Spectacular
5.8K posts

Spectacular
@DukeSpectacular
Why are you reading this bio? I'm not important. Go away.

On May 20, Amazon ended support for every Kindle made in 2012 or earlier. The devices can no longer buy, borrow, or download books. Reset one to factory settings and it will never log back in. The screen still works. The hardware is fine. Amazon reached across the internet and turned a thing you paid for into a brick, on a date they picked, for a reason that benefits them. The owners bought the devices. They bought the books. They followed every rule. Amazon changed the rules anyway, because the rules were never yours. When you tap "Buy now" on a Kindle book, you are not buying a book. You are renting a license that Amazon can revoke, expire, or strand on a dead device whenever it suits the quarter. They designed it this way on purpose, and they showed us the blueprint years ago. In 2009 Amazon reached into thousands of Kindles overnight and deleted, ironically, copies of George Orwell's 1984, a book people had already paid for. They refunded everyone, apologized, and promised never again. We took the promise for what it was worth and watched the door instead. In February 2025 they shut it. They removed Download and Transfer via USB, the last simple tool that let you pull your own purchases onto your own computer and keep them. Newer Kindle files use a format almost nobody can crack. They closed the exit, then they started bricking the devices. None of this was a surprise. They proved in 2009 that they could reach into your library and take a book back. Everything since has just been them deciding when. A copy you cannot hold is a copy you do not own. A library that lives on someone else's server is a library someone else can burn. The cartel rents you access to the words and calls it ownership, and the only reason most people never notice is that the landlord usually lets them stay. May 20 was the eviction notice. It went to 3% of Kindle owners this time. The lease is identical for the other 97%. Stop buying books you cannot hold. When you do buy from Amazon, strip the DRM the day it arrives and keep a clean file somewhere they cannot reach. Back up everything you already own while you still can. A book on your own drive is yours forever. A book in your Amazon account is yours until a lawyer in Seattle decides otherwise. And when you want a book the cartel has priced out of reach or locked behind a dying device, the shadow libraries that never expire are one search away. The pirates build libraries that cannot be revoked, because they assume the cartel always will. The cartel cannot delete what it cannot reach.


It's always them right? 😞 The answer of Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced Censorship.












In the 1980s there was an attempt to destroy tabletop roleplaying games! The claim was that it caused teen suicides. The proof? A kid that played D&D killed himself, so his mom founded a group named BADD (Bothered About D&D) named either in homage or mockery of MADD (Mad About Drunk Driving). The kid who died was also up on charges of grand theft auto, which is incredibly sad, but kind of weakens the idea it was D&D. Most of the focus was on D&D because that's the only RPG that most people had ever heard of. (Side thought - how much more appropriate would Stranger Things have been if the kids had played Call of Cthulhu?) But the people running BADD barely knew about Traveller, Call of Cthulhu, or GURPS. Few articles targeted my games. I did get an occasional mention in a BADD-sponsored editorial. My favorite epithet (repeated several times) was that Call of Cthulhu was "crueler and darker than D&D" so I'll always have that to treasure. 1/2

Squaresoft PS1 RPGs 🔥🔥🔥




































