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Tag: podcast pingback

June 27, 2009

Podcast Pingback – CAGCast

Cheapy takes a wiff
Image by gamerscoreblog via Flickr

Even before these “tough economic times”, gamers have always been looking for ways to save a buck or two. Whether it’s through a used game, or a deal that happens at a local vendor, or a package that has more to offer than taking away your productivity, gamers are always looking for a deal. Enter Cheap Ass Gamer, a site that’s been around for a number of years and has built credibility as a community site for people to find great video game deals, read reviews, and more recently, trade games with one another. Loyal CAGs have been visiting the site for quite some time, and “Internet Space Pimp” CheapyD has built a decent livelihood from running it.

Cheap Ass Gamer has a podcast called CAGCast. CAGCast was around when podcasting was pretty much brand new, which means they’ve gone well past the 150 episode mark, making it one of the longest lived gaming podcasts I’ve had the pleasure to listen to. The podcast consists of CheapyD, staffer and contributor Wombat, and the occasional guest, whether it is reviewer Shipwreck or members of the gaming industry. Consistent topics covered include news from the “Big 3″ – Microsoft, Nintendo, and Sony – as well as talk about what games Cheapy and Wombat are currently playing. A mailbag chock full of listener questions rounds out the on-topic agenda.

The average length of a CAGCast is typically an hour and a half to two hours, which means the podcast is ideal for listening to during a day job as you get work done, during a workout, or on a weekend drive to run errands. Part of the show’s charm, which explains its extended length, is the drifting, yet personable, nature of the show. Cheapy and Wombat don’t just talk about games – they talk about their personal lives, the trials, tribulations, and humor of being relatively recent fathers, Cheapy’s dealings with living in Japanese culture, and tangents into randomness. If a sidetrack into the wonders of poop bothers you and you want a more focused podcast, this might not be the podcast for you. But I think that the tone of the show and where it goes is great, because it humanizes the hosts and shows that they aren’t just faceless members of the gaming media conglomerate. Because of this, the show typically listens as if you were sitting in a restaurant, a bar, or in someone’s living room talking casually about games, giving it an interesting personal charm.

Personality dynamics between Cheapy and Wombat contribute greatly to this charm. Cheapy is generally easygoing, but also opinionated in his gaming thoughts, while Wombat brings in a sardonic wit and sharp commentary. Because of this combination, there are times when the hosts will clash on a variety of gaming and non-gaming related topics, leading to plenty of fodder for discussion and feedback on the part of the listeners. It isn’t unusual to see one of the hosts taken down a peg by a jab from the other host, or from an extremely negative but interesting piece of listener mail. A positive and sunny person like me can still respect the fact that CAGCast doesn’t hide from the more inflammatory bits of listener feedback, turning it into entertaining discussion.

CAGCast is definitely worth a listen if you’ve wanted a podcast that contains plenty of gaming discussion with a heaping helping of personality – even if that personality means talking about poop, weed, and love hotels.

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June 16, 2009

Podcast Pingback – Podtoid

The Destructoid
Image by extraface via Flickr

In great contrast to the lack of rant on a minimally visited site such as Overly Positive, Destructoid is a site filled with edgier writing, controversial op-ed pieces, and ranting galore. Once a smallish little blog, Destructoid has grown into the harsh, direct, yet intelligent voice of the gaming community. There are rules in the Destructoid community – ones that you would expect you would have on a gaming site – but the fast and loose moderation based on tenets such as “Thou shalt not suck” has been Destructoid’s trademark. The result is a community not afraid to speak their mind but who tends to think before they speak, lest the wrath of the community fall upon them. For Destructoid, this works to great effect.

Destructoid has several podcasts, but the flagship is called Podtoid – an hour or two of games discussion, banter about the hot topics of the gaming world, and responses to frequent listener questions. Of perhaps all the podcasts that currently sit on my iPod, Podtoid probably has the most diverse and opinionated set of individuals. There are wry and at times acerbic deliveries from Jim Sterling, whose English accent only serves to increase the novelty of his rather sharp criticisms. There’s Samit Sarkar, the podcast’s requisite punching bag, whose love of sports games and his tendancy to ramble are objects of great humor. Topher Cantler is an old school gamer who boils down his preferences to a few, simple concepts, most of which are in retro games. Aaron Linde, the show’s longest member, is a hardened veteran with equally well-traveled accomplishments – not the least of which includes the unintended contribution to a blatantly pornographic game which was supposed to be a joke. Finally, Anthony Burch rounds out the cast as the navigator and resident prison guard to this set of loveable inmates.

Podtoid’s charm doesn’t really lie in being controversial, raunchy, and raw for its own sake, but simply in the fact that these guys are gamers who feel the sort of things that gamers feel – ultimately, it’s greatest strength is its ability to connect with gamers on many levels. While Destructoid has exploded into a popular site visited by thousands under the watchful and savvy eye of its owner and founder, Niero, you never get the feeling that the site has lost where its roots were – as a gaming blog that had an unabashed, unfiltered opinion about anything and everything video games. Gamers you’ve run into at the store, at friends’ houses, at social gatherings, and in malls fall into at least one or more of the niches that Destructoid fills with its podcast. This means you get a podcast that is not just hilariously funny or dangerously rantish, but also full of content from hosts that feel passionate about their hobby.

So while Destructoid’s acidic opinions seems to run counter to my own sort of “c’est la vie” philosophy about geek topics, they’re more than worthy of a listen – if for nothing else, to hear that even they don’t take themselves seriously. Don’t believe me? Try checking out Podtoid 94, which is an MST3k-ish take on the awful Jean Claude Van Damme and Raul Julia movie Street Fighter. Or what about episode 88, in which Jim Sterling talks about the ultimate in game design being the inclusion of, and interaction with, toucan birds? The latest episode, episode 102, jaws about the Prototype vs. inFamous fanboy gang war. No matter what your slant, Podtoid has something for you – just as long as you’re willing to leave that snooty standard of “professionalism” and “industry insider” at home.

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