#and even if it doesnt have that same element of storytelling ow has then at least you'll be surprised by this game you knew nothing about
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wahh thats so awesome to hear!! im glad i could get someone to play in other waters i think its really good :>
its funny that you mention it being like outer wilds in a sense because that part of the game totally surprised me! i went in almost as blind as you i just saw "you play as an ai helping a biologist" and was like wow thats cool and didnt even think about the gameplay or story or anything i didnt even know there was a mystery
after stray kinda flopped for me i was honestly a little worried that maybe outer wilds was TOO good and now i cant enjoy mysteries anymore (silly, i know) but my god in other waters has enraptured me i cant stop playing it
#i think the best way to find games with that sense of exploration is just.. play games..? its kinda weird to say it like that but#recently so much of my steam wishlist is just games ive heard of and know almost nothing about#ive never really gone looking for a specific type of game i just see something cool and play it knowing nothing#and in a way thats kind of like how outer wilds is even if the game isnt like that at all#i guess what i mean to say is that just play games you dont know shit about and sometimes you find something cool like ow#and even if it doesnt have that same element of storytelling ow has then at least you'll be surprised by this game you knew nothing about#its fun to have very small expectations be the only thing you think of before you play a game for the first time bc then you get surprised#by anything really! and its great i love games i dont know where these tags are even going#ALSO editing this bc i realized something#if you do still wanna specifically look for games like outer wilds try looking up anything to do with open world mysteries#or mystery games in general? because alot of that type of genre is following leads
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FX’s Fantastic Better Things Rewires Expectations
Having covered television for two decades, I’m increasingly drawn to shows that break traditional genre definitions, and the truth is that most of the groundbreaking work lately is happening in the more creator-driven world of TV comedy. Shows like “Atlanta,” “Barry” and “Master of None” are vibrant and unconcerned with traditional comedy bits or structures. While he’s on black lists for most studios now, the fact is that a lot of this is owed to how much Louis C.K. broke molds with “Louie,” and that same personal, confessional form of comedy storytelling is embedded in the DNA of FX’s “Better Things,” a show he co-created with star/writer Pamela Adlon. "Louie" is gone, but we’re all lucky that “Better Things” lives on, still challenging norms for shows about motherhood, Hollywood, and, well, everyday life. An episode of “Better Things” almost requires one to recalibrate their brain in the way it doesn’t adhere to traditional sitcom beats or storytelling structure. Naturally, I kinda love it.
The plot descriptions for episodes of “Better Things” are almost a thing of beauty in their simplicity. “Sam unleashes.” “Sam sees old friends and cooks for everyone.” This is not exactly the Dunphys of “Modern Family” going through their latest comedy of errors. The descriptions hint at how “Better Things” isn’t exactly what one would call plot-driven. It’s more like a series of short films, most of which aren’t even the length of an episode. Sometimes a half-hour will have a narrative thrust—like the premiere, in which Sam (Adlon) has to take her eldest to college—but often they won’t, picking up mid-scene and ending mid-scene.
This season feels more structureless than ever, and I mean that in a good way. We’re often with Sam and her friends or family hearing snippets of conversation, feeling mood and tone more than plot. It started to remind me of “Short Cuts,” or the short stories of Raymond Carver, fleeting character beats and dialogue that amount to something truthful in their accumulation.
Once again, Adlon is totally fearless in how much of herself she is literally willing to reveal, such as opening the season with her trying on pants that don’t fit any more. It’s a season about menopause, weight gain, concern over her mother’s dementia, and, most of all, motherhood in all its glory and awfulness. Parenthood is so often a cynically manipulative sitcom trope, and parents on TV are almost always the extremes of bumbling idiots or idealized saints. It’s so refreshing to see a show that respects the complexity of being a parent in the ‘10s. We can be both, sometimes in the same moment.
Don’t get me wrong. I like comedies that try to be strictly funny too. All those shows I mentioned like “Atlanta” and “Barry” are often hysterical, and “Better Things” has some great pure comedy scenes. It just doesn’t feel like a show that relies on them. Adlon is more concerned with character and truth. “Better Things” has that element that commonly comes with great fiction in that it feels like we’re dropping in on lives that existed in the months since this show was on the air. It’s like visiting old friends —some of it is funny, some of it is dramatic, some of it is silly. And we can’t wait till the next time we get to drop in.
Review based on the first eight episodes of season three, premiering February 28th.
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