Showing only Notes + Links tagged gameson creativity, art, & design
by Casey A. Gollan


Feb 11, 2010comments

The tarot is most commonly viewed as a tool for divination. A traditional tarot reading involves a seeker - someone who is looking for answers to personal questions - and a reader - someone who knows how to interpret the cards. After the seeker has shuffled and cut the deck, the reader lays out the chosen cards in a pattern called a spread. Each position in the spread has a meaning, and each card has a meaning as well. The reader combines these two meanings to shed light on the seeker’s question.

A simple process, but rarely presented in a simple way. In films, we always see the tarot being used in a seedy parlor or back room. An old woman, seated in shadows, reads the cards for a nervous, young girl. The crone lifts her wrinkled finger and drops it ominously on the Death card. The girl draws back, frightened by this sign of her impending doom.

This aura of darkness clings to the tarot cards, even now. Some religions shun the cards, and the scientific establishment condemns them as symbols of unreason, a holdover from an unenlightened past. Let us set aside these shadowy images for now and consider the tarot simply for what it is - a deck of picture cards. The question becomes - what can we do with them?

Lesson 1 - Introduction to the Tarot

I’m reading through Joan Bunning’s well written website from 1995 (throwback!) called Learn Tarot. Her refreshingly sane introduction makes a lot of sense to me.

Feb 8, 2009comments
Feb 4, 2009comments

Because Vandals Like Tetris, Too

If you don’t see it, look closer.

(via dailymeh)

Jan 13, 2009comments

BLDGBLOG: SuperMax

This account of “Prison Tycoon 4: Supermax, a ValuSoft game released 2008” is SO messed up.