@BethanyBlack The steamdeck would be better for playing on the plane though, I think. I also prefer playing my Switch propped up in bed whereas if I’m using my laptop I have to sit up to a desk to be comfortable. It’s all down to what you feel most comfortable with, and I’m guessing the two weeks of work is paying well enough to give you options!
@BethanyBlack the thing with a work laptop is that you’ll be lugging it around, so it’s better to go for something that will do the job without being too heavy or too expensive to replace if it breaks. I do my “on the road” gaming on a Switch but I’m seriously tempted by the Steamdeck or possibly the ROG Ally when I have some money to spare.
@BethanyBlack can we also cut the stuff about being “high functioning” too? Just because I can make it through a day at work (and be pretty good at it) doesn’t mean that it’s not a struggle most of the time.
The video games of my youth didn’t have music, beyond the odd beep, so the first soundtrack that made me stop and listen was The Secret of Monkey Island which I played on a friend’s Amiga.
Your least favourite track on your favourite music album.
This is a tricky one.
One of my favourite albums is The Race for Space by Public Service Broadcasting which tells the history of the space race using archive recordings and some banging tunes. There’s a great track called Gagarin which has an upbeat funky horn section but on the album it’s followed by Fire in the Cockpit. (1/2)
Spaceplan is pretty much an idle clicker game, but it actually has a story and an excellent electronic soundtrack to accompany it. It’s one of the very few games that I put on just to listen to the music.
A Day in the Life by the Beatles starts out as a jaunty little song about getting out of bed, takes a hard turn into psychedelia and then ends with a symphony orchestra turned up to 11 capped with the longest sustained piano chord I’ve ever heard. Absolutely amazing!
The game that I immediately thought of was Journey - a haunting trek through a desolate desert, where you occasionally see other travellers but no words are spoken.