This is how I feel about playing Outer Wilds.
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I came to the comments just to say this. I'm glad I'm not the only one
I need to play this. I get the same feelings with RPGs or really good open world games. Would love to add another to the list
GNU Terry Pratchett
Or as I've recently come to calling it, GNU + Terry Pratchett
I've barely read any books since he died tbh.
Maybe try some sex instead
You are missing out. There is so much greatness out there
Greatest Nut Ultimately?
I'm a Stephen king fan, so by the time I finish one of his books he's written 3 more
Dungeon Crawler Carl for all you video game nerds. Listen to the audiobook...
I'm lying. I've reread it multiple times and picked up new things each run.
You can enjoy the rereads while knowing that the first read is a unique experience!
The problem with DCC is the next book isn’t written yet :(
So you get that prolonged feeling with each new book. Same with he who fights monsters- another decent LitRPG series.
I’m lying. I’ve reread it multiple times and picked up new things each run.
Treating DCC like NetHack, I can dig it.
Any interesting sci Fi or magic/fantasy books that did this to you? I'm looking for something new!
Definitely The Expanse series if you haven't read it yet. I loved so many of the charcters, a bit sad to not be reading about them anymore.
May I present to you the next series James S. A. Corey are writing? The Captive's War!
I've enjoyed the book and novella published so far, and definitely sated that itch I had after finishing the Expanse. :)
I have this a lot, but the most it has happend was about 10 years ago with the webserial worm ( https://parahumans.wordpress.com/ ), I read it so much. I read it before work, I read it during lunch, I read it when I got home, I went to sleep late etc. etc.
When it was done I had forgotten what to do with my time, I wound up re-reading it again but slower at a few chapters a day rather than turning myself into a gremlin for maximal reading efficiency.
If you want a summary, it's a superhero story, which usually really isn't for me, but something about the tone of the writing and the way the world worked in this one made it work.
Powers are incredibly varied, but the strongest characters are the ones who know how to use their powers well, the protagonist exemplifies this, where she doesn't get a cool flashy power but she figures out how to use it so well and adapt to each situation that she becomes terrifying.
I also liked the charactersation of the heroes and the villains, where the heroes are somewhat vain and egotistical which means they do good things when the cameras are rolling rather than being "morally good". the villains are mostly just people on the edges of society for a mix of reasons which means they do what they want, but I think since then "The Boys" has also done something similar so the effect may be lessened.
Curious if anyone else on Lemmy has wound up reading it.
The Player of Games by Iain M. Banks
Nearly all of the culture books! The very first scene of the very first book, Consider Phlebas, just sets the bar so high (and is only one scene). It outdoes entire other works of horror in just half a chapter... and then the actual action starts.
Great book as well. Of all the sci-fi universes, The Culture is the one I want to live in the most.
Sanderson's big fantasy series right now, the stormlight archive. Oh my god, each book is just made to make you get drawn deeper, and deeper until you hit the end. The gap between the first and second book was so freaking long to wait. I think we're up to book five now, so you don't have to have that feeling for a while.
Alternatively, if you like blue fantasy (talking animals and wise spirit guides that help sometimes hapless humans), mercedes lackey did great things with her heralds of valdemar series. I'd actually recommend jumping into it at a later point because her writing greatly improved from the first trilogy. You could start with magic's pawn/promise/price, which has one of the earliest depictions of lgbt protagonists I ever read.
If you like more 'earthy' fantasy, the wit'chfire series (actual series name, banned and the banished) by james clemens (who I just found out is a pseudonym for a sci-fi author who didn't want to be 'smeared' as a fantasy author and has some other good books when i googled for the name) is really good. Don't start his other series, because even though it was fantastic, it's never going to be finished. I think we're at like 30 years now and never gotten the third book.
And then there's the big one, the bold one, the 'start you off so small and build you into a great, grand sweeping epic' jim butcher series: the codex alera. The first book was riveting from start to finish. I actually think it was the best one, because the worldbuilding was just so sublime. I loved the characters more and more with each added book, but the magic of the beginning was just amazing.
I read a stupid amount of SF and fantasy (up to 60 books so far this year), and I keep notes, so if there's a particular kind of thing you enjoy I might be able to make a more focused recommendation.
I believe I've read everything recommended in reply to you, and most are excellent. Some books I've read recently that really pulled me in, and that I didn't see mentioned elsewhere, are:
- Sleeping Giants, Neuvel
- Ammonite, Griffith
- Spin, Wilson
- The Space Between Worlds, Johnson
- Service Model, Tchaikovsky
- The Tainted Cup, Bennett
Lots of others of I go further back. I hope you find something you love.
The Red Rising trilogy left me with this feeling. I loved the terraformation zones descriptions and how the technology is described and implemented.
The story takes lots of twists and turns, kept me glued to the books.
Me recently with Project Hail Mary. Now just reading sub par sci-fi space books trying to chase that same feeling of exploration and wonder.
That was playing red dead redemption 2 for me
Often. That why I don’t start a series of books unless there are at least like 4-5 in the series. But even then the series ends sometimes and it feels like you’ve lost a dear friend.
The Baroque Cycle by Neal Stevenson did that for me. 2700+ pages and it felt like I needed more
I still haven't recovered from reading The Left Hand of Darkness and The Dispossessed
About to start another replay of The Last of Us both one and two. I would pay a lot of money to be able to forget the story and experience it again anew.
Nah, I have to settle for sex instead. :'(
I go read analyses and reviews of it to see what other people think of it. Its sort of like being slowly weened off of the original work, bit it can also let you appreciate it in new ways.
After watching Breaking Bad, I felt as if a part of my life had been torn away from me and I have been left with a hole.
Dunno about books, but I've recently caught up, finally, to the last season of Agents of Shield, the only one left for me to watch, years later after its debut. Truly felt I'd miss the gang.
Agents of Shield did something MCU doesn't: followed a few main characters, and eventually ended. The MCU just keeps going, adding some characters, removing others. Replace some. Just so much going on in parallel, and never really ending either.
I enjoy the movies, and even other shows, but they just don't follow characters this closely for long enough for us to care? Idk. Agents of Shield, through its seven seasons, followed a group of people, eventual close pals, and had a proper, graceful ending. Did not hint at more and then vanish
Edit: actually, I read Loveless, by Alice Oseman, and felt similar. I am not a book reader, so I don't have much experience on this. Once more, following characters closely as they change, evolve, develop. And then it ends. Like, what now? That's it? Snap, back to reality?
Also, these fictional characters and their close relationships, friendships. Where my group of cool, close pals? I want my gang, too! Why not I. R. have close friend? Where besties?
I remember the first time finishing the Lord of the Rings. I was heartbroken knowing I couldn’t read it again for the first time. I still remember-read it a bunch, and still feel saddened by reaching the ending every time.
The first two Kingkiller books.
Where's the god damn 3rd book, Patrick? I
Many books have done this to me, but the most significant recent experience of this was Elden Ring.
Probably The Count of Monte Cristo. Really the perfect book in my opinion - long, but with so much going on and so many interweaving plotlines that it kept me interested throughout. What an adventure.