Rick’s neighbor Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie), a golden demigoddess effortlessly and appealingly enjoying her rise as an actress.  All complicated, of course, by our knowledge that Sharon Tate was killed in a horrific crime at the end of the year. All three performances are exceptional, and the 161-minute run time never drags.
 
The climax is unexpected yet inevitable.  Even if you enjoy the rest of the film, you may bounce off here. As for myself, it seemed entirely in keeping with interests and agenda of the rest of the movie.

movie still

 
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Framing the Future: Utopias

Jul. 16th, 2019 03:23 pm
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I haven't taken advantage of Dreamwidth other than to get excited and engage with other people's work, which is a bit of a lost opportunity. So I thought I'd share a blog post, that eventually got turned into a longer essay on optimism in my zine.

Shiny postmodern buildings: the go-to visual metaphor for utopias


Utopias use ambitious world building to get to the root of some truth about society. They imagine a better world to explore what could be fundamentally different about our own. Utopias, then, differ in tone but have a similar purpose to serious dystopian works like The Handmaid’s Tale. Utopian and dystopian traditions, at their best, are partners tidally locked; circling, facing and influencing each other.

Herland, a story written in 1915 about three male explorers encountering a remote advanced civilization made up entirely of women, gave Charlotte Perkins Gilman a way to interrogate gender roles, and vividly imagine how women could thrive if they were not forced into an unnatural state of legal dependence on men.

In The Shape of Things to Come, H.G. Wells wrestles with the specters haunting the 1930s, imagining a future historical process by which war and want are defeated, and religion and the state have been abolished. It is a world where all humans are geniuses, and there is no underclass.

You might have noticed that Wells is imagining a world populated exclusively by people very similar to himself. Some utopias have an earned reputation for intolerant universalism. But the imaginative exploration in a utopia isn’t necessarily and always a literal plan of action, it can be a move to abstraction to bring certain ideas into focus. This may have been clearer when utopias were set typically set in vaguely located distant lands, before globalization pushed them into the future, with its implications of progress and teleology.

Regardless, some utopian visions are cosmopolitan and embrace plural conceptions of the different ways good lives can be constituted. This is even true of pop culture stories that imagine human progress while also being concerned with telling an interesting yarn. Sometimes this is as simple as the original Star Trek’s celebration of IDIC: Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations. As Roddenberry described it, if we get to the 23rd century: “We will learn that differences in ideas and attitudes are a delight, part of life’s exciting variety, not something to fear.” If this has a whiff of articles in bourgeois lifestyle magazines, it is still opposed to the ethno-nationalisms of its time and ours.

The challenges of cosmopolitanism can also be explored in more depth, as in the nuanced way Iain Banks in the Culture novels grapples with an advanced post scarcity utopia interacting with other societies. A particularly amusing example is his short story The State of the Art which inverts the prime directive dramas of Star Trek by having an advanced society encounter 1970s Earth, with characters arguing about how best to deal with such a violent and inequitable world. In the end, our planet is left alone and uncontacted. We will be a control group used to judge the impact of their interventions helping other civilizations. Samantha Power would not be pleased.

In writing the Return the Stars space opera RPG, I wanted to make sure that valuing and respecting difference was an important concern for the player characters, and so is universal respect for human rights. There can be a lot of drama and perhaps something to learn when transcendent ideals clash. Taking a Sophoclean (philosophically, if not dramatically ) approach may not be a normal move in game design, but hey, that’s why indies exist!

Some object to utopias because they see fiction itself as disconnected from social issues (the “get your politics/existence out of my <insert media category here>” mobs.) Others, perhaps, are concerned because they worry that utopias are a species of escapism that promotes quiet acceptance of the way things are.


Begum Rokeya

But consider the case of Bengali feminist and political activist Begum Rokeya, who fought for women’s education and employment. Her 1905 utopian satire Sultana’s Dream reverses traditional society and portrays a world where men are forced into seclusion while women run the world. It not apart from but rather stands as a part of her activism writting essays, founding schools and the Muslim Woman’s Association. Every year Bangladesh celebrates her accomplishments by awarding a prize in her name to women for outstanding contributions to society and the empowerment of women.

While Bangladesh honors Begum Rokeya, few Americans today even remember Edward Bellamy, although he is arguably one of the most important, influential and successful authors in the nation’s history. His 1888 utopia Looking Backwards demonstrates all the imaginative innovation that would, decades later, be the hallmark of the so-called “golden age” of pulp science fiction. He foresaw that by the next millennia there would be credit cards, shopping malls, and even a sort of on-line communication derived from the then newly invented telephone.

Looking Bakcwards

But these ideas were in the service of a broader agenda—fighting the inequality, wage stagnation and corruption of the first gilded age of robber barons. Looking Backwards thrusts its protagonist a century into the future, where capitalism is abolished and industry nationalized. It is a world where “The nation guarantees the nurture, education and comfortable maintenance of every citizen from the cradle to the grave.”

It is hard to overstate the contemporary impact of Looking Backwards. It was the second American novel (Uncle’s Tom’s Cabin being the first) to sell more than a million copies. It is said that the book could be found in every union hall. Within a few years, a mass movement of at least 165 political clubs across America were founded to spread the book’s ideas. Tolstoy called it “exceedingly remarkable” and insisted that it must be translated. It was. Widely. Looking Backwards was one of the first works of western science fiction published in China. John Dewey and Charles Beard both ranked it second only to Das Kapital among the important books of their time.

In 1890, a young Charlotte Perkins Gilman joined a Bellamy Club, and quickly became a featured speaker, starting her career by writing poems and essays in the movement’s publications.

She was not alone. The clubs and the associated People’s Party, more commonly known as the Populists, were short lived, but they were the catalyst for the next 30 years of progressive politics—and nearly every important progressive activist, politician, and union organizer of the era read Bellamy. Prime Minister Clement Attlee described the eventual socialist It may be hard for you to imagine any novel, much less a science fiction utopia, being anywhere near as influential today. If so, consider how doggedly the post war establishment worked to destroy the vital connections between culture and politics. Blacklists and the House Un-American Activities Committee were the stick. The “professionalization” of writing was the carrot.

As Eric Bennett describes in Workshops of Empire money poured into MFA programs from foundations (and, in one noteworthy instance, a CIA front organization) as part of the cold war agenda to create a de-radicalized literature that values “sensations, not doctrines; experiences, not dogmas; memories, not philosophies.” It is perhaps telling that Paul Engle, longtime director of the Iowa Writers Workshop, wrote in a proposal: “It is important that these most articulate of all their generation should write and study far from both coasts, where foreign students have tended to concentrate. Here they will learn the essential America.”

If today we fail to see the full potential of both utopian and dystopian genre fiction to strengthen and inspire people working to create a better and more just world, it may be because we have been carefully taught that interiority and artful subjectivity are the true hallmarks of literary fiction, and that the only real purpose genre can serve is entertainment.

Speculative fiction is a great way to explore political ideas and cultural norms. Utopias are part of its toolkit. I believe there is value in picking up this tool and trying to learn how best to use it.



"R.E.M. - Shiny Happy People (Official Music Video)" (Watch on YouTube)



Sensible Gen Xers enjoy this video ironically, if at all. I do so unreservedly

 

Utopia is a unclear/contested term. People who express a dislike of utopias or otherwise differ with what I’ve writting may have in mind a definition different the one I express in the first sentence. (Alternatively, I’m more than capable of being wrong.)

Note specifically I’m considering utopian literature to include better worlds, not only thought exercises that imagine “perfect” futures without any conflict or struggle.

Hat tip to Mimi Mondal, who wrote an article that led me learn about Sultana’s Dream.

It will not surprise you that as a man who lived in the 19th century, Bellamy had some problematic ideas. One thing that is interesting about him is that he was willing to change his mind and grow in response to feedback. Looking Backwards had a very sentimental view of women. Three years later he would write “Some men oppress other men, all men oppress women.” It is interesting to speculate how he might have continued to evolve and grown if he hadn’t died of tuberculosis in his 40s.

 

You may be interested to compare and contrast utopias with hopepunk.

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Beginings

Jun. 8th, 2018 06:06 pm
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While I'm not entirely certain that I need another haunt on the web where I can blather, it seemed worthwhile to create an account as interesting people seem to congregate here.
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Mark Sabalauskas
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Page Summary

  • Return to the Stars up for an Indie Groundbreaker award this evening
  • Do Rules "Matter"?
  • Serendipity Issue of the Stellar Beacon released
  • Review: Rise of Skywalker
  • Review: A Choir of Lies
  • Arisia:makes another "inexcusable failure", It is time to end this con.
  • Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
  • Framing the Future: Utopias
  • Beginings

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