This week, Eden and Peter discuss their changing musical tastes.
Pixels, Preferences, and the Passage of Time: A Gaming Journey
This week on "The Middle of Culture," Eden and Peter dive into the ever-shifting landscape of their video game tastes. But before they press start on the main topic, they level up listeners with their recent media adventures!
Eden takes us on a whirlwind tour:
- They ponder whether "The Wild Robot" tugs at heartstrings or manipulates emotions
- Their dragon-sized anticipation for "Dragon Age: The Veilguard," complete with a nostalgic stroll through Bioware's gaming history
- A yakuza-style plunge into "Like A Dragon"
- A sneak peek into the fashionable world of the upcoming "Infinity Nikki"
- Unraveling the intricate threads of "Claudine," a comic that boldly tackles gender and relationship complexities
Peter's playlist is just as diverse:
- Gearing up for demon-slaying action in Diablo IV's "Vessel of Hatred" expansion
- Falling head over heels for Balatro's iOS debut
- Diving into the mystical depths of "The Well of Ascension"
- Clocking in for some laughs with "Superstore"
- A headbanging journey through recent metal releases featuring Sylosis, Blood Incantation, Devenial Verdict, and a potential album of the year from Lowen
Finally, our hosts press pause on their current obsessions to reflect on how their gaming preferences have evolved. They explore their drift away from the intense worlds of RTS, TBS, and FPS genres, gravitating instead towards immersive RPGs and laid-back sim games that offer a different kind of digital escape.
Join Eden and Peter as they navigate the changing tides of their virtual adventures, proving that in gaming, as in life, the only constant is change!
The Middle of Culture is what happens when two siblings with too many opinions and not enough chill dive headfirst into movies, music, video games, and whatever else is rotting our brains this week. It’s part pop culture podcast, part sibling rivalry, and fully unfiltered. Expect passionate arguments, niche references, unsolicited rankings, and the occasional moment of unexpected insight. If you’ve ever wanted to eavesdrop on the kind of argument you’d hear at the family dinner table—only with better audio—this is your show.