RafaelFajardo

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  • notational: orkwitch: queerpunkhamlet: sixpenceee: Someone messaged me and told me about this really strange game.  This game is called Loved but it does the exact opposite. It makes the player feel guilty and bad. It’s also kind of trippy.  Anyway you gotta experience it for yourself. No screamers I promise!  Let’s hope my blog doesn’t…

    May 18, 2014
  • bitforms: By the way Internet friends, bitforms will be moving to a new location in the Lower East Side this August! Goodbye Chelsea, you will always be our first love. bananas

    May 18, 2014
  • newsweek: Men Throwing Rocks With The Other Hand (by Juan Etchegaray) (Source: https://player.vimeo.com/)

    May 18, 2014
  • Interesting. I will look for Snowpiercer. ladymargo: Dear Tumblr, I just got around to seeing this movie, despite the fact that it did not get a wide-release. Find it and watch it. Believe me when I say, this film is in the same league of sci-fi/speculative film classics as Bladerunner and Children of Men. This.…

    May 18, 2014
  • postwhitesociety: from Patricia Hill Collins’ Black Sexual Politics: African Americans, Gender, and the New Racism

    May 18, 2014
  • Everybody gets told to write about what they know. The trouble with many of us is that at the earlier stages of life we think we know everything- or to put it more usefully, we are often unaware of the scope and structure of our ignorance. Thomas Pynchon (via amandaonwriting)

    May 18, 2014
  • (via Escape from Woomera still highlights Australia’s shame 11 years on | Polygon)

    May 18, 2014
  • GUILLERMO ANGULO: He tried to write One Hundred Years early on. At the beginning he called it his mamotreto [bulky notebook]. It was not spoken of; he could not write it. He knew the novel needed a writer with more experience, so he waited until the day he became the writer capable of writing One…

    May 18, 2014
  • I think that his greatness lies in his imagination. An imagination with which he reveals things to the world that appear to be improbable, but people like them. It’s the way he puts them. A metallic grasshopper, for example, that leaps from town to town along the banks of the Magdalena River. Connecting technology with…

    May 17, 2014
  • What was it like to be a female Star Trek fan in the 1960s?

    rhube: phene-thyla-mine: I found these reddit posts that I thought gave great insight into what it was like for women in the 1960s who enjoyed Star Trek.  Very eye-opening, in my opinion.  I hadn’t realized the extent to which women enjoying science fiction was frowned upon.  Source: X [–]Aynielle 6 points 11 months ago:  I often wonder if…

    May 17, 2014
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About us

Rafael Fajardo (he/him) is an artist, designer, researcher, and educator. Born in Colombia, he migrated with his parents to the United States in 1968 and grew up in San Antonio, Texas. Through his work with SWEAT, Rafael has been creating boundary-blurring videogames as an art form since 2000. Rafael has also collaborated with artists Adán De La Garza and Justin Ankenbauer under the moniker of Dizzy Spell to curate a series of pop-up artist game arcades.

https://rafaelfajardo.com/links.html

https://sudor.net

https://dizzyspell.xyz

Latest posts

  • Discord may be taking our data
  • Yurupari documentary series
  • Learning Pico-8
  • What I did with my June
  • Block Coding in Godot 2

Categories

  • books
  • code drawings
  • commissions
  • communities
  • games
  • toys
  • tumblr archive
  • words

RafaelFajardo

ludo ergo sum