MobileSuitLilah

Quaint Witch, Sad Enchantress

  • she/her

Incredibly based gay trans woman poster 🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍🌈 | Lover of books, music, and video games ✨| Happily married to @milktea ❤️ | Icon by @peachparfait

Praise for @MobileSuitLilah

“Lilah is maybe the internet’s greatest poster…a unique and very funny sense of humor…her jokes are specific and experimental while still being accessible to a mainstream audience”
The New York Review of Posts

“Men you may not like it but…[Lilah’s posts are] what peak performance looks like”
— Virginia Woolf, author of Orlando

“I’m a huge admirer of Lilah’s posts to the point that I left my wife…only then did I discover Lilah is gay and had also never heard of me”
— Jonathan Safran Foer, an author I guess

"Lilah's posts were a huge source of relief during the development of DonPachi...it's no exaggeration to say Cave wouldn't exist without her posts"
— Tsuneki Ikeda


Sometimes I’ll see a user review on Steam or backloggd by somebody who has developed their own custom mathematical system for review scores, one that feels like a nightmarish or possibly kafkaesque extrapolation of the “objective” review scoring of 90s/2000s games crit to the extremes of granularity. And as they proceed to assign a “0” for “tutorialization” and a “0.4” for “completion time” to a 99 cent indie game while holding over a maximum of 1 point (out of a total score of 10) for “personal impressions” I think about how common but also depressing this mindset about games is. How applying a generic one-size-fits-all framework of “consumer technical product” in a vain and fleeting search for an objectivity that doesn’t exist coldly cuts you off from the much more interesting and valuable relationship you can have with games as expressive art and your own subjective relationship with them.

Anyways catch me scoring my favorite novel out of 10 using categories like “length” and “simplicity of prose”, as well as “story” and “bookfeel”


You must log in to comment.

in reply to @MobileSuitLilah's post:

Anyways catch me scoring my favorite novel out of 10 using categories like “length” and “simplicity of prose”, as well as “story” and “bookfeel”

You say that, but there's a 40% chance someone on Goodreads or BookTok has done exactly this because of the influence commercial games have exerted upon other media.

  • Re-read Value (The "fundamental flaw" with mystery novels)
  • Worldbuilding ("Why no map?")
  • Show-Don't-Tell Score ("It's just an objective rule of good writing")
  • Chekhov's Gun Fulfillment ("Don't have a non-white character unless it serves the plot directly" -Wes Anderson)