Never stop dreaming.
#SummerGameFest began in a spare bedroom in 2020.
Today, we're at @DolbyTheatre for our biggest show yet, alongside thousands of fans.
Thank you for joining us on this journey over the past seven years. We're just getting started.
The frustrating part of games discussion on X is that the viral trending topics are often the stupidest and most surface level items. It makes me wonder how much this might translate to many other discussions on X…
@JoeTLudwig At this point I’m never planning on giving my child a smartphone. They will get a phone for calling at driving age with some sort of GPS, but the smartphone can wait until they get out themselves
Personally I’ve always reckoned those who have eaten individual flavors of any candy that should be eaten in multiples or handfuls as having some sort of inability to take life as it is dealt to you.
The struggle that I have with Widow’s Bay is that it suffers heavily from a Marvel Cinematic Universe level of forcefully injected “Millenial-Cringe” humor that completely ruin significant moments of gravity. I do enjoy the show, but I find myself wanting to enjoy the show more than I actually do.
Us elder millennials experienced life before the internet and then were introduced to it gradually as we matured. I think we should be aiming to do the same for our children.
The most connected generation in history is also the loneliest.
And some are now turning to AI to fill the gap.
In fact, 73% of Gen Z say they sometimes or always feel alone.
That should make us pause and ask what happens when AI starts filling emotional and relational gaps once occupied by other people.
In my latest X article, I explore the loneliness epidemic, what smartphones and AI may be doing to our kids’ mental health, and why we need to slow down before blindly embracing every new piece of technology.
"We have built a culture that worships the unbothered self: autonomous, frictionless, infinitely optimized. Children are inconvenient to that god."
https://t.co/Onnv1XOfHO