Sunday, February 22, 2026

Animal Crossing New Horizons

The other game I've been playing recently on Switch 2 is Animal Crossing. I returned to this after five years and decided to make a fresh start with a new island as I'd forgotten a lot of the mechanics and surprises. The new HD graphics and general polish make this feel like a whole new game, and I've quickly got back into the daily rhythm of collecting fruit, digging for fossils, fishing, bug hunting, snowman building and general pottering around in small doses.

I suspect I am going to rack up a whole extra year of daily play on this!



No Man's Sky : Remnant

The game No Man's Sky continues to evolve in surprising and enjoyable ways. The latest Remnant expedition introduces a gravity gun and some new options for customising the Colossus crawler with a flatbed tipper chassis, and then sets you loose on a planet where you collect industrial scrap that you load into your truck and take across hazardous terrain to a recycling centre where you launch it into various fiery furnaces for nanites. It becomes even more fun (and nerve wracking) when some of the waste you collect is volatile, either toxic, radioactive or explosive, and you have to carefully avoid craters and rough terrain for fear of it all going boom, like the old film Wages of Fear about truckers transporting dynamite through the jungle. 



There are other options to choose tank tracks, off-road tyres or spider legs for your vehicle, depending on the terrain. The final upgrade adds a scoop to the front that lets you happily bulldoze through rocks, plants and (ahem) wildlife  collecting resources as you go. 

I've been playing this mainly on Switch 2, but it also cross saves seamlessly to my PS5 and MacOs versions of the game. This particular expedition is somewhat unusual as it's all based on a single planet rather than the regular planet hopping, so the multiplayer can have lots of other people driving around at the same time. There is some speculation that this is a network stress test for the forthcoming Light No Fire game which also promises massively multiplayer co-op play.


Daisy


Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere


In 1981, Bruce Springsteen was on a roll. After the release of the critically acclaimed and chart topping album The River and a sellout tour to large crowds, everyone (not least the record company) was eagerly anticipating the next big hit from the Boss.

However, there was a darkness on the edge of Bruce's metaphorical town. The tour had been physically and emotionally gruelling, and the long studio sessions for the previous album had eaten through all but $20,000 of his savings. He rented a house by a lake in the small town of Colts Neck and bought a simple four track cassette recorder, turning one of the unused bedrooms in the otherwise empty house into a home studio with the aid of his engineer Mike Batlan. 

The plan was to work on demo recordings in advance of the studio sessions with the band but things took a darker turn. Bruce was evidently rattling around in the house on his own when he caught the movie Badlands on the TV. This led him to research the Starkweather spree killings that inspired the film, which he turned into a grim first person narrative murder ballad called Nebraska. 

Other songs started to flow - tales of working class struggles and troubled people, evidently inspired by memories of his relationship with his damaged and abusive father (shown in black and white flashbacks). At one point he also starts listening to the song Frankie Teardrop by the band Suicide, which Mike Batlan advises him not to listen to on repeat. 

Around this time he starts a tentative relationship with a young single mother called Faye that he meets after a gig at a local bar where he has been blowing off steam playing with old Jersey friends. This is a composite character created for the film, but it shows his difficulty in committing to any sort of lasting relationship at this time in his life.

As his mental health spirals and the recording sessions with the band are struggling (a stellar recording of Born in the USA being the one high point), he insists on putting out the lo-fi home recordings out as an album, warts and all. Fortunately his manager and producer Jon Landau saw where he was coming from and backed him in the face of record company scepticism to release the album Nebraska with zero fanfare (although having a sure fire hit in the bag probably helped).

That's pretty much the film, but it's a worthwhile watch mainly for the performances of Jeremy Allen White as Springsteen and Stephen Graham as his father, and the music which sees White recreating the feeling of those haunting recordings on Nebraska as well as the punch the air live performances in a couple of scenes. 

Seed

From a tiny seed
The tallest tree may grow
When planted with care

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Grasshopper

A warrior waits
Your journey has just begun
Patience, Grasshopper

Friday, February 20, 2026

Day, Sail

When I was a child
Each day seemed like a lifetime
Now they just sail by