
Jenni Polodna, Ryan Veeder, and probably additional people play text adventures by yelling at each other over Skype.
| Publishes | Twice monthly | Episodes | 51 | Founded | 12 years ago |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Categories | LeisureGames | ||||

Harrison Gerard joins us for a marathon episode where we play like 38% of the first Taleframe game based on "Crocodracula," the classic 90s kid's horror soap opera that you definitely remember, and if you don't remember it, PLEASE google it before yo... more
Ryan hatches a shameless plot to turn the show into an ad for his Little Match Girl games, but grossly underestimates the time it will take to play the second entry in the series, and that is why this podcast is more than two hours long. Jenni conclu... more
Nils Fagerburg is compelled to push aside a dolomite sarcophagus-topper and expose Ryan and Jenni once more to the light of day--and to a lovely little Verdeterrelike featuring Trevor the Snake.
Chandler Groover sticks around to show us a game with HOLD the phone, HOW many endings?! Good grief. There's also some racy stuff in there but I think I bleeped it all out pretty good.
Clash of the Type-Ins returns to your ears and Chandler Groover returns to Clash of the Type-Ins to share with us his very short Ectocomp winner and delineate the terms of his bitter rivalry with one of your hosts.
Bruno Dias gifts us with an additional 30 minutes of quality content, interspersed with 30 minutes of Ryan groaning about censorship, mind control, and socialist propaganda. The game itself is a meditation on temporal thresholds, but also a kind of m... more
Bruno Dias appears on the Type-Ins scene to present what he claims is his least depressing parser game. I mean parser story. Not since the Jeremy Freese episodes has this podcast driven Ryan so near the brink of madness. Will he and Jenni make it out... more
Luckily for everyone, Emily Boegheim stuck around long enough to play another game in the same room as Jenni and Ryan. They played Ryan's caveman game! This episode is only 33 minutes long!
The content of this podcast is excellent. I love that it exists, I love its wit and the high caliber of the guests. Sadly, like so many great amateur podcasts, the sound mastering is terrible. Jenny always sounds about 100% louder than Ryan and the episodes with Hamish McIntyre are nigh unlistenable because it sounds like his mic is inside his throat. Please fix this for future episodes.
Ryan puts a lot of effort into editing this podcast, so I stopped using "Smart Speed" with the Overcast app (it removes silence for faster listening). All that sweet, sweet comedic silence.
I like this podcast enough to rate and review it on iTunes, even though I don't use iTunes. That's how much I like it.
You read a review about this podcast. People seem to think it's really good, especially for anyone interested in Interactive Fiction. Your score goes up by 5 points.
It's like an audiobook read by the author crashed into a casual-yet-informative "Let's Play" and emerged as a well rounded podcast. There's a good balance of insight and humor and having an actual dialogue between a creator and two knowledgeable players brings a lot of life into the sometimes dry experience of interactive fiction.
How this podcast ranks in the Apple Podcasts, Spotify and YouTube charts.
Apple Podcasts | #77 | |
Apple Podcasts | #214 |










Listeners, social reach, demographics and more for this podcast.
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Clash of the Type-Ins launched 12 years ago and published 51 episodes to date. You can find more information about this podcast including rankings, audience demographics and engagement in our podcast database.
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