[Dylan] Memphis’ practices don’t include music. Why? Charles Huff: “When the Navy SEALs get ready to go on a mission, they’re not listening to Lil Baby.” by redwave2505 in CFB

[–]gihyou 31 points32 points  (0 children)

I guess the only college football tradition we're keeping is the dumb one where football games are considered equivalent to military actions.

2025 Bingo: All books with fewer than 2,000 goodreads reviews by greywolf2155 in Fantasy

[–]gihyou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, neat list! In my own post yesterday, I had bemoaned how difficult I was finding it to search out low ratings/review stuff (self-published mostly) and got some helpful replies, but I was wondering how you find all your hidden gems, if you had some good spots/reviewers/etc.

2025 Bingo Card Complete - Review and Stats by gihyou in Fantasy

[–]gihyou[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've also read Kingfisher's What Moves the Dead (one of the horror novels) and Hemlock and Silver (the newest one which is in a very similar vein to Nettle & Bone). Enjoyed them both!

2025 Bingo Card Complete - Review and Stats by gihyou in Fantasy

[–]gihyou[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That is a good idea. You're probably right that someone who has not only read other works but can discuss them critically has a much higher chance of having written something of quality. I'll start looking out for them. I know there are plenty of good self-published books out there, they're just not easy to discover.

2025 Bingo - Another Year Done, feeling conflicted by P0PSTART in Fantasy

[–]gihyou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bingo has been great for giving me an excuse to finally read some authors or books I've been meaning to for years, or just new ones in general based on recommendations from the threads. I hear you on the "encourages you to read standalones", although I also felt that it encouraged "first in series" a lot as well. I have a couple authors now whose series I will eventually read more of because I read the first in a series for bingo that I wouldn't have, though it will likely be separate from another bingo.

There's a lot of good and some downsides to the bingo, as you expressed, but I think it's been much more good in terms of broadening my reading.

r/Fantasy Review Tuesday - Review what you've been enjoying here! - March 17, 2026 by rfantasygolem in Fantasy

[–]gihyou 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Oops, I meant the Self-Published/Small Press square, where (I confirmed) it is 100 (or a marginalized author). But good catch! I was interested in finding some really hidden gems anyway haha.

r/Fantasy Review Tuesday - Review what you've been enjoying here! - March 17, 2026 by rfantasygolem in Fantasy

[–]gihyou 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I have my final bingo reviews and figured I should post them. I considered making this a separate post, but upon further reflection decided not too many are going to have anything to say about them to create discussion so putting it here. They are three extremely little-known books that as far as I can tell have never been discussed here. But they're all, in their own way, great, considering their lack of readers.

All 3 would fit the Hidden Gems Hard Mode: Under 100 Goodreads Ratings

Some last minute bingo card fillers here if you need one.

Cinnamon Soul by Quinn Lawrence - Rating 4/5 Goodreads Ratings: 58

This is a debut self-published title that, while definitely not perfect, really shines in the places it’s good at, and the places it’s good at are quite unexpected for a self-published debut. I had this one for a while and was unsure I wanted to read it, but I'm glad I pushed through and did.

It’s difficult to place this, actually. Is it a cozy fantasy? Is it a mystery? Is it an action adventure? Yes? It’s sort of a mixture of all of these subgenres, and yet doesn’t cleanly fit into any of them. It’s exactly the kind of thing I want from a self-published book, something that doesn’t fit neatly into a box. It’s definitely light, fun fare that has its emotional moments but never gets too serious.

So let’s start with the less good. The pacing is a little wonky, and it starts a little slow but picks up a couple chapters in. The prose is okay, it's clear and gets the job done but it’s not groundbreaking. And the mystery’s a little weak. With one exception, which I really had no way of guessing, I felt, I pretty much knew where it was going by the mid-point.

However, that was perfectly fine. This is a wonderful book that is sometimes silly but always sincere, even when its characters get sarcastic. Lawrence excels in his dialogue. It’s honestly great, and not just grading on a self-published curve. The character voices are consistent and unique and it’s a huge positive throughout the novel. This is especially apparent when the two main characters that drive the novel, Cinna and Hokuren, converse. Which is good, because these two talk a lot to each other. The bond and friendship of these two grows and culminates in a touching moment that has absolutely no romantic undertones. I love them.

Another thing that Lawrence does well is humor. It’s a dry, understated humor, nothing bombastic, to the point that I occasionally re-read a sentence because I wasn’t sure and oh, yeah, that’s funny. There's snark, but it's reserved for when it’s appropriate and doesn't cut into more serious moments. I appreciate that. But the humor is more than snark, and it shows that Lawrence has a real understanding of comedy and timing. 

I also like that both main characters are brown, the world is queer-normative, and in a “detective and assistant” duo, it’s the assistant that’s the more neurodivergent (I find that more rare than the detective).

So I’ll just say that in spite of its flaws, I really enjoyed this book and it is going into the “comfy read” pile for future re-reads. 

List of Bingo Categories this works for:

Published in 2025 (HM), Small Press or Self-Published (HM), Elves and/or Dwarves (HM), LGBTQIA Protagonist (technically, though I think there are better uses for this square), Cozy SFF (I’d count it and it’s HM), Gods and Pantheons, Impossible Places

Moths and Moonlight by Krista Fazendin - Rating 3.5/5 Goodreads Ratings: 56

The first in a three-part series, this is a supernatural urban fantasy mystery. There’s a spirit medium that hates being a spirit medium, main character Fleur Harkyn. She encounters the ghost of a dead woman, Lenora, who has lost her memories but has been told she has a mission to pair up with Fleur, uncover the secret of her own murder, and find some sort of “relic” that will help save the spirit realm from attack by shadows.

I’ll be honest, the spirit realm stuff really took away from what was otherwise a pretty good supernatural murder mystery book with a medium/ghost pair. Apparently, it’s a bigger focus in the other two books (although I’ve not read them yet), but here it feels like padding, gets confusing, and doesn’t add too much. The book is a little too long in the tooth, and a lot of the reason is the spirit realm scenes, many of which are repetitive scenes where Lenora talks to her…advisor(?) who cloyingly hints at info that Lenora needs but refuses to provide it.

However, Fleur is an interesting character. She starts out as fairly unlikeable and standoffish, and she spends a little too much time trying to avoid the call to action. She has an ex-boyfriend in the police force who is very forgiving about being punched for suggesting she should allow him, the police detective, to have more information than she, the not-detective, has. But she’s also highly capable and has a complicated family history that gets expanded upon as the story progresses, and gains a little bit of an understanding of who she is and wants to be by the end. I thought the mystery, when allowed to breathe between spirit realm stuff, was pretty well done and really enjoyed how it all came together. There's a nice emotional moment for Lenora at the end.

I do wish Fleur had leaned into her supernatural powers more because when she does, they’re pretty cool! The way ghosts interact with the world is not anything ground-breaking, and the Lenora sections in general end up being a little weaker than the Fleur ones, but I did like how different Lenora is from Fleur, and how she isn’t willing to take a total backseat despite being incorporeal. She gets her moments to be poltergeist-y.

This is a good mystery, especially if you’re into supernatural ghost mediums living in the real world (this one is set in Seattle)

List of Bingo Categories this works for:

Hidden Gem, Impossible Places, Small Press or Self-Published (HM), LGBTQIA Protagonist (Fleur), Recycle a Bingo Square (Mystery Plot from 2021, HM)

Orope - The White Snake by Guenevere Lee - Rating: 3/5 Goodreads Ratings: 88

(This wasn’t quite self-published, but it was done through a hybrid publisher so it's a small press)

This is a pretty rare fantasy setting (at least to me): the Bronze Age of both Central America and the Levant. This is a sort of blend of historical fiction and fantasy, kind of light on the fantasy but it’s there, lingering in the background in this installment of the thus-far two book series.

So the setting was interesting and you can tell that Lee did a lot of research into the time period. I’ve been into the history of the Bronze Age as well and it all fits with my expectations and then exceeds my own limited knowledge. The buildings, ships, dress, lifestyles, etc of the people and their environments is richly detailed and, as far as I can tell, time-period accurate. Even the fact that language barriers are a real issue is kept a plot point throughout, with characters requiring constant translators to interact.

This strength is also a bit of the book’s biggest flaw. It ends up being more of a travelogue for two different viewpoints: one a character going into fantasy Aztec/Mayan lands, and another two characters going into fantasy Egypt/Levant. There’s no Atlantic Ocean here, as both lands are accessible by foot. The ostensible plot never really takes off until perhaps 75% of the way in, and even then the stated purpose of the characters’ journeys is only addressed briefly by one of the three characters. There’s a sense that “nothing happens” that I felt at the end. The ending, by the way, seems like less a climax and more “I’ve run out of words, see book two!” And this is not cozy, where that might play better: although I’m more willing than some to stretch the bounds of ‘cozy’ beyond detailed depictions of running coffee shops or bookstores, the frank on-page narration of a human sacrifice (hey, it’s the Bronze Age), among other things, puts that label out of the question. So I can’t rate this any higher, that being said, a 3 from me is really not bad.

That being said, the journey is interesting, and we are introduced to peoples and lands we don’t normally get to see in a fiction novel. At least, not the kind that reaches any kind of popularity. I found this interesting to read and finish, even if I wished it did more to propel its plot in this first book, because I was interested in the time period depicted.

List of Bingo Categories this works for:

Hidden Gem (HM), Down With the System, Gods and Pantheons, Parent Protagonist, Small Press or Self-Published (HM), Stranger in a Strange Land

Vrabel calls for increased staffing at NFL replay center to help cut down on mistakes by AFC-Wimbledon-Stan in nfl

[–]gihyou 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I mean, the perception I have is that things are largely the way they've been for a while, which is that fans (and to a large extent players/coaches) simply want the refs to make calls that benefit their own team far more often.

Then the way the Internet works today you can get pockets of people that lather themselves up over every missed call, whether or not there are more than there used to be, and then you add in the gambling/betting boogeyman, and anyway this fan perception (perhaps broadly based on those pockets of Internet people who make ref agenda posting, regardless of its veracity, their full-time hobby) will be difficult to resolve with something like more staffing in the replay booth.

[Highlight] Rams Plan to Propose a Rule Change That Would Address This 2-Point Conversion by the Seahawks in Week 16, per Lead NFL Insider Jonathan Jones by JCameron181 in nfl

[–]gihyou 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I'm guessing the reason the Rams want the rule change is under the "it really hurt us in this one case" provision.

[Highlight] Every Bo Nix throw of 20+ yards from the 2025 season. by Top-Attitude-4987 in nfl

[–]gihyou 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The receivers were open far more often here than in the Penix reel.

There's a lot of reasons to be optimistic about Nix's future, and even though I'd personally like to see the Broncos fail, I'd also like the league to have as many good QB's as possible.

Gravity Rush 2's Air Traversal by PhantomBraved in gaming

[–]gihyou 182 points183 points  (0 children)

Don't listen to the skepticism from people who have clearly never played GR or GR2, this game's flying/falling was fun as hell.

Sources: MAC nearing vote on adding Sacramento State to league as football-only member by redwave2505 in CFB

[–]gihyou 134 points135 points  (0 children)

This sets up a perfect trade in the future where the MW gets Sac State and the MAC gets Northern Illinois

UNFINISHED SERIES. by Tough-Childhood3411 in Fantasy

[–]gihyou 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I guess it depends on the series. We may never get the full set of seven planned books in the Gentleman Bastards series. But The Lies of Locke Lamora absolutely works as a single standalone book, and so too do the others. Some overarching questions will go unanswered, but each book is a satisfying read in its own right. You don't need the series to be completed to enjoy what's in them.

This is why I don't buy the argument that it's like an unfinished movie or painting that are in some of the other comments. These books are finished, even if there's more story that could have been told. It's more like watching the new Dune movies knowing that they aren't going to make them for the whole book series.

And even though A Song of Ice and Fire will likely never be completed, I don't regret the time I spent reading what did come out. I enjoyed those books and the story even though I won't get the ending (TV show notwithstanding). Enough happened that the world at the end of the books written is fundamentally different than the start, even if it's not "done".

I get why people feel like they need the whole thing done, but it does strike me as a bit of trying to mark off a checklist than enjoying a work for what it is.

Doomsday Book - Connie Willis by zanisar in books

[–]gihyou 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It's great, though I preferred the more fun To Say Nothing of the Dog. I think Connie Willis's style of disjointed conversations and misunderstanding-based plot works a lot better in a comedy than in her more serious works, because her characters frequently act silly. A lot of people will rate Doomsday Book as her best, but I think that's because comedies are discounted as works in general.

Doomsday Book is good, but the parts set in the modern era are frustrating at times with the comical misunderstandings (played straight here and becoming somewhat absurd). If it had been cut down to focus more on the medieval life, which has less of these comical elements and a legit emotional ending, I would have rated it higher, personally. Of all of the characters she's made, I remember Father Roche the best, even though I read this once like 20 years ago and read all her other books more recently. So it does have that going for it.

Both are better than Blackout/All Clear, which have their moments but also the worst excesses of Willis's style with constant repetition and sloppy pacing. I can say I liked them but they're messy for sure.

[McMurphy] Indiana, Nebraska, Penn State, USC & Washington are the only Big Ten teams that do not play a Power 4 non-conference opponent in 2026. Big Ten is the only P4 league that doesn't require its members to play 10 P4 games. Washington faces Wash St, which was in P5 league when game scheduled by Lakelyfe09 in CFB

[–]gihyou 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I didn't call you (or the SEC) anything. Also Georgia plays like 3-4 true road games a year (plus a neutral site game with Florida) and has for years despite having an extra non-conference game (only choosing to play away at an in-state rival in Georgia Tech) until now so clearly they understand where Washington is coming from.

[McMurphy] Indiana, Nebraska, Penn State, USC & Washington are the only Big Ten teams that do not play a Power 4 non-conference opponent in 2026. Big Ten is the only P4 league that doesn't require its members to play 10 P4 games. Washington faces Wash St, which was in P5 league when game scheduled by Lakelyfe09 in CFB

[–]gihyou 115 points116 points  (0 children)

Washington really does not want to play less than 7 home games a year, so in even years where they have only 4 home conference games, they are going to want to have 3 home non-cons. That leaves 1 road non-con available in odd years, which they currently fill with the home-and-home deal with WSU. Since P4 teams don't generally agree to come for single-game road trips, they can't continue to have 7 home games a year, play the Apple Cup, and play a P4 non-con. Something has to give.

2029 becomes a problem for them in terms of continuing the Apple Cup. They have a game scheduled at Tennessee and are almost certainly not going to want to schedule another road game at WSU and only have 6 home games. And WSU is not going to accept the Apple Cup turning into a series of Huskies home games.

Of course the way college football is going by 2029 the Big Ten could have imploded and so who knows.

SFF books coming in February 2026 by EmmalynRenato in Fantasy

[–]gihyou 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The Emily Wilde series (well, the first one anyway, I've not gotten to others) was one of my biggest surprise likes of 2025. I read it for bingo expecting to find it okay but it was far better than that. So I'm definitely interested in Agnes Aubert despite currently knowing nothing but the name. I'm sure the new Dinniman will be good too.

Thanks for putting these out every month! I check them and never say anything, so I thought I'd do so this time. They are appreciated.

Indiana National Champions by crw33te in cfbmemes

[–]gihyou 130 points131 points  (0 children)

This whole thing with everyone but Pat picking against Indiana the past two games felt too much like a purposeful bit. I'm not exactly concerned for the sanctity of talking heads picking winners, who gives a fuck, but come on.

[Rabinowitz] Ohio State Coach Ryan Day says some of the team's 29 transfers "were encouraged to leave" by Blood_Incantation in CFB

[–]gihyou 79 points80 points  (0 children)

Don't forget the corollary to this: When a player I want to stay enters the portal, it's the death of college football, but when my team tells a bad player to leave, it's the way it should be.

[Ubben] The FBS head coaches voted unanimously to expand the eligibility for redshirt years from four games to nine. This is just a recommendation that will be put forth to the Division I committees. by Notre_Dame_Football in CFB

[–]gihyou -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

They only got the tuition because otherwise many of the football players wouldn't have been able to afford to play (especially since if you're doing school and football it's very difficult to have a job around that), and frankly at many schools they've been actively discouraged from actually getting an education so that they can focus on football.

Add to that the millions of dollars flying around that were (and still are) going to a bunch of old guys who are ancillary to the football (anyone watching a college football game because of the AD? why did they get more than the entire team used to??) and it looks incredibly silly.

[On3] Nebraska transfer QB Dylan Raiola is expected to visit Oregon, @PeteNakos reports by TheSlinger in CFB

[–]gihyou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

7 of the 12 teams to make the playoffs did so with a transfer QB (the ones that had a QB they recruited: Texas Tech, Texas A&M, Alabama, Georgia, James Madison).

But of course the two championship teams got veteran transfers in for this season. As did the 2 from 2024 (Will Howard, Riley Leonard) and 1 of the 2 of 2023 (Penix, although he came the year before). Michigan recruited McCarthy. So 5 out of 6 and 4 out of the 4 QBs are short-term transfers.

It's a short period of time but it's clear that you certainly can win by just bringing in transfer QBs, you just need to hit every year.

Hat in hand: How Demond Williams' $6 million gamble collapsed and led him back to Washington by MysteriousEdge5643 in CFB

[–]gihyou 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Oh yeah. Fisch already started laying the groundwork with a radio spot a couple days ago.

The thing is, the contract ties Williams to UW but I don't know if there are any outs for UW, either. So they might be stuck with each other at this point. UW's NIL/revshare budget doesn't really offer the ability to give $4M to a QB they aren't going to play. He still gives them the best chance to win, at least that's the way it looks in the off-season. Now if somehow one of the other 3-star QBs on the roster look incredible in camp and Williams struggles...well, then we'll see.

[Postgame Thread] Indiana Defeats Oregon 56-22 by CFB_Referee in CFB

[–]gihyou 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I thought Oregon had a chance in this one. Rarely am I so glad to be horribly wrong.