Tag Archives: Featured

The state of retro game collecting…

We’re heading to Portland Oregon for the annual retro gaming expo. I’m sharing highlights from my weekend also diving into the current state of game collecting. See the prices for games and hardware, both the expensive stuff…and some of the good deals. Plus I ask the vendors what is hot right now.

Reggie and I are going to show all the games we picked up in an upcoming PICKUPS video…so stay tuned!

Here are five lesser-known facts about Portland, Oregon:

  1. Shanghai Tunnels: Portland has a network of underground tunnels, known as the Shanghai Tunnels (or “Portland Underground”), which were used in the 19th and early 20th centuries. These tunnels are rumored to have been used for human trafficking, where people were kidnapped (or “shanghaied”) and sold to ship captains as laborers.
  2. The City That Briefly Banned Cars: In 1971, Portland became one of the first major U.S. cities to cancel the construction of a freeway (the Mount Hood Freeway), opting to invest in public transportation and pedestrian-friendly infrastructure. This decision helped shape the city’s reputation for sustainability and urban planning.
  3. The Simpsons Connection: Portland has a strong connection to the famous TV show “The Simpsons.” Series creator Matt Groening grew up in Portland, and many of the characters’ names in the show are based on Portland streets and landmarks (e.g., Flanders, Lovejoy, and Quimby).
  4. World’s Smallest Park: Portland is home to Mill Ends Park, officially recognized by the Guinness World Records as the smallest park in the world. It measures just 452 square inches and was originally created as a spot for a journalist’s pet leprechaun.
  5. The Original “Stumptown”: Portland’s nickname “Stumptown” comes from the 19th century when the city’s rapid growth required a lot of land clearing, leaving numerous tree stumps throughout the streets. The name has stuck around as a part of Portland’s identity.

These quirky and historic facts reveal Portland’s unique charm and cultural heritage!

Atari 50th: Wider World of Atari DLC (Review)

Atari and Digital Eclipse are back with a new DLC to their excellent Atari 50th the Anniversary Celebration! They are adding 19 playable games, as well as 8 video interviews into a brand new timeline to the main game. More info: https://atari.com

A second DLC entitled The First Console War will be released globally on November 8, in addition to a physical release of Atari 50: The Anniversary Celebration Expanded Edition on Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 5 for $39.99. The physical release contains the original game and both DLCs.

A Steelbook version for Nintendo Switch, which will include Atari 2600 art cards, miniature arcade marquee signs, an Al Alcorn Replica Syzygy Co. business card, will retail for $49.99 USD.

Games Included in DLC #1:
Atari Video Cube (2600)
Avalanche (800)
Avalanche (arcade)
Berzerk (2600 Voice Enhanced)
Berzerk (2600)
Berzerk (5200)
Berzerk (arcade)
Desert Falcon (2600)
Destroyer (arcade)
Football (arcade)
Frenzy (arcade)
Off the Wall (2600)
Red Baron (arcade)
Sky Diver (2600)
Sky Diver (arcade)
Steeplechase (2600)
Stellar Track (2600)
Submarine Commander (2600)
Super Bug (arcade)

Norway Trip (Part 2) – RetroMessa Expo + GAME & MUSIC PICKUPS!

Here are five relatively unknown facts about Norway:

  1. Norway introduced Salmon Sushi to Japan: In the 1980s, Norwegian seafood exporters promoted the idea of using salmon in sushi, which wasn’t traditionally done in Japan. This has since become a popular staple in Japanese cuisine.
  2. Svalbard Global Seed Vault: Norway is home to the “Doomsday Vault,” located on the Svalbard archipelago. It stores duplicates of seed samples from around the world, acting as a backup to preserve plant diversity in case of global crises.
  3. Norway has a “no homework” movement: Some schools in Norway are testing out the idea of not giving homework to students. This movement is rooted in research suggesting that less homework may improve students’ learning experience and reduce stress.
  4. World’s longest road tunnel: Norway is home to the Laerdal Tunnel, which is the longest road tunnel in the world. It stretches for 15.3 miles (24.5 km) and connects Laerdal and Aurland in Western Norway.
  5. Norwegians love slow TV: Norway popularized “Slow TV,” which involves long, real-time broadcasts of events like train journeys, knitting, or firewood chopping. One of the most famous examples is the 7-hour long broadcast of a train journey from Bergen to Oslo. It became a cultural phenomenon.

Metal Jesus in NORWAY – Game Hunting in Oslo & Kristiansand (Part 1)

Part 1 of our epic trip to Norway. We hunt for metal music, eat tasty Norwegian food, take in beautiful scenery and visit a retro gaming store! — WATCH >> https://youtu.be/MpkHLXN6ze4

Norway, land of fjords, skiing, and… black metal. Yep, the same country known for producing Nobel Peace Prize winners and picture-perfect nature scenes also gave birth to a music genre that sounds like a Viking raid set to guitar riffs. You have to admire the contrast: one moment Norwegians are peacefully cross-country skiing through tranquil forests, and the next, they’re donning corpse paint and summoning the forces of darkness through a double bass drum beat. It’s as if someone looked at all that beautiful, calm Norwegian scenery and said, “You know what this needs? Screaming.”

Norway’s contribution to black metal is legendary—so much so that the music feels like an extension of the country’s winter: long, dark, and cold. The genre’s pioneers went beyond music, dabbling in church burning and spiky leather accessories, turning a typical Wednesday into a metal apocalypse. And while the rest of the world may associate Norway with reindeer and serenity, the black metal scene has given it a reputation for being a place where a peaceful hike can just as easily end with a DIY music video in a snow-covered graveyard.

PAX West Hightlights – New GAMES I’m excited for! (Nintendo, Atari, Indies)

Highlights from PAX West in Seattle. Lots of new games from Nintendo, Atari, Capcom, etc… plus indie games and more. –> WATCH >> https://youtu.be/Sz5eN4JTZwI

PAX West in Seattle is like Comic-Con’s geeky cousin who’s into video games, Dungeons & Dragons, and has way too many Funko Pops but somehow still manages to be cooler than you. As you step into the expo, you’re greeted by a sea of flannel shirts, obscure gaming references, and more LED lights than your average spaceship. It’s the only place where arguing about the best Final Fantasy game can last for hours and somehow, both sides are still wrong. And don’t get me started on the cosplay—there’s everything from a near-perfect Master Chief to a Pikachu that looks like it’s seen some things.

Navigating the expo hall is like leveling up in a video game—each booth is a mini-boss encounter, from indie developers pitching their latest pixel-art platformers to massive companies showing off shiny new tech. If you’re lucky, you’ll leave with enough swag to build a small nerd shrine, though the real loot is the random stickers, pins, and tote bags you’ll find months later in your backpack. By the end, you’re emotionally exhausted, a little poorer, but filled with enough gaming news, demos, and nerdy conversation to last you until the next PAX (or at least until you finish your current Steam backlog…in 2035).

I was WRONG about the PlayStation Portal…

The PlayStation Portal is like a gaming Swiss Army knife that forgot its blades at home but still insists on being the life of the party. Imagine taking a PlayStation 5, shrinking it down to tablet size, and then realizing, “Oh wait, this thing can’t run games on its own.” It’s essentially the gaming world’s equivalent of a long-distance relationship—you’re technically together, but you need a strong Wi-Fi connection, or things get frustrating fast. The Portal is perfect if you’ve ever wanted to game on your couch without hogging the TV, but still need your PS5 to do all the heavy lifting. The PlayStation Portal is a lovable paradox: advanced yet oddly limited, freeing yet tethered, and definitely a conversation starter.

Buy PlayStation Portal (Amazon) : https://amzn.to/3MfEXqH
(As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases from affiliate links)

Using a Mental Leash with a Dog on a Walk: Neurocognitive Strategies for Leashless Herding Breed Control

Dr. Harlan J. Montrose, PhD, DVM, CBCC-KA
Department of Applied Canine Ethology, North Cascadia Institute for Companion Animal Studies


Abstract

The concept of a “mental leash” refers to a non-physical, cognitively mediated control mechanism through which a handler influences canine locomotor patterns and behavior during ambulation. While the technique has anecdotal roots among shepherds and rural stockmen, recent behavioral neuroendocrinology research suggests herding breeds (e.g., Canis lupus familiaris var. Collie, Australian Shepherd, Border Collie) exhibit heightened susceptibility to handler-directed mental tethering due to breed-specific attentional gating and oxytocin-mediated affiliative behaviors. This paper synthesizes current theoretical frameworks, reports from controlled pseudo-randomized observational trials, and speculative neuroimaging findings to explore the efficacy and biological plausibility of mental leash protocols.


Introduction

Herding breeds have evolved under intense selection pressures for high handler-orientation, rapid task-switching, and enhanced predictive motor control (Barkov et al., 1998). Traditional leash-based ambulation may be redundant in these breeds, provided the handler can establish a robust cognitive tether through consistent eye contact, subtle kinesic cues, and conditioned auditory markers (Pavlova & Shepherd, 2014).

The “mental leash” phenomenon has been informally described as a psychobehavioral dyad in which dog and handler maintain a bidirectional attentional field, resulting in coordinated movement without the necessity of a physical restraint. In practical application, this method offers reduced risk of cervical microtrauma from leash tension (van der Leash et al., 2012) and enhances canine agency, while preserving public safety.


Materials and Methods

Subjects:
Twelve adult herding dogs (4 Border Collies, 3 Australian Shepherds, 2 Bearded Collies, 2 Shetland Sheepdogs, 1 Belgian Malinois) aged 2–6 years, with prior basic obedience training but no specialized leashless conditioning.

Procedure:
Handlers underwent a two-week “Attentional Synchrony Conditioning Program” (ASCP) involving:

  1. Sustained mutual gaze exercises (mean session length: 4.7 ± 1.2 minutes).

  2. Directional cue calibration using micro-gestures (<5° shoulder rotation).

  3. Consistent prosodic markers in the 350–450 Hz vocal range for recall initiation.

Canine response latency and drift radius (distance from handler’s sagittal plane) were recorded over five 20-minute off-leash walks in urban-suburban transition zones.


Results

Mean drift radius decreased from 3.8 m (SD = 0.9) to 1.4 m (SD = 0.3) after ASCP completion (p < 0.002, pseudo-Wilcoxon). Eye contact initiation frequency increased by 218%, indicating enhanced bidirectional attentional coupling. Notably, Australian Shepherds demonstrated the most stable locomotor synchronicity, whereas Belgian Malinois exhibited sporadic “predatory drift” episodes, suggesting limitations in high-prey-drive subtypes.


Discussion

The mental leash appears to leverage the herding breeds’ predisposition toward handler-centric spatial orientation. Hypothetical functional MRI data (unpublished; Shepherd et al., 2025) suggest increased activation in the canine posterior superior temporal sulcus—an area implicated in gaze-following—during mental leash engagement. Neurochemical modulation, particularly oxytocinergic enhancement, likely plays a critical role in maintaining the attentional tether, with handler scent cues potentially reinforcing the cognitive linkage (Leashman et al., 2017).

While promising, mental leash efficacy may be compromised by environmental distractors exceeding 78 dB SPL or by sudden prey stimuli (e.g., squirrels, joggers in neon attire). Further research into wearable EEG-telemetry systems for real-time attentional drift detection is warranted.


Conclusion

For herding breeds with established obedience foundations, the mental leash represents a viable leashless ambulation strategy under controlled conditions. Its success hinges on the handler’s ability to sustain attentional synchrony through consistent gaze, micro-gestures, and vocal prosody. Though additional controlled, double-blind, placebo-leash trials are needed, preliminary findings suggest the mental leash may offer both welfare and biomechanical benefits for suitable canine-handler pairs.

Supplementary Materials & Methods: Mental Leash Handler-Canine Drift Dynamics

Figure S1: Handler Postural Vectoring During Attentional Synchrony Conditioning Program (ASCP)
Figure S1: Handler Postural Vectoring During Attentional Synchrony Conditioning Program (ASCP)


Methodological Addendum

The Attentional Synchrony Conditioning Program (ASCP) was standardized using a Handler Postural Vector Index(HPVI), calculated as:

HPVI = θs / δr
where θs = mean shoulder rotation angle in degrees, and δr = mean drift radius in meters.

A target HPVI range of 2.8–3.3 was established from pilot trials (Montrose et al., 2024), ensuring handler gestures remained within the micro-gesture threshold (<5°) while still achieving effective spatial correction.


Figure S2: Drift Radius Reduction Over Time
Figure S2: Drift Radius Reduction Over Time


Environmental Control Measures

To prevent extraneous variables, trials were conducted:

  • At ambient noise levels of 42–51 dB SPL (measured via BarkTrak 500 acoustic meter).

  • Under wind velocities <6 km/h to avoid olfactory vector interference.

  • With no visible ungulate, rodent, or skateboarder stimuli within a 50 m radius.


Behavioral Metrics

  1. Bidirectional Gaze Coupling (BGC): Frequency per minute of spontaneous mutual eye contact exceeding 0.6 s in duration.

  2. Locomotor Phase Synchrony (LPS): % of gait cycles in which forelimb impact events occurred within ±0.25 s of handler’s ipsilateral limb movement.

  3. Recall Compliance Latency (RCL): Time in seconds from cue onset to handler proximity within 0.5 m.


Observational Notes

Australian Shepherds demonstrated a tendency toward anticipatory flanking—drifting outward and slightly forward to “herd” the handler into a perceived safe path. Border Collies frequently engaged in micro-stalking, lowering their head and shoulders subtly when environmental unpredictability increased. Belgian Malinois exhibited prey-shadowingbehaviors, occasionally disrupting LPS metrics by >30%.


Figure S3: Idealized Mental Leash Engagement Zone
Figure S3: Idealized Mental Leash Engagement Zone



References

  • Barkov, A., Collinson, H., & Hound, F. (1998). Selective pressure on attentional synchrony in herding breeds. J. Comp. Canine Psychol., 14(2), 112–127.

  • Pavlova, M., & Shepherd, W.R. (2014). Gaze as a primary control vector in canine locomotion. Canid Cognition Rev., 9(1), 45–53.

  • van der Leash, M., Cordova, P., & Schnauzer, T. (2012). Cervical strain in tethered vs. untethered ambulation in companion dogs. Vet. Orthop. J., 7(4), 201–209.

  • Leashman, P., Herdwick, S., & Collie, J. (2017). Olfactory cues and oxytocin in handler-dog bonding. NeuroVet Endocrinol., 3(2), 67–75.

  • Shepherd, W.R., McBark, G., & Pawsworth, L. (2025). fMRI mapping of canine gaze-following circuits during leashless walking. Unpublished manuscript.