Showing posts with label relaxing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relaxing. Show all posts

Monday, December 26, 2022

Fiber Monday

 

In Which I Am Pooped
And I'm Sure You Are Too.


Friends, Craftsfolk, Netizens...

The Christmas Crunch of 2022 is finally over.

I was hooking up a storm right up til 9AM on Christmas morning, finishing my dad's gift - a simple half-double-crochet hat - and it's finally, finally over.

Now begins the Christmas Crash.

The Christmas Crash is exactly what it sounds like - after you've finished the Crush, you're exhausted, so you basically take a week off. As 99% of my activities were Crochet-Related, I'll be taking the rest of this week away from yarn, I think.

If that changes, you'll know because I'll have something new next Monday and a frantic explanation of why I totally couldn't take time off because I had a great idea lol.

For now, though, I'll take a break. My knuckles are sore and it'd be nice to watch a video without subconsciously counting stitches.

It is so important to take breaks. Please remember to rest your hands after a long period of crafting! You can't make if you can't move!

I should be back tomorrow to talk about the final stretch to Christmas and my plans for the next few days, but for now...

Go Enjoy Something!
FC

Saturday, August 10, 2019

Saturday Casual Gaming 232: Unpuzzle

"Unpuzzle" by Kek Studios on Kongregate

When I was little, my dad would hand my sisters and I puzzle books by Dell or whoever and we'd go straight to town, scribbling in answers to logic problems and Sudoku to our little hearts' contents. We still use those books from time to time, even as adults! So thank you, dad, for a lifelong love of puzzle games.

While looking for a game to write about, I stumbled on Kek Studios on Kongregate, and they had what I was searching for: A logical, order-of-operations game called Unpuzzle.


It does what it says on the tin. You undo the puzzle!

With great, relaxing New Age-y music and a clean, minimalist style, Unpuzzle is chill and challenging at once. You are presented with a puzzle and you must swipe away each of the pieces. Some are locked with numbers indicating an amount of pieces you must first remove. Some are blocked in by the tabs and slots on the pieces themselves. Some are unidirectional (as indicated by blue chevrons), some are connected to one another via a blue design in the center, and some can even rotate! Finally, some can even teleport to other locations on the board!

If you're a logic-minded person, you probably already know where to start!
If not, let me get you started: it's the piece next to the one that can't move for 9 moves.

Talk about simple gameplay! This is definitely one of those "minutes to learn, lifetime to master" kind of puzzles, and I'm all about that. I understand there are also Apps on Android for Unpuzzle and its sequel, and I hope they're just as great as the online version! Kek Studios have been on Kongregate for three years (their anniversary was August 2) and all five of their games are simple yet complex and I love it.

Rock on, Kek Studios!

Go Enjoy Something!
FC

Saturday, June 29, 2019

Saturday Casual Gaming 226: Coloring Pixels

Since I started gaming with handhelds back in the 1990s, you can guess that I love me some pixels. I love 8- and 16-bit (and 32-bit!) images. I love the creativity inherent in stacking colored blocks to make things look recognizable or to come up with something brand new! It's always wonderful.

And since I draw and color and paint, you might be able to guess that I love coloring books.

I do not have a ton of space for coloring books, however, so the recent boom in digital coloring books has been a major boon to me! I was bumming around last year on Steam and found this:

From ToastieLabs, this is Coloring Pixels
Coloring Pixels is a really cool free-to-play coloring book you can download from Steam and fill in beautiful pixel art images that range from incredibly simple shapes to incredibly lush scenes. I love the way it looks, the fact that there are occasionally overlays for holidays (there was snow around Christmas, drifting slowly over the screen, and the edges of the screen were, I believe, on fire around Halloween) just makes it more fun!

Now, I'm the kind of coloring person who likes to finish one color before moving on to the next, which works really easily on small images, but when you get here...

Well... once you get into the crazy amount of colors, things go much slower.
Much. Much slower.
But your reward for finishing each image is that wonderful sense of accomplishment from completing a very difficult task! And it really does feel like an accomplishment. You feel like you've done something, and on days when I literally can't will myself out of bed, that can be soothing.

It's not done, yet, but this is a zoomed-in portion of that same image!
Looooook at allllll that deeeeetaaaaaaiiillllll!
Now, the argument can certainly be made that these sorts of things are not, technically, games, but I'm going to count it because it was free, it makes me happy, it requires input, and you are, technically, finishing tasks to get to an end goal. The tasks are just "input all colors in the appropriate locations" and the end goal is just "finish the picture"...

I did mention that it's only kind of a free game. There is DLC. The DLC is really cool, but it also costs money, which means it isn't happening for me. I mean, there are 12 DLC packs (all of which sound fun), and none of them are more than a dollar. The only reason the "Buy All" function on Steam tells you it's over sixteen dollars is the addition of a downloadable copy of the soundtrack. While the music is pretty fun, it's not something I'm dying to download, but I can always appreciate wanting people to pay you for the music.

That wasn't sarcasm. I've played music in a community band before. The number of people who took "community band" to mean "free of charge because we're not famous" was horrific. No, we will not play your wedding for free. The band itself does have financial needs. Like renting practice space and buying water.

What I'm saying here is, I don't think soundtracks should always be free to download. It's cool when a company can afford to do it, but I'm not going to be butthurt when it's under seven bucks.

If they were charging twenty bucks for the soundtrack, then I'd be butthurt.

But yes, the art you're coloring, the colors you use, the soundtrack, the little extras (like the holiday particle effects), and the overall game itself are more than worth your time if you need a moment of zen!

Go Enjoy Something!
FC