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    1. Colossal Game Adventure: February 2026 Voting Topic

      Welcome to the voting topic for CGA! Anyone can participate. CGA does not require membership and is always open to all. Ballot Formatting Ballot entries are NAME (VOTES) e.g. Pong (3) Copy and...

      Welcome to the voting topic for CGA!

      Anyone can participate. CGA does not require membership and is always open to all.

      Ballot Formatting

      • Ballot entries are NAME (VOTES) e.g. Pong (3)
      • Copy and paste the game titles from the list so they match exactly.
      • The ballots will be tallied using this script from u/Spore_Prince.
      • Any improper ballots will not be counted (but you will get a polite message from me or someone else asking you to fix them beforehand).

      Topic Rules

      • All top-level comments must be ballots and ballots only.
      • Child comments can be anything -- feel free to talk about why you chose what you did.

      Voting Process

      • Each person has 20 votes to distribute among games as they see fit.
      • Each person can allocate a maximum of 5 points per Single Game/Arcade Special.
      • Arcade Specials count as one block (do not vote for each game in them individually).
      • Voting closes 96 hours (4 days) from the posting of this topic.
      Example Ballot 1 - Valid Ballot
      Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing (5)
      Portal 3 (5)
      Half-Life 3 (3)
      Team Fortress 3 (2)
      Night Trap (2)
      Xexyz (1)
      Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon (1)
      Left 4 Dead 3 (1)
      

      Uses 20 points total, and no game exceeds 5 points

      Example Ballot 2 - Invalid Ballot
      Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing (10)
      Protal 3 (7)
      Wand of Gamelon (5)
      

      Uses more than 20 points; games exceed 5 points; titles do not match


      Voting Outcomes

      • The top 6 games/Arcade Specials will become the next 6 months of CGA (or more in case of a tie).
      • Of the remaining games, the bottom 50% will be cut from the list.
      • The remaining 50% will stay on the list and will enter the next voting round starting at their current point totals instead of 0.

      Game List

      Game Rollover Votes
      Another World 19
      Back in a Flash
      Bloons Tower Defense
      Line Rider
      Motherload
      QWOP
      Stick RPG
      25
      Behind the Wheel
      Lego Island
      Rally-X
      Sega Rally Championship
      15
      Beneath a Steel Sky 15
      Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow 23
      The Colonel’s Bequest 15
      Crystalis 15
      Descent 18
      Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist 13
      The Genesis of Treasure
      Gunstar Heroes
      McDonald's Treasure Land Adventure
      Dynamite Headdy
      Alien Soldier
      Light Crusader
      0
      The Grue That Binds
      Border Zone
      Twisted!
      Zork
      15
      JSRF: Jet Set Radio Future 12
      The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past 15
      Lode Runner 12
      Lufia II: Rise of the Sinistrals 26
      Maniac Mansion 0
      Metroid 14
      Metroid Prime 19
      Mother 3 0
      Red Dead Redemption 0
      Resident Evil (REmake) 0
      Scroll Lock-on
      Einhander
      Ikaruga
      Paradroid
      Raid on Bungeling Bay
      Thunder Force IV
      14
      Sid Meier’s Pirates! 24
      Space Rogue 0
      StarTropics 15
      Tetris 13
      Threads of Fate 15
      Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2 13
      9 votes
    2. My personal AI assistant project

      Let me start off by saying that I'm exhausted by AI hype. Being interested in LLM agent technology (AI agent hereafter for brevity) means skimming over a lot of hype for one or two useful, semi...

      Let me start off by saying that I'm exhausted by AI hype. Being interested in LLM agent technology (AI agent hereafter for brevity) means skimming over a lot of hype for one or two useful, semi reality based, bits of information. Maybe the part that I find the most frustrating is how effective the hype is. I don't know if there's ever been a hype cycle like this. Probably a big part of the reason for that is the internet has already proven, within living memory for most people, that technological revolutions really can change everything. Or mess everything up. Either way they generate a lot of economic activity.

      So this post is not that. I'm not going to tell you about how AI agents are the second coming for Christ. I'm not selling anything.

      Fairly early into learning about AI agents I wanted a way to connect to the agent remotely without hosting it somewhere or exposing ports to the internet. I settled on tailscale and a remote terminal and moved on, I rarely used it. Somehow the tiny friction of "Turn on tailscale, open terminal app, connect, run agent" was enough to make it not feel worth it.

      I know I'm far from the only person who had the same "I want it remote" thought, the best evidence: OpenClaw. It's just one of those things that everyone naturally converges on.

      If you're not familiar with OpenClaw, the TLDR is: Former founder with more money than he'll ever need vibecodes a bridge between instant messenger apps and LLM APIs. Nothing about it is technically challenging or requires solving any particularly hard problems. It almost immediately becomes the fastest growing GitHub repo of all time and is currently at number 14 for number of stars. It blew up the (tech) internet like very few things ever have. Within months he was hired by Open AI.

      OpenClaw now does more than just connect messaging and agents, but I believe that one piece is the killer feature. My tailscale terminal solution, combined with a scheduled task or a cron job and some context files could already do all of the things that OpenClaw can do, and countless people had already implemented similar solutions. But I think it was the tiny bit of friction OpenClaw removed that was responsible for a lot its popularity.

      I thought that was interesting but I have no interest in the security nightmare that is OpenClaw, or the "sentience" vibe for that matter, so I built my own tool.

      Essentially it's just a light secondary harness combined with a bridge between Signal and Claude Code. It does some other things too, things I wished existing harnesses did, some memory and guidelines, automated prompts and reminders to wake the agent up and have it do stuff, some context to give the agent some level of persistence, make it less LLMy, less annoying. None of that is particularly interesting though.

      Once I got it working (MVP took less than a day) and started playing with it, the OpenClaw phenomenon made a lot more sense. Somehow having the agent in a chat interface, with almost zero friction (just open the chat and send something) was cooler than it had any reason to be.

      I can't explain it any better than that at the moment. Not only was it kinda fun, it lent itself to a whole range of "what ifs". What if it could do X? What if I wrote a tool that gave it Y capability? I've been experiencing that for some time, but somehow agent in your pocket has a different feeling.

      Here's an example of a "what if". What if it could do our grocery shopping? I definitely want that. I already had a custom browser tool that I built for agent coding assistance so I was most of the way there. It was just a matter of teaching the agent to login and navigate a website, something they're already trained to do. Some hand holding, a few helper scripts, and an evening's worth of hours later and I had it working. The agent can respond to a shopping request by building a shopping list based on our most recent orders, presenting it to us for approval/edits in a Signal group chat, doing searches for any additional product requests and adding the finalized order to the cart. It could also checkout the order and schedule the delivery time but I'm doing the last 2 clicks manually for the time being. It's an idiot savant, it seems like a bad idea to give it access to my credit card. Maybe eventually.

      The fact that I can handle shopping with a couple of signal messages feels effortless in a way that handling shopping by connecting to my PC terminal remotely via tailscale terminal wouldn't have. Especially when I can include people in the loop who have no interest in tailscaling anywhere. Everyone can use messaging apps.

      I imagine before long solutions like this will be built in, either in the grocery websites and apps, or into the frontier harnesses themselves. There will probably be agents everywhere, for better or worse. Probably I'll wish that the agents would all fuck off. In the meantime it's exciting how easy it is to get these tools to do useful things.

      29 votes
    3. Is higher education still valuable?

      Hi friends, Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to...

      Hi friends,

      Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to college?

      I’m asking because I am enrolled in a masters program for statistics and have ~2 years left. I’m concerned that by the time I’m finished, the degree won’t be worth the paper it’s printed on. Like many of you, I work in software. Some days I think I should be learning an entirely different skill set in a non tech related field to diversify my value instead of doubling down on a potentially dying field.

      I am not really interested in “you should pursue education for the sake of education”. While this is probably true, at the end of the day I need a way to make money to survive and education is the historical way of increasing one’s value in the job market. Furthermore, I can educate myself for far cheaper if education from a university is no longer considered valuable.

      Anyone else in the same boat? Am I being dramatic? Would love to hear your thoughts.

      27 votes
    4. What programming/technical projects have you been working on?

      This is a recurring post to discuss programming or other technical projects that we've been working on. Tell us about one of your recent projects, either at work or personal projects. What's...

      This is a recurring post to discuss programming or other technical projects that we've been working on. Tell us about one of your recent projects, either at work or personal projects. What's interesting about it? Are you having trouble with anything?

      11 votes