Triple Click - How to Make Friends and Have Better Conversations
Episode Date: November 21, 2024You all asked for advice, so here it is! Kirk, Maddy, and Jason open up the mailbag for a special Burning Questions all about life advice. They talk about how to make friends as adults, how to have be...tter conversations, how to convince your children to cook with you and much more.One More Thing:Kirk: Echo Point NovaMaddy: Scream 2 + 3Jason: Dragon Quest III HD-2D RemakeLINKS:Support Triple Click: http://maximumfun.org/joinBuy Triple Click Merch: https://maxfunstore.com/search?q=triple+click&options%5Bprefix%5D=lastJoin the Triple Click Discord: http://discord.gg/tripleclickpodTriple Click Ethics Policy: https://maximumfun.org/triple-click-ethics-policy/ Happy MaxFunDrive! Right now is the best time to start a membership to support your favorite shows. Learn more and join at https://maximumfun.org/jointripleclick 🚀 SUPPORT TRIPLE CLICK:Join Maximum Fun | Buy TC Merch💬 JOIN THE TRIPLE CLICK DISCORD🎮 Triple Click Ethics Policy📱 SOCIALS | @tripleclickpodInstagram | YouTube | TikTok | Twitch
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Here's some advice. If you're listening to a podcast and the first thing the host does is offer you some advice, that person is probably great at advice and you should listen to everything they say.
Welcome to Triple Click where we bring the advice to you.
This week we are giving listeners advice on all sorts of topics from making friends as an adult to becoming a better conversationalist, maintaining ties with your friends who've just become new parents and getting your kids into cooking.
I'm Kirk Hamilton.
I'm Maddie Myers.
And I'm Jason Shrier.
Hello.
Hello. Hello. Hello. Wow. What's this voice? That's a very somber greeting, Jason. I like this. I mean, it's good, but it's different.
This is our 60 minutes phase. Yeah, this is NPR. Hello. Welcome. Well, I guess we are being kind of formal this week, given the topic. I mean, we're really getting into it. We're really getting into our feels and seriousness. We are. And like NPR, we are also supported by listeners. And, uh, we are really getting into our feels and seriousness. And, uh, we are also supported by listeners. And, uh,
By the public.
That could be you.
That's true.
You could be one of the public, one of the members of the public who support the creation
of triple click every week.
If you go to Maximumfund.org slash join it.
Sign up to become a member.
You know, you'll be throwing us a bone.
You'll be allowing us to keep this big podcast ship afloat.
Yeah.
And also, of course, you'll be supporting Maximum Fun, a wonderful worker-owned podcast network.
So, yeah, if you do that,
Those are all the sort of altruistic reasons to do it, but also you will get a lot of bonus content from us and actually from every maximum fun show, but mostly from us.
We put out a monthly bonus episode and they're kind of about everything.
We have a lot of spoiler casts for different games, movies, TV shows, just things that we like.
And at the moment we are nearing the conclusion of Triple Quest, a three-part D&D campaign, dungeon mastered by the great
Matthew Mercer. It's been super fun. I'm in the process of finishing up Act 3, which is going to, man, there's a lot of fun stuff going on there, doing a lot of music for it, a lot of sound effects. It's been a lot of fun. So I'm excited for that to go out and for everyone to get to hear the grand finale. Of course, you do get those episodes in the main feed on a delay. But if you really want to hear the finale first, maximum fun.org slash join, become a member, and you also get access to loads of other bonus stuff.
All right. So that is enough of that. Jason, what are we doing this week?
This week, we are doling out advice. Burning advice is this week's topic.
Burning advice. A few weeks ago, we took a call for listeners to send in their greatest advice questions.
We put out the call. They took the call. We put out.
Sure. A few weeks ago, we put out a call for listeners to send.
We heated it.
Send some advice questions.
And we got a lot of them.
We got a lot of good ones.
A lot of people asked one that we're not going to get to, which is how do you choose what game to play?
Which we've kind of talked about in the past.
We're not going to answer that one.
But we are going to answer some other ones.
We can't choose that.
It's impossible to know.
We're going to put on our advice hats and try to help people out today as much as we can.
And maybe we'll give them bad advice and steer them in the wrong direction.
Who knows?
All bets are off.
We can't make any promise.
is we're not doctors here at triple click.
We're not doctors.
We're not therapists is something that I thought a lot as I was reading some of these questions
was the fact that we're not therapists.
We are just three people who live our lives as best as we can and we'll give advice
from those three perspectives.
Can I just tell you, Maddie, when I, so I interview people a lot for my job and a lot of
people tell me their stories and often at the end of it they're like, you know, this is like
going to therapy.
That happens to me too.
I'll be like a therapist.
Yeah. And sometimes I do kind of feel that way, especially, but that unlike a therapist, I don't feel like I give them advice at the end. I'm just like, well, thanks for telling me your life story and goodbye.
Right. The key difference being that when you tell your life story to your therapist, they don't then go, like, pull good quotes from it and publish it to the public.
Right. Ideally. I guess that is a little bit of the difference. I mean, maybe there are some experimental types of therapy that do that.
Yeah, today we are publicly doing it. Today we will be publishing.
All of the advice and our recommendation.
So let's get to it.
We're going to do this like we do burning questions where we each read one.
I will kick us off.
This is from Stephen.
Stephen asks, how do you make friends as an adult?
Easy one.
Just a real softball.
Okay, well, my advice is going to be a little different than yours.
My advice is to have children and then you will just be hit by a deluge of birthday parties
and playground dates and school hangouts
and you will meet other parents
and make friends with them.
What do you do if you don't like the other parents,
though? I guess that's a separate advice question,
but it's fine.
Well, that's not a big deal.
I mean, you just don't,
you're just kind of casual to them,
but then you will eventually,
like eventually, hopefully you'll find a couple
that you do really click with
and then you hang out with that.
Other advice includes joining, I don't know, clubs,
churches, synagogues.
Jason.
Chase's advice is have kids.
And then, I don't know, join a club or something.
We're off to a great start here.
Yeah, I don't know.
Well, you guys could talk about the childless experience.
I do think the child-free version is significantly more difficult, no?
I mean, I think it's much harder, especially if you're like trying to limit it from work.
Like if you're like, how do I make friends outside of just making friends from work,
which is probably the main way that you socialize if you're listening?
And I certainly have made friends that way.
But honestly, it's having hobbies.
It's not just joining a club, but having hobbies and then meeting people through having
something else that you do outside of work, which could be anything.
It doesn't have to be video games.
It could be, you know, joining a choir or knitting and meeting people at the yarn store
and hanging out with them.
Or recently my mom got really.
into raising monarch butterflies, and she made a friend doing that, which is really cool, by the way.
That is a cool hobby.
If you get really into that, it's actually like a cool hobby to get into.
So there's all kinds of hobbies you get into, make friends by doing that.
Maddie, one time I took my kids to this nature center near me a few months ago during the summer,
and they have this butterfly exhibit.
And what they do, apparently, is they freeze these butterflies and put them in envelopes and
then mail them to this place.
And so these people, these guides at the nature center, like took out these envelopes.
and inside were frozen, alive butterflies.
And they, like, took him out.
And because of, like, the warmth of their hands, the butterflies, like, woke up.
And they had been in a coma, essentially, for, like, two weeks.
And then they just kind of, like, staggered out and flew into this habitat.
It was crazy.
Butterflies are wild.
That is a magical story that doesn't feel real.
I swear to God, it was crazy.
My kids thought it was awesome.
So this is an example.
So if you think that's cool, that's something you could get into.
You could start volunteering your local butterfly sanctuary.
and get into volunteering and meeting people that way.
Yeah, I think meeting people through an activity can be good because it's sort of, you know, filters for people that have something in common with you, you know.
I actually have known plenty of people.
This has happened to my sister, too, who are parents who make friends with people through their kids and because you do wind up in these social situations.
And then at some point have the realization of like, wait a minute, do I like these people?
Do we have something in common or have we just been thrown in together because our kids are friends?
Because you're not, you know, it's a, that's definitely a distinct way to meet people.
And I've definitely found that it can be good, you know, to filter for a shared activity.
We made some really good friends of ours in Portland because our dogs have the same name.
Our dogs are both named APA and it's a reference to the same TV show.
And someone at the pet store, I think, like, met them and heard about it.
and like they learned their dog's name, and they were like, oh, there's another couple that I know who also named their dog, APA, and wound up, like, connecting us.
And we just sort of met up with them to get a drink or something.
And they're really nice.
And then as it turns out, like, if you name your dog for the same silly animated kids show, like, you're probably going to have other things in common as well.
And so, you know, we are now friends with them.
They're really great.
I think my advice is rather than give more practical advice, like, I think that's good advice.
to have something in common, whether it's kids or a hobby or game night or whatever,
a club that you're all a part of or volunteering.
I think that my advice would be a little broader, which is you have to kind of try
and you have to be open to the idea of actually having a friend and the idea that the person
that you might want to be friends with also wants to be friends with you.
And I think a lot of people run into sort of assuming that no one wants to hang out with them,
where you kind of like start talking to someone who like, I don't know, maybe you met through a work thing or you had something in common like you're at a, you're both at a cafe a lot at the same time and you end up talking a little bit.
And then you're like, ah, well, they probably wouldn't really want to be my friend.
So you don't want to feel overly forward, you know, saying like, hey, you want to get a cup of coffee sometime?
Like, maybe we could just hang out.
And a lot of times, even if you try that, like you offer to get coffee with someone and they're like, yeah, we totally should.
And then it keeps not happening.
Like, it keeps not working out.
It's easy, I think, to then tell yourself like, okay, well, this is a soft no.
Like, they don't really want to be friends.
And that may be the case.
And you should, like, pay attention for that.
But generally, like, it just is sort of hard.
for adults to make the time, to actually connect, and, like, build a friendship.
Like, it's just way harder in your 30s and your 40s than it is when you were in school or,
like, when you were a kid.
And so I think, like, give it time and, like, allow for the possibility that, yes, this person
does want to be your friend, rather than just, like, giving up immediately or not even trying,
which I think is something that stops a lot of people before they start.
Yeah, and be willing to be the first one.
And it's funny, I used to like, I think a lot of people think this way that like, you don't want to be always the one reaching out first and making plans of someone.
You want to wait for them to see, like, make sure they're interested to.
Make sure, like you said, they want to be your friend too.
But I think just kind of putting that inhibition aside and just being like, no, screw it.
I'm just going to reach out first to every person I make.
Otherwise, it won't happen.
I think that can be a healthy way to look at things.
Another piece of advice I'll give, I could give a bunch of these.
I mean, other than like, join clubs and have hobbies, like, we've all.
said. I mean, I don't know, watch football with people, play poker with people, whatever else you
want to do, play sports with people. Another piece of nice I'll give is like reconnect with people
that you used to like and might live near you. I've had some good experiences that way, just like
reaching out to someone on Facebook or texting them or something and be like, hey, like it's been a long time.
I saw you live like 15 minutes away from me now. You want to grab a coffee and catch up.
That can be a good way to do it. And then you can see, like, if you still like them.
sometimes you'll do that and you'll wind up marrying that person.
For instance.
Yeah, well, that could be an added bonus unless you're already married.
If you're already married, then don't feel that.
Yeah, then it could really make your life.
It's kind of stressful.
Next question.
Maddie, you want to read this one?
Sure.
This is from Ellie who writes, love the show, et cetera, et cetera,
great way to start.
Perfect, Ellie.
We'll assume that those acetters mean.
And Kirk is always right about everything.
I agree with it.
It's usually what et cetera I mean.
My advice question.
A close friend.
of mine, my main gaming buddy recently became a father. Since then, I've barely heard from him.
I'm not surprised, of course. I've heard babies demand attention, but I miss my friend. So I guess
this is a two-part question. How can I best support my friend without adding to his pressures,
and how can we game together in a way that works with his new life? Turns out having kids can both
gain you friends and also lose you friends. Yeah. Yeah. I think that's true. That's a real thing.
So Jason, do you feel like it's nice when people reach out to you and try to game with you?
Like, is this something that works for you?
Does it stress you out?
Like, especially because you kind of went from being like the fatherless game, childless gamer, not a fatherless gamer,
childless gamer, to child having gamer who's still sometimes games with friends.
Yeah, very rarely.
I think that gaming, multiplayer gaming, I think, is not something that like is really amenable
with having too small.
children, unless you only do it at night after they're asleep, in which case, like, you're
kind of sacrificing your time with your significant other. So that can be really tough. I think that
that is something, like, I would never, I used to play a ton of destiny and, like, our raid
scheduling. I never, I always would have struggled with that post having a kid. Like, I essentially
stopped playing Destiny when I had a kid. So that's tough. I mean, you might just want to wait a
little while until they get settled into their routine. Because also the other part of this is that
like having, um, being through the first six months to 12 months of having a kid is very different
than once you get into a rhythm and they start getting older and sleeping through the night and
um, you have your routines and patterns. Then it can be a little bit easier to be like,
oh, well, my wife is going to her bridge club meeting tonight. So I could play games and my friends
as opposed to you all hands on deck because the baby needs to be fed every two hours.
So we need to do this.
So one of, I mean, to answer Ellie's question, I think that like as the baby gets older,
I think your friend might be, might have more time to play games with you.
It's just that like right now, literally you have to be up like randomly throughout the night.
You have to be on call all the time.
And things do change.
Things do get better.
So like your friend who you game with might actually just come back to reality.
six months or a year or so. You might just have to give them a little bit of time.
That's a good piece of advice in and of itself. I also think,
Ellie, you can just ask your friend exactly what you asked us and the way that I asked Jason,
too, which is just what do you need in this time? And also just saying to someone, hey, I miss
you. And I know you're going through it. But for what it's worth, like, I miss you and I'm excited
for a time when we can spend time together again is like a nice thing to hear from a friend,
even in a non-needy and weird way.
I'm sure you can square that circle, Ellie.
Yeah, sure. Agreed.
Yeah, I agree with all of that.
And having had friends, I've basically been in Ellie's position
where I've had friends who have had kids
and then have sort of faded for a while and then come back.
And once you do start being able to do things together,
assuming that right when Ellie says recently,
that their friend recently became a father,
like you're probably referring to in the next, like, a few months ago,
which then very much what Jason said.
Like those first few months or that first year is like pretty different.
But once things maybe do settle down and you can start finding time, it's also just helpful to have a little bit more structure.
At least the dads that I play games with and have game night with and play video games with.
Like it's definitely helpful for them to schedule a lot more.
Like it's less easy, I think, to be like, all right, let's just hop on and play.
Like sometimes that works.
But usually it's like, okay, it's Monday night and Monday night is game night.
And then like, you know, maybe their spouse and them like can work out a way.
to like, you know, always have that time be available to them.
And that kind of thing is helpful to you.
So, like, being open to a little more structure can definitely be a good thing.
Yeah.
I think that's even good advice for making friends as an adult.
Like, I have sung the praisers of my scheduled gamer night many times on this show.
And it's because as an adult, things come up.
And you're going to forget to stay in contact with your friends if you don't make a date of it.
And just have a night where you're like, I'm going to spend time with my friends tonight.
And I think that works whether you're friends.
friends are child-free or not. It's just a, you got to make time. You got to actually make the time
else those relationships aren't maintained. It's the same as any other kind of relationship.
Yeah, social structure. It just becomes more important as you get older. Yeah, I think it really does.
Kirk, do you want to read this next one? Yes, this next question comes from Madison, who writes,
Hi, Hi, Triple Click. I have a question that may be suited for a burning advice episode.
Sure is. Well, here you are, Madison, so it sure is. Madison writes, I've been at my job just over two years,
have run into a lot of issues with my boss.
However, I also have some wonderful coworkers who have become great friends.
I'm a young woman in a male-dominated field, and any time a new opportunity comes up,
I find myself hesitating to apply out of a fear that I will not find the same supportive
and like-minded coworkers at a new job.
As three people who have gone through various changes over the course of your careers,
how do you overcome the fear of the unknown to pursue new opportunities?
Do you have any decision-making strategies such as making a pro or con list?
Thanks for everything you do.
I'm a big fan of the show.
This is a good one.
That's interesting.
I feel like we need to give Madison a real pep talk here.
I read this and I was like, Madison, please apply to these other opportunities.
Yeah, yeah, I agree.
I mean, having a boss that you aren't getting on with, that's probably not going to change, to be honest.
I mean, that's like the number one reason why people leave jobs.
And you can maintain those great co-worker friendships after you leave.
In fact, it's maybe people make adult friends.
Yeah, also you can do that.
Or you can just maintain those friendships regardless.
Not everything needs to be a podcast, but it could be a gamer night.
Jason is just kidding about the podcast.
But his point is that we maintained our friendship after we left Coach Alba.
Yeah, I got it.
But regardless, I really feel.
like I've had such wonderful experiences working at lots of different publications.
And I don't know what Madison's job is.
So I can't speak to that.
But I do work in a male-dominated sector of journalism.
And first of all, you can generally find out what the politics are of a workplace,
even if it's not a journalistic outlet that has a front-facing presence.
You can just kind of talk to other people who work there and be like,
what is it like there?
Am I going to get along with people there?
That's a great way to find out if you would or wouldn't like a place to work,
just full stop.
but also you probably will find other supportive and like-minded people at all these other places that
you're thinking about. And you might even find other amazing people that you never would have met otherwise.
And maybe even a boss who you really get along with. And so I guess because I'm not a fear of the unknown person,
I'm having trouble with this pep talk. I'm just like, but what about the exciting aspects of the unknown?
What about all of the wonderful things that you can't imagine how great they could be because you haven't tried them yet?
I'm clearly this person.
I'm just like, but what about how great that job could be that you haven't tried yet because you're hesitating?
Just like picture that side of it as opposed to the negatives.
But I've never tried a pros and cons list, I don't think, in my life.
Have either of you ever actually done it?
And has it worked for you as a way to kind of talk yourself into a tough decision?
Yeah, so I have and have both, I guess the main time I did it was when I almost got, I got a job offer while I was at Kotaku.
Right, yes.
That was a really good job offer and then wound up like really considering it and I wound up actually not taking it.
Partly because Kotaku countered, it was like in the midst of sort of turmoil and the, I think the Univision acquisitions.
They're really trying to retain talent.
And it wound up being like, oh, okay, cool.
Like I sort of renegotiated my position.
But I definitely took very seriously the opportunity.
And I think that's my first advice to Madison is definitely apply for other jobs.
And yeah, everything Maddie just said is true.
Like if you don't like your boss and like are thinking about leaving, yeah, then just do it.
Especially if you've like made friends with your coworkers, you can still stay friends after you've left.
Like that can be a great way to have a lifelong friend.
It's like we work together at this one job and, you know, five jobs later we're still friends.
Like that's that happens all the time.
Like, you won't lose them.
And even if you do go to a new job where you don't like me best friends with your coworkers, that's okay too.
Like, not every job has to be like that.
It can just be a kind of okay job.
So, yeah, definitely apply because applying for other jobs is just like a good way to even just grow at the job that you're currently doing.
So true.
Like, you know, having an outside offer, like you won't really know until someone makes you an offer.
What you're worth, like, you know, what is even out there, like whether it's possible for you to apply to another day.
job. And remember, this is just applying, which is the word Madison used. So I'm saying, like,
this isn't leaving necessarily. You're just applying for other jobs. And you can get an offer and then
kind of make the pro-con list and think it through and then decide that you don't actually want to
take it. And that alone can be really empowering to like have gotten a sense of what's out there
and then made the decision that, no, actually, you know, there are some problems with my job. I don't
love my boss. But I do really like working here in this position is really good. The last piece of advice
that I'll give for this kind of thing is that I think it's a really, it's really good to take the
opportunity to ask other people for advice. And in particular, people that you're kind of
are acquainted with, but maybe you look up to them or they're like a role model in your field.
There's someone you've maybe met once at a conference that you'd love to connect with a little
bit more. This kind of situation where you're like, I don't know, what should I leave? Should I go?
I have this possibility. That's actually a really great time to reach out to someone that you see as a
kind of a mentor and ask for their advice. Because you'd actually be surprised how often people are
really happy to hear from people like that. Like sometimes I'll hear from people who are just like,
hey, you know, I kind of know them. I've met them a couple of times and they're thinking about
launching a podcast, for example, or like going into business for themselves. And they're like,
hey, you know, I just wanted to pick your brain a little bit. And I really like that.
Like, I kind of value the opportunity to just talk to someone for 30 minutes and tell them the
ins and outs and, you know, have a kind of off-the-record chat. And so that's kind of my last thought to
Madison's, this can be a great way to connect with new people and to like get new really valuable
insights from people that you might not know all that well. And it all starts with applying.
Like it all starts with having the choice that you have to make. And then you get to get into
the fun part, which is like figuring out what decision you want to make. One thing I'll add to all
that excellent advice and thoughts is that when I left Kachu, I knew that, I mean, for reasons we've
discussed in the past. Leaving Kitako is not a difficult choice. I knew that it was doomed and that
we were all going to be out of there. But I was choosing between two job offers for my next thing.
And one of them was a gaming site where the work would be very similar to Kataku in a lot of ways.
And the other one was Bloomberg. And ultimately, I was kind of going back and forth. I wasn't sure.
I was talking over with people. And ultimately, I landed on Bloomberg for the fundamental reason that it was going to be
so different that I would inevitably have to learn new things and just like imagining myself a few years
from then I was like wow okay I would I feel like this one opportunity here would be kind of more of
the same and like exercising the same muscles versus flexing new muscles and developing new muscles
and stuff like that and that to me was kind of a good way to go and I'm very glad I did that
because just doing more of the same I don't think would have been as interesting to me to continue my
career that way. So I think that like as scary as change can be and as hard as it is to go out
of your comfort zone, professionally it can be really worth it and you'll just like learn things that
you never thought you would learn before and work with people that you never thought you would
work with before and stuff like that. So a worthwhile thing to do, I think, to jump off the cliff
every once in a while. Yeah, for sure. Definitely. Although I can't speak to you. I mean, Maddie,
do you want to chime in real quick on the woman in a male dominated field?
thing because that seems like an important part of this, which is, which we haven't addressed,
which is that Madison, it sounds like, feels like she might not have the same support
that she does at his current gig.
I mean, this is part of why I sort of alluded to it, but I'll spell it out more clearly.
Like when I say, like, find out what the culture is like at another place, I think for this
this is really important, but also it's a situation where people will speak in coded language
that you, Madison, will understand.
Like when you ask people like, what is it really like there?
You're going to be able to figure out what they mean, especially in this kind of situation.
And also, if they don't know what you're talking about because you are only speaking to men,
then that will also tell you something.
And so I feel like this is one of those social situations where also like Kirk's advice about
approaching a mentor could be really helpful too, because that person might have a lot of connections
in your field and might be like, oh, you never want to work there.
that place is terrible in the Total Boys Club, but these other places that you might not think of
are actually really cool. So that's another opportunity to just kind of do some networking. And again,
like Kirk said before, you can keep all your friends from this job. Like we keep emphasizing that.
But like those people aren't going to go anywhere. They're still going to be around. And if you work
in a kind of small industry like we do, you might end up working with them again someday. And hey,
that's a perk. Would it be nice if you went to another job and you were like,
hey, this is actually a really great place to work.
And boss is way better over here than you can tell other people that information, too.
And that might be just a nice thing that you, Madison, can do for your great coworkers
that you like so much.
So there's a lot of potential benefits on that specific score that I'm kind of seeing here
for you.
And just as somebody who's worked at a variety of publications with all different kinds
of bosses in this arena, that's part of why I'm so emphasizing, like Madison, it actually
could be way better.
and you just don't know.
You could have a boss
who's actually really supportive of you
and makes you feel great.
And I want that for you.
Yeah.
Next question is from Nathan.
Nathan says,
you all seem to be such wonderful conversationalist.
I just love listening to you talk.
It's all editing, Nathan.
It's all Chris of Kirk.
It's all in posts.
We're terrible at it.
I wondered if you had any advice or techniques
on how to improve at the art of conversation.
I'm pretty socially awkward
and I don't often know what questions
to ask people or how to respond to their questions in a way they'll find interesting.
Any wisdom you can share would be super appreciated.
Yeah. Oh, I think we can offer some advice for this.
So let's think. How to be a good conversationalist. First of all, I think we've given this
advice before, but ask people questions and ask people about themselves. I think like,
thinking of conversations too much as like, I need to have something to contribute, I need a good
joke. I need good stories. I need an interesting job I can tell people about is like putting a lot
on yourself, but really a big part of being a good conversationalist is asking people, you know,
just how they're doing and then just listening. And then the key is to ask follow-up questions,
which these are like journalistic skills. I think that's actually the context in which this
has come up before, that I am a terrible interviewer because I really like to talk. And so I'll
I've, I know I've told this before, but I'll just tell it again, where I'll be transcribing, you know,
an interview that I'm doing and my interview subject will be saying something really interesting
and then I'll like interject and add my own fucking inane observation about what they just said.
And when I'm transcribing, I'm like, shut up.
Like, let this interesting person talk.
God.
So I'm always working on this.
And I'm sure being a podcast host doesn't always help because you do a fair amount of listening but also talking.
But in conversation it is very important to listen.
And then I think most people don't get follow-up questions.
It's like not something that I find I notice it when I'm talking to someone.
Like if they ask me a question, it's very rare that I'll give them an answer.
And then they'll say, oh, so, you know, this and kind of elaborate, like ask me to elaborate on something that I said.
But really, like, that's a really important thing for conversations, not just for making people comfortable,
but for actually getting to the interesting part of whatever they were going to say.
Like if you ask someone how their job went and they're like, well, it's going, okay, I'm this and this and this.
And you realize like, oh, okay, there's a part of that that seems interesting that I don't know that much about and you ask about it.
Like, they'll really value that because people like to talk about what they do because it's kind of fun and because it's so unusual to get asked about it.
And then also you'll find yourself kind of being able to relax.
Nathan mentions being a little socially awkward.
Once you get another person talking, it's actually a little easier to just kind of listen.
listen to them and like just go off whatever they're saying. And then eventually maybe you will
think of something that's, you know, you have to contribute to that or, you know, to talk about
and you'll kind of like relax into a conversation that way. So that's, that's one starter
tip, I guess. Yeah. And the other thing is that like if you're not just talking about each other
and you're talking about other things, try to find a commonality there. And you can ask a bunch
of different kinds of questions about like what they like, what they're into, what they do
for fun. I mean, here in suburbia
with parents of children,
we have a lot of just kind of easy go-to
small talk conversation points.
Oh, where's your kid in school? Oh, where did
you live before you moved to the suburbs?
Oh, oh, I lived in Yorkville too.
Oh, you lived on 84th and first? Oh, me too.
So you can wind up finding points of
commonality and working that way. Or, oh, hey,
like, you're wearing a Jets hat. Oh, are you a fan
of the Jets? Oh, they just fire
their general manager. Oh, my God.
Same old Jets.
Terrible team.
Once again,
can't believe we're going through this.
Can't believe we do this to ourselves.
So I think that like,
the rest of the podcast is just Jason listing off
small talk about the Jets for the next like three hours.
I mean,
look,
this is my life.
And then you get into like trades the Jets could be making.
And here's how you can get into that.
I can't believe we relied on Aaron Rogers.
He's still washed.
What a moron.
And you're off to the races.
And then that's just,
it's a great party.
Then you're off to the race.
races unlike the Jets running back.
And you're standing alone in the kitchen monologue and get everyone's left and you didn't even
realize because you're having so much fun.
I assume, I mean, sometimes every once in a while I find someone who's into games and then
we can just talk for hours about games and I'll tell them what I do and they'll be like,
what?
You do that for a living?
And I'll be like, yeah, it's pretty weird.
But anyway, like I think that like, yes, you can, the go to, the easy go to and what
you should do first is like ask someone about them.
and try to get them talking about themselves.
But, like, at some point, you want to find common ground, and then you can start getting
into it.
Another thing that I would recommend, and this is easier said than done, is to value brevity,
just like you would in writing an email to triple click, which is just keep your, try to keep
things short, try not to ramble too much, especially look at their face for cues.
If you feel like their attention is wandering a little bit, you might have lost them.
And you can kind of freak yourself out a little bit that way, so try to be careful about this.
But still, like, if you notice that they're kind of looking for other people, maybe try to keep your sentences shorter.
Maybe try to then switch to a question like right then and there and try to get them talking rather than just talking at them.
Because talking at people, that's really, that's the number one way people kind of lose each other in conversations is where the one is talking at the other.
Yes. Yeah. I mean, I feel like that was, it's so obvious to just ask people questions.
But I felt like this was such a life hack when I was in college and I felt really awkward.
at parties and was like, I don't know how to talk to people. And then I was also reading all these
journalism books at the time. And that just, I ended up figuring out socially like, oh, these are
just all the right ways to get people to talk to you. And I can just use this at parties. And now
my wife makes fun of me when I do it. And she's like, don't let her reporter brain take over because
people will just start sharing like increasingly personal piece of information with me and like a public
setting. Because the other hack for this is that if you just ask people questions, they'll be very
excited to answer most of the time. So you can get people that you don't know at all to tell
you far more information than maybe they even realize. So like it can also be kind of dangerous
where you're like, now I'm in like a personal conversation about this person's like mother-in-law
or like whatever problems they're having at home and like, how did we get here? But like it is a true
life hack where it's like if you just keep asking somebody questions, they will love it. They will be so
excited. Great for dates too. It's like my number one like dating advice thing is like just ask
other person questions. They're going to be so excited. And it does kind of like, and the two things,
like what you were saying, Jason, and then what Maddie and I are saying about questions, like,
those, they synergize. Because if you get someone talking pretty soon, you will, they'll probably
say something where you're like, oh, cool, like you're into this or into that. Oh, you're doing a renovation.
Oh, I just did a renovation. Exactly. Let's talk about Rebar. And like whatever phase you are in your life,
you know, you might find something to talk about that. Oh, you have like a shoulder problem. So do I?
I'm going to PT. Let's talk about it. It depends. These are all.
like middle-aged guy things.
Late 30-something issues that might be coming up.
Let's talk about our kids and our houses and our aches and pains.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
And our dogs, I suppose.
So when was your last colonoscopy?
Right, right.
Oh, man, I'm going to do one next year.
I hear it's crazy.
So, yeah.
And one other thing I'll mention about being a good conversationalist.
And this is a little bit more of an advanced tip.
But it's something that I tried to do when I'm at parties, which is often you're not in a one-on-one
conversation.
Yes.
You'll be talking to someone, getting them going.
you'll kind of be talking and someone else will come up
or maybe their spouse will be there
and you're talking to them and like
finding a way to fold other people
into a conversation can feel a little more difficult
obviously you're just trying to get comfortable
but it can be a really good feeling
and can lead to a more relaxed environment
if you're able to see someone is there
and like they haven't said anything
to just like really like directly be like
hey you know Mary hasn't said anything
but I'm curious if you you know
having experience with this like just like throw it
to someone who's standing there.
And often they'll be like, oh, no, I don't know.
But then even letting them in in that way can open up the conversation.
But then it'll turn out that they do have something to say.
Yeah.
Right.
And that's so true.
Also, an excellent way to remember someone's name if you forgot it is to be like,
oh, have you met so-and-so?
Oh, yes.
Yes.
Very helpful, very helpful trick.
I wish I was better at names, man.
I'm so bad at them.
Emily's amazing at it.
I'm amazing at it.
She does all the tricks.
You know, the like name memory and memorization tricks.
Yeah, just say their name after you meet them.
Just be like, oh, hey, great to meet you, Dave.
And that'll help.
Yeah, I work on it.
I'm good at it.
It's a useless skill.
But that is a very helpful thing to have on call when you're in that kind of a setting to just
be like, bam, for sure.
Your name.
Something I really want to try that I've seen at least one person do is just like carry
around a notebook and like write down like things that someone told you.
And just so you remember, just so you have this notebook full of information about people so you remember it.
Because it's very easy to forget and talk about reporter brain.
So this will be something, don't you think that like once we're all wearing our like AI powered AR glasses that like they'll just tell, they'll just like summarize every single conversation you had at the party afterward?
It'll come up.
It'll be like, this is Mary.
She did a renovation and you talked with her about it six months ago.
Yeah, but that'll be miserable because like, okay, but right now it's like super impressive.
if someone remembers some, like, obscure thing, you told them about your job, like,
10 weeks ago, but, like, with the AI headset, it won't be as impressive anymore,
so then it'll just be useless.
Yeah, I feel like a lot of things that previously seemed impressive will just be run-of-the-mill
because AI makes it so easy.
All right.
That's just surprising.
All right, Maddie, take the sex question, please.
All right, this one's from Valerie, who writes,
I am a woman who's often the only one in a voice channel full of dudes.
I'm also bad at the games we play together.
friends like Final Fantasy, 14 raids, Deep Rock Galactic, and any battle royals. I love and trust my
friends, and yet I feel like I'm single-handedly setting Gamer Girls back by years with every loss.
Maddie, have you ever felt this way? If so, how do you handle this? I'll say right off the bat.
Yes, I have. And then I'll get to her next question, which is Kirk and Jason. Do you think this is
actually a gender thing? Or are you also afraid of being judged by your gamer friends?
Who, again, I usually trust. So again, Valerie, I do.
definitely I definitely feel this pressure and I actually feel it regardless of who I'm playing with,
even if it's all women, I'll still be like, I am the worst out of everyone on the call right now
and I'm really feeling it. And sometimes I'll tell jokes about it or I'll just be like really
upfront and I'll keep it to the point and just be like, look, I don't, I don't think I'm
I'm very good at this, but I'm having a great time just so everybody knows. And, you know,
if you want advice, Valerie, you can say.
that you'd like it and if you don't want it, then you can also be like, don't tell me what I'm
doing wrong. I'm well aware. I feel like that's the other piece of the social situation that's
like I either do or don't want advice. But also, if they like you, then that's really why you're all
playing together. And so you shouldn't really worry so much. But Kirk and Jason, I assume everyone goes
through this from time to time in life where you're like, I'm the worst one here. Is everyone
noticing this? Is everyone noticing that I'm bad? Sure. Yeah. Although it kind of, I don't, I can
relate to the feeling of single-handedly feeling the lead of your gender as you play. And that
sucks to have to deal with on top of the pressure. Because you're like, oh, God, now they're not going to
play with a girl again. Yeah, that kind of sucks. Yeah, I don't, man, it's tough because some of these
games, like there's some games you can play together and they're very low stress, like low pressure,
because it doesn't matter how good someone is. And then there are other games where it does,
and you really are kind of hurting the group when you're sucking at it, like raids or like
competitive shooter games, battle royals, et cetera, et cetera.
I guess my advice, if you're really feeling self-conscious about this, would be to suggest
playing, like, more casual games.
If you're all playing Mario Party together, it doesn't really matter if someone sucks.
Or other games that are kind of either lower skill thresholds or, like, skill doesn't matter
quite as much for whatever.
The stakes aren't quite as high.
even something like Splatoon or like a Mario Kart type game like those games feel like even though they can be competitive
the stress and the pressure is so much lower I feel like but yeah it's tough because it's like I've also been the situation where there is someone who's really holding back the raid and it really sucks and like you kind of you're you just kind of leave being like man I don't want to play with that person again because they really held us back here so I do think that it's like even and I don't want to
to say this to make Valerie be like, oh my God, I never want to play these games again, but it is,
it is a real thing. I'm guessing they don't feel that way. Yeah, but it is a real thing. I mean,
since she's like, we're still playing together, I'm guessing they don't feel that way about her,
but. Yeah. I think that like, okay, yeah, I think that's a really good point. I think if you're,
like, really sending everybody back and they're actually upset about it, like, I think you might
find your invites kind of drying up. Yeah. Like, I think you'd find that they are playing without you.
So, like, if they are continuing to play with you, then, like, chances are you're fine or, like, they don't care.
Like, so don't worry too much if you're still regularly getting together with them.
And if it does, if it comes up or if you really continue to feel that stress, then maybe just suggest, like, other kinds of games.
Yeah, other kinds of games or other kinds of activities.
Valerie mentions Deep Rock Galactic, which is kind of similar to Helldivers, too.
Yep.
And in Hell divers, at least, like, I'm not great at that game.
and definitely my skill was eclipsed by the guys that I was playing with.
They were just like way higher level and had been playing a whole ton more
and like knew exactly what to do.
And they liked playing on really high difficulties.
And I did find it was kind of more fun for me to just go at a lower difficulty
and play in a kind of more casual way where we're like trying 100% the map
rather than being like, let's put it on the hardest difficulties so we get the most XP.
And then that just made it easier for me.
So it could be that like I didn't suggest that at the time.
I just kind of found that was more fun.
But I think Valerie, maybe you could suggest, like, if you're playing deep rock, be like, hey, you know, could we, like, play on this setting or, like, play this game mode?
Like something that's a little bit less intense than the hardest, most intense one.
Which, same for a game like Destiny or FF14, where, like, there is a raid, which is then very demanding and complicated.
But you could also just do stuff that's a little bit more low-key if you have more fun doing it.
And I think you're totally in your rights, especially if you love and trust your friends, like you say to just say that.
like, be like, you know, I feel like I'm letting you guys down.
So can we not do this hardest thing?
Like, let's do something a little bit more low-key.
Yeah, and also it might be in your head.
Maybe you're not actually like, yeah, exactly.
So definitely talk to them about it and it'd be like, look, do you guys feel like, yeah.
That's true.
And they could just be like, right, we totally don't care.
It's fine.
Yeah.
And if you're succeeding and stuff, like, if you're finishing these Final Fantasy
14 rates, then it's definitely fine.
Like, it's only, I think what I was talking about earlier was more to the point of like,
we are not actually getting this done.
We've spent five hours.
just because this one person
who only is back.
Which, I mean,
even that is like,
that only,
that has only happened to me in my life
with, like, destiny raids.
And even then, like,
usually because we were trying to do them blindly.
And so, like,
that was a very specific threshold.
I don't, I can't speak to Final Fantasy for a team,
but I'm sure they're hard too.
Yeah, but even then, like, when,
when people knew the mechanics,
it was much, much easier.
And even the low-skill players
could just kind of get through them pretty easily.
Yeah, I definitely got carried through some of those raids.
Yeah.
I just hadn't taken the time to learn the mechanics and would be playing with guys who did it like every week multiple times.
They would be like, just stand here.
Exactly.
Shoot whatever you can.
You're fine, man.
And most of those raids are designed so that maybe everybody has to do something.
But it's not like everyone has to be like super pro gamer like elite mode.
Like you can kind of have a couple people getting carried.
And sometimes there's like different roles.
Like when I was in a destiny raid group, I would be like, okay, I've like tried this role in this raid and I'm just really bad at it.
But I think I'd be good at that other one.
Like I see this other role here that actually I think I'd be pretty good at.
So what if we swap and then I think the raid's going to go better?
What if I took the standing in the corner and not doing very much role?
And you did the thing where you have to run through a cold gauntlet of enemies.
Yeah, that's exactly what happened.
And Kirk is presenting it exactly how it went.
And it turned out went way better.
And we won the raid because of that.
I've done that many times myself.
All right.
Let's do one final question real quick.
Kirk, if you want to read this.
This comes from Colleen, who writes, I was listening to the triple cook episode, and Maddie talked about how she has been making her waffle recipe with her family since she was little.
I also like to bake when I was little, and my mom says, it's how I learned fraction.
Now I'm a mom of two kids, age three and four.
Both my husband and I are cooks.
Any advice on how to get the kids interested in cooking or baking?
They sometimes help, but they lose interest quickly.
It's not surprising, given their ages.
Maddie, how did your family include you and at what age?
Jason, any tips that worked in your house?
Kirk, when did you get into cooking?
My only strategy at this point is to let them help when they want for as long as they want
and prepare for a mess.
So, Maddie, maybe you first since your waffles started this whole thing.
Sure.
So I don't remember, so that means probably at age three or four, because it's so far back
that I don't remember when my parents first started letting me cook.
But we definitely made a lot of waffles and pancakes, and that's like a pretty child safe,
despite there being fire involved.
But like if a parent is there helping, especially pancakes, like the kid getting to pour the
pancake and then kind of watching for the bubbles, that was big.
And then my dad would be like, oh, when is it time to flip it?
And then if you burn a pancake, it's no big deal.
Like that's definitely something where you can kind of try it and also you can flip the
panicking correctly.
And that's funny and fun, classic kid activity.
Also, I've remember my parents got me a little.
little tiny apron really early on in life. And it was like a nice, like, professional-looking
apron that was just like my mom's. And that made me feel really important. And like I was
like part of everything. And, you know, there's always an extra rolling pin. Like, there's like
ways to kind of make your kid feel included. And I don't know how early this started. But my mom always
genuinely made it seem like I was truly helping her. Even in situations where I'm sure I wasn't,
she would be like, oh, you know, thanks so much for like doing this additional thing or like kind of
putting me in charge of a task that didn't really matter that much. And then I always felt like I had
true ownership of what was happening. And then it just became second nature over time. And I was
like making my own pancakes and waffles as I was getting older. And then my parents didn't have
to help with anything anymore. And I was making other stuff by that point. But those are like really
easy things for kids to make. Jason. Jason, you've got kids. Go ahead. Yeah. I have some tips.
So first of all, definitely just like let them do if they're if they show interest, let them do it.
and let them kind of grow bored and do something else.
Three and four are super young.
But my five-year-old, so a couple of things that have worked for us.
One is planning things in advance and talking about them often and early.
So, like, for example, I've been talking to my daughter for, like, at least a week now about Thanksgiving,
and she's getting very excited to help me cook on Thanksgiving just because I keep talking about it.
And I keep saying, like, oh, what are you excited to make?
Oh, do you want to work on the pie with me?
Oh, are you excited to cut the turkey, et cetera, et cetera.
And then two is to come up with clever activities.
So something that she got really, really into is we got this bluey cookbook at the library that has all these recipes.
And she had this idea.
She was like, I want to do a restaurant where we pretend that we're a restaurant and her brother and her mother would just be the guests.
And so they would go out somewhere for a couple hours and she and I would cook and then they would come back and we would serve them a meal.
And she was like, she was talking about that for months.
She was so excited about it.
and she got really into it and it was more difficult to cook with a five-year-old who you have to kind of assign
activities to and like keep an eye on but um i pick pretty simple recipes and we got a couple of
them from that bluey cookwick and so it worked out pretty well um and we had a plan in place and so
she got really really into that that's so cute but yes i mean uh colin's strategy of letting them
help what they want for as long as they want to prepare for our mess that is all 100% true and uh i just
think if you want to keep them on board, you can kind of go about it, but with some planning
and talking about it and getting them really excited for it, especially the four-year-old.
Three might be a little too young still, but the four-year-old, you can be like, plan out a
menu with them and make it a whole special occasion and be like, this is what we're going to do
on Saturday.
And there are a lot of kind of fun ways you can play around with that strategy.
Yeah, my younger niece is really into baking.
Like, she's a good baker and has really gotten into it.
She's 11 now.
And just over the last couple of years, so she'll like make, just go make a chocolate cake.
Wow.
Like, you know, she'll have to get permission because I think she would just eat the whole chocolate cake.
But she'll just go bake stuff.
Like a dog.
She is capable of doing it.
She would probably give the dog some chocolate cake too.
But I think the only thing I would add that I think that my nieces have enjoyed is they will watch like Master Chef Jr.
and the Great British Bake Off, like they watch those kinds of fun cooking baking.
shows together and especially the ones that feature kids.
I think are a big hit with the whole family and with the kids in particular.
And watching kids make often amazing things like on Master Chef Jr.
Yeah, that show is incredible.
I think a really cool way for the kids to connect and be like, oh, like, I could just go do
that in our kitchen.
So that seems like maybe something you might want to try.
Yeah, that's a great recommendation.
Did, God, have you guys, have we talked about the show Kid Nation?
That's the you should have.
Oh, yes.
Many times.
We have.
if they really want to get inspired.
We probably have to do a like bonus
episode about it at some point because it comes up
so often. Oh man, one day.
All right, let's take a break. Thank you to everybody
who sent in advice questions. Maybe we'll
do another one of these someday. So just a reminder,
you can always reach us to triple like at
maximum fun.org.
In the meantime, let's take a break
and then we'll be back for one
more thing.
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society on maximum fun.org. Oh darling, why won't you accept my love? My dear, even though you are a
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And we are back. It's time for Unos Mas things.
Kirk Wedding to start us off.
All right, I'll start us off. This is a game I am playing at the advice of friend of the show Russ Frushstick,
who I think will probably be talking about it on the besties this week too. So this is going to be a week for people
who listen to both of our podcasts to hear about this game. But it's really good. And I do
I do really endorse it. I've loved it so far. It's a game called Echo Point Nova. This is out on Steam. It's a PC game. And it is the subgenre of first person shooters that is known as a movement shooter. So it's a first person shooter where the whole appeal of the game is how you move through it. I am pretty sure there's a demo for this game. And so you can just go try it out if you want to. So this is a game where you're like a kind of anonymous like
mercenary or something in this kind of beautiful looking world of floating islands.
And it's an open world game, actually.
Like it's a whole big floating archipelago with a ton of islands that a lot of them have
different biomes.
There's all kinds of secrets and surprises hidden among the islands.
But you start out and you're like, okay, it looks a little like it's very simple,
like geometry, very clean.
There's kind of like drum and bass, like this really nice ambient drum and bass playing.
And it just has a kind of like, chill.
hill wave kind of a feel. And you're moving around and you get a gun and you're shooting it.
And then you get a hoverboard. That's like the first major upgrade that you get. And in this game,
instead of running when you hit shift or I guess click the stick or whatever when you press the run
button, you just hop on your hoverboard immediately and you begin moving at like 5,000 miles an hour.
So you're already really fast. Like you move like Doom Guy when you're just running and then you
pop out the hoverboard and suddenly you were just flying through the air. You have a double
jump, you have a grappling hook that you get really early. And like the speed and flexibility with
which you move is totally wild. So I've been playing with a mouse and keyboard. It's really good
for that. But I was actually playing multiplayer with Russ a little earlier today. He plays on
Steam Deck and says it's great on Steam Deck and that there's like a lock on with aiming that makes
it totally work with a controller because you're doing a lot of like aerial acrobatics while like shooting
guys. And so apparently the controller controls are really good as well. So there's almost no story.
There really just kind of isn't a story. Like you'll see these little dialogue bubbles pop up at various
points from like different people that I guess are supposed to be talking to you on your radio.
But really you're just exploring the world and doing whatever objective is in the corner.
And I would kind of compare this game to Titanfall 2. It has that same kind of a feeling.
You'll get to a new area and it's usually some kind of cool.
complex, like, jungle gym, you know, with a bunch of obstacles and walls and barriers and
and stuff.
And then you press a button and you start an encounter and, like, a bunch of dudes show up.
And they're like, guys, all different kinds of dudes.
So, like, armored guys and people in mechs later, like big robots.
Some of, there's, like, huge enemies that show up sometimes.
Guys with shields, like little fast-moving guys.
And they're all just kind of attacking you.
And you just have to kill a certain number of them to clear the area.
But the arena is like this huge open space.
You move so fast through it.
So it's also kind of like Tony Hawk Pro Skater.
It's like first person Tony Hawk meets Titanfall.
It's the most fun movement.
And these encounters, like these fights are so thrilling and great.
I like watched the trailer and was a little skeptical.
Like I watched some gameplay on Steam.
The key art on Steam, I think, is actually like, it looks really generic.
The name Echo Point Nova.
Like it's all a little bit generic.
But man, when I started playing it, it's got a killer vibe.
The music is really cool.
The energy is great.
And just like the feel of playing it, like the movement, the speed is amazing.
Like it's like a really exhilarating, like I'm really bold over by it.
It's just absolutely fantastic.
So anyone out there who likes these kinds of games, you know, I talked about I Am Your Beast a little while ago, you know, this whole lineage of these like fast moving, really, really sort of intense and demanding shooters.
But that also like you give you lots of tools to do cool shit.
If you like that kind of game, you will almost definitely like this game.
and it's certainly worth checking out the demo.
It's made by a Greylock Studio,
which I think it's kind of,
it's like headed by a guy named Matt Larrabee,
who I think is like the designer
and maybe like the primary developer.
Their previous game was a game called Severed Steel
that I think is also fairly beloved
and somewhat, and pretty similar to this,
though I think it's like in more enclosed spaces
and you're not flying around quite as much.
But really, oh, there's a little crackdown,
there's like little orbs that you have to get,
so you're like climbing to hard to reach places.
Man, it's so good.
It's such a wonderful surprise.
I really
I really wasn't
I just had no idea
it had come out
hadn't really heard
anything about it
and then yeah
remind everyone
the name
it is called
Echo Point Nova
it is on Steam
and it is terrific
cool
real video game name
there
yeah everything
about it sounds
right video game
like capital
v capital G
it's a good
one of those
Maddie
Maddie what's your
one more thing
my one more thing
is scream
two and three
we've had a couple
couple movie nights
in a row here
watching scream movies
in our household and we're just continuing along.
There's so many of these.
I don't know how many we're going to get through,
but we had a really great time with two and three.
I had only ever seen Screen 1,
and then I had my wife watch it for the first time,
and I had never seen two and three.
So these were brand new to me.
Had an amazing time, really liked both of them.
They're really goofy.
They're very silly,
and they're not serious films,
but I enjoyed the heck out of both of them.
And I do recommend
both of them.
And to just say kind of like a couple quick things about them,
if you've never seen Screen 1,
still just like an unabashed recommendation as like a fun mystery,
goes places you wouldn't expect,
good commentary on horror films.
You can watch it and stop there, I would say.
Two and three are much more commentary on Scream 1
and then also on movies as like a secondary layer on top of that.
And like within the world of Scream,
starting with Scream 2,
there's a franchise called Stabb that all the
characters are referring to, like a movie series that's like based on the real life murders that
took place in Scream One, sort of unrealistic that it would happen in the way that it does, but this
takes place in a surrealist world where things are wacky. And that part I found very entertaining.
And I liked not knowing who the killers were and trying to guess and failing. And just one more
thing I'll say about this. So Courtney Cox is in these movies. She plays Gail Weathers, real stereotypical
female reporter who does whatever it takes to get her scoop, wildly unethical character. Just
absurd character.
Like, I feel like
this character type,
I love and hate it,
where it's like this,
the hot female reporter
who like is just completely unethical
in every particular way.
And it's just like,
why is this in every movie?
I feel like now that I've pointed it out,
people will know what I'm talking about.
But anyway,
I love and hate Gail Weathers,
but I will also say,
Courtney Cox apparently designed her hair pieces
across each of these movies.
And like, thank goodness,
because I was like,
I hope no costume designer made her wear
any of the absurd wigs that this woman is wearing.
Like, scream free, she has these baby bangs that are just, like, deeply upsetting.
And I was like, did they make Courtney cut her hair that way?
No, it is a hair piece.
So I was really fascinated by that.
And just, like, Courtney Cox being like, like, no, I'm going to, like, design specific
terrible hair for this character to have.
And that really, like, endeared me to her as, like, her performer.
And also kind of made me understand the character more as, like, just this, you love to
hate her.
It's Gail Weathers.
So yeah, we're continuing the scream averse and really digging it.
Is three the one where they're making the movie and they're like on movie sets and stuff?
Yes, and it's very fun.
Is that the one where there's like a killer in the soundproof room?
Yes.
And like the person can't hear it.
That rules.
I love that kill.
Yeah, it's great.
And they're like beating on the glass.
There's also that one where there's that long rack of the ghost face costumes and like somebody's hiding behind the huge rack of costumes.
And of course like one of them is the real ghost face and his like foot steps down from the rack.
it's like perfectly framed.
It's a great shot.
There's just a lot of moments like that
where you're like,
this is great.
Movies.
You gotta love movies.
They have fun.
They have fun with those movies.
Nice.
All right.
My one more thing is a video game
called Dragon Quest 3 HD2D remake.
And this is a...
As promised.
Yep.
Yep.
Last week.
Finally.
Not to be confused
with Dragon Age the Vailguard.
What do you think is a worse name?
Dragon Age the Vailguard or Dragon Quest 3 HD2D remake?
I don't know.
Oh, they're both pretty rough.
Those are both the full titles.
Hard to say.
It's genuinely hard to say.
So this is, so Dragon Quest 3 came out in 1988,
and it's gotten a few kind of remakes and re-remasters since then,
but this is the most elaborate.
So this takes, so HD2D in the title,
that refers to this graphical style that Square Enix really kind of innovated with Octopath Traveler,
where you have kind of the pixelated 2D characters.
They might not necessarily be 2D, but they have a,
2D look and they're standing on these three dimensional backgrounds which gives them this really
interesting aesthetic effect and it's gotten prettier and pretty over the years. Octobatha
Traveler 2 especially is gorgeous.
And this takes things for them.
Yeah, this game also looks incredible.
And so it takes the original game and most of the gameplay and mechanics and world design is
still intact.
There are some changes.
A lot of quality of life changes like in the original NES game, you had pretty limited items.
and now you do not and stuff like that.
But fundamentally, have either of you guys played a Dragon Quest game before?
Yeah, they're very much like the quintessential turn-based JRP games.
They're a lot about resource management.
Some of them have pretty elaborate stories.
This one doesn't really have a story.
The characters are just kind of choose your own adventure,
like create your own characters.
They don't talk or have personalities or anything.
But it has a really interesting kind of,
resource management element to it where you really have to plot things out and figure out
when you're going to use your character's spells to get through attention because
resources are pretty limited as to get through each dungeon. It also has a pretty cool job
system and it has a lot going for it if you're into kind of turn-based systems heavy JRP's
which Maddie this game would drive you crazy because it's like it's full of invisible
random encounters everywhere. It's got everything that you would need. Very much the Dragon Quest way.
Yeah, it's got its own kind of rhythm.
Although, Kirk, I mean, in the more recent ones, Dragon Quest 11 had encounters on the map rather than invisible.
That's at least more bearable to me, I would say.
This one is much more old school.
But the one thing that I will say that I wanted to talk about specifically is that when you get, the game starts out pretty linear and you kind of do a bunch of quests.
And then at a certain point, you get a ship.
And then you are set into the open world and you can take your ship in any direction.
go wherever you want. And it's really, it was revolutionary at the time and still feels a little
bit revolutionary because the game doesn't give you guidance. And so in this remake, they add quest
markers, objective markers, and I would actually recommend turning them off because it's really fun
at this point in the game. If you're into this game, again, so you have to get into, you have to
look past the invisible random encounters. But if you're into the game, it's actually really fun to
go around and sail around and find all these towns on your map and go into them and talk to all the
NPCs there and sometimes they'll give you hints, some of which are very straightforward,
some of which are obscure, about what you should be doing and how you can go around and
complete your objective, which is to get all these, these orbs that are hidden in various
places. And it's actually really cool. And you kind of view, you have to keep a mental
checklist of where you're supposed to be and what items you need to get. And it's got a little
Metroidvania to it and that you have to get specific types of keys that unlock certain doors.
And only, you can only make progression once you've gotten that key. And in the,
or this item that unlocks this thing.
It's pretty cool. It's a cool system.
And it's a lot more fun with, as I mentioned before,
the objective markers turned off because you actually have to listen to what the
NPCs are telling you and follow the directions or listen to the clues they're giving you.
And that part is really cool.
And I think was revolutionary in 1988.
I mean, no game had done anything like this.
And this was the game.
I think the first two Dragon Quest games were popular.
in Japan, but this one really set, like, turned it into a cultural phenomenon. This is the game
where, like, hundreds of people were reportedly arrested in Japan for skipping school to go and play it,
to the point where, in Japan, they had to issue, like, Squyriynex had to make a special arrangement
to, or Enix at the time, had to make a special arrangement to release games on Saturdays
rather than Thursdays in the Dragon Quest series, because Dragon Quest would just shut down all of Japan
when it would come out. Dragon Quest's popularity in Japan is, like, is, is, is, is,
crazy. It's unheard of. It's like
Call the Duty here or something like that.
Probably even worse.
But anyway, this game is really cool. It's a really
well done remake. It's not going to convert
any like JRP naysayers
or people who don't like the encounter rate.
It's pretty tough. It's one of those games. You pretty much
have to play it while you're like watching TV or something like that.
Which is too bad because the music is cool.
But like those
sitting through those invisible random encounters
can be rough unless you're like really feeling
the rhythm of it.
are there any like console commands or fast forward or anything like that says so this is the thing so
um you can set battle speed to like ultra fast which makes it pretty speedy but like you can't
so in um in like a bunch of other squarionics jrpgs i forget which ones have this exact mechanic but
like in a bunch of them you can turn off random encounters um a bunch of the kind of old school jr fág
styles and especially like the um the newer versions of some of the final fantasy games you can
turn off random encounters with like these built-in cheat codes and stuff like that.
And that is always a big advantage of those games and not being able to turn them off.
And this is a little bit unfortunate.
Although we would also kind of defeat the purpose of the game if you could turn off
random encounters because it's not like a story game.
It's a game that is very much about battling and building up a group of characters and
finding class permutations.
You can actually, there's this interesting job system where each character has a job.
and then once they hit level 20, you can take them to this place and have them switch jobs,
but they don't stay at level 20.
They actually go all the way back to level one, but they keep all the spells they've learned,
and their stats are cut in half rather than starting from the beginning.
So you can then max the system to build really, really powerful characters by switching job classes,
keeping their old spells, and then you build up a mage to level 20,
and then you turn them into a warrior, and suddenly have this built-up tank who can cast spells.
So there's some cool systems in place, but it's very much a game for people who are into systems rather than into stories.
So very much for a specific type of person.
But if you're into Dragon Quest, this is a great remake and just as a remake, it performs well.
It looks great.
It's got all the trappings that you would want from a game like this.
Nice.
All right.
That is it for this week's episode.
Hope everybody enjoyed our advice.
But once again, we are not lawyers.
So do not take any of our...
We don't know anything at all.
We don't know anything.
So don't listen to us.
The advice of three idiots who play video games.
Hopefully our advice is helpful.
Three idiots who play video games.
We tried.
The new name for our podcast.
That's going to be the new podcast summary.
Triple Clay, two and three idiots who play video games.
All right, Kirk Maddie, see you both next week.
Yeah, see you both next week.
Bye.
Triple.
Click is produced by Jason Schreier, Maddie Myers, and me, Kirk Hamilton.
I edit and mix the show and also wrote our theme music.
Our show art is by Tom D.J.
Some of the games and products we talked about on this episode may have been sent to us for
free for review consideration.
You can find a link to our ethics policy in the show notes.
Triple Click is a proud member of the Maximum Fun Podcast Network, and if you like our show,
we hope you'll consider supporting us by becoming a member at Maximumfund.org
slash join.
Find us on Twitter at triple clickpod.
Send email the triple click at maximumfund.
and find a link to our discord in the show notes. Thanks for listening. See you next time.
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