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@Xexyz@mastodon.me.uk
2025-10-20 11:06:27

The Stanley Parable: completed!
The Stanley Parable is an odd narrative game, where you are effectively given instructions by the narrator.  As an office worker, you suddenly realise that everyone else has disappeared, and it feels that the point of the game is to understand why.  If it were a traditional game, that would be the case. The game is most fun, or rather funny, when not following instructions.

@portaloffreedom@social.linux.pizza
2025-10-21 11:16:25
Content warning: Framework, politics

I don't think at framework they are racists or transphobes or xenophobes or fascists in general.
I think it's just a living example of the parable of the Nazi bar. They might not believe in it, but that does not change that they are going in that direction.
I wonder how the work culture will be influenced by this. Will people leave and will they hire more white supremacists as a replacement?

@bencurthoys@mastodon.social
2025-10-16 21:24:32

The parable of the Emperor's New Clothes, but the Emperor is the one from Warhammer 40,000.

@davidaugust@mastodon.online
2025-12-09 17:56:52

I wrote a short story, a sort of parable, and you can read it first if you subscribe (for free) to my ghost. I'll release it to subscribers later today. I am titling it "To Sea."
Subscribe here: stuff.davidaugust.com/

@qurlyjoe@mstdn.social
2025-12-10 22:28:09

You approach a wide river on your journey. To get to the other side you must build a raft. After many attempts and false starts you at last are able to cross the river. Once you reach the other side, you continue on your journey, but the raft is heavy, no longer useful, and so you leave the raft behind, that others may use it to cross the river. This is the parable of the raft.

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-09-26 17:02:50

Day 3: Octavia Butler.
Incredibly dark, graphic, and disturbing near-future science fiction, which has proved absolutely prophetic. In the 1990's she was writing about a charismatic Conservative Christian and white nationalist president elected in 2024, and the horrors his paramilitary followers would unleash, including forced labor & indoctrination camps. Did I mention those books include ebikes & pseudo-cellphones too? Characters fleeing north from a disastrous social collapse in Loss Angeles? This is "The Parable of the Sower" and "The Parable of the Talents" and the later was tragically rushed to an end because of Butler's declining health.
Her work deals unflinchingly with racism and the darker parts of society, and to those who might say "her depiction of social collapse is overblown," I'd say that while it's not literally the world we live in, it's *effectively* the world that the poorest of us live in. If you're a homeless undocumented latinx person in LA right now, I'm not sure how meaningfully different your world is from the one she depicts.
Her work comes with a strong content warning for lots of things, including racial violence, sexual abuse and slavery, including of children, animal harm, etc., so it's not for everyone. Reading it in 2023 was certainly an incredible trip. Her politics are really cool though; with explicit pro-LGBTQ themes and tinges of what might today be considered #SolarPunk.
#20WomenAuthors

@sauer_lauwarm@mastodon.social
2025-09-22 13:30:33

a stark, black-and-white parable that unfolds like a myth carved in stone