My absolute favorite place to get wallpapers. You can filter by size, aspect ratio, color, and content. If you can't find a wallpaper you like here, there's no hope.
Acheron Games makes great supplement materials for D&D 5e, including my personal favorite: Inferno, which is a hellish supplement based on The Inferno by Dante Alighieri.
I love synthwave. It makes me believe that the 80s never ended, and NewRetroWave Records has some of the best synthwave artists out there. If you're looking for something that's not the music industry same-old, give these guys a look.
The Winamp Skin Museum is chock full of old Winamp skins. There's a lot of them that are plain awful, but it's still really fun to go through a huge archive like this and browse around. It's an endless scroll, so you'll never run out of nostalgia.
This is an awesome resource for all things related to Beyond the Supernatural. It favors the second edition of BTS, but it's really easy to convert between them.
An excellent essay that details how the dystopia that is modern American life isn't the cyberpunk that we were promised, but gothic horror instead. Very well written.
A really good (and free) ebook for getting you up to speed with python quickly, and getting it to do useful things. This is a great second step in learing python, or a good first step if you have prior programming knowledge, even in a different programming language.
A beginner's introductory course to programming with python. Very simplistic, and very much geared toward the absolute newbie. A perfect place to start if you have never programmed before, but if you have a lot of the material will feel too easy for you.
One of the most stable collections of classic ROM files on the net. I have no idea how Vimm has been around since 1997, but I'm grateful. This site has been my go-to for classic gaming literally for years. It's not a complete archive anymore (thanks, Nintendo) but it still has most of what you might want.
A Linux distribution dedicated to retro gaming and emulation. It can even be run from a USB drive, so there's no need to replace your existing operating system.
A handy site for people like me who think that the box art is just as important as the game itself. A good box art can make even a mediocre game look amazing, and it's ususally what draws a person to pick up the game and give it a shot. In an era where digital downloads are king, and physical copies are becoming rarer, this kind of site is a breath of fresh air.
A neat retro styled internet portal, styled after the old Yahoo! directory. It also allows you to search with alternative search engines like Old'aVista.
This is a well written article with a brief history of the early internet (going back even further than I can remember) and detailing the nightmare that corporate run web has become, and how people like myself are keeping the tradition of the personal website alive.
An excellent manifesto by Kev Quirk regarding how the current state of the web is hot garbage, and that Web 1.0 was a better place. In a lot of ways, it mirrors the ideas outlined in my essay, but I disagree with his conclusion. The Web 1.0 isn't dead, but it's widespread adoption is unlikely without a massive paradigm shift of the majority of internet users.
Lovable college freshmen accidentally falls for his roommate, who streams constantly with a female persona. Heartwarming and sweet. I literally couldn't put this one down.
Welcome to Heaven's Blog
Home of my favorite LGBTQ-centric web comic. Great content, and very relatable to me. Not particularly explicit, but still NSFW.