I'll keep this (relatively, for me) short.
My kids and I have been playing Mario Kart World on the Switch 2. It's really well done, free roam is fun (but limited), and the controls, smoothness, graphics, etc. are REALLY well done. It's lacking in many features (ghosts racing, competitive free roam trials, tracks, items, etc.) and I hope many of the gaps will be filled in over the coming years. It's feeling a bit played out already.
BUT... I've also recently introduced Double Dash (Gamecube) and Mario Kart Wii to the kids. They got a kick out of wii motion controls and double dash's gimmicks, but even with a retrotink, playing it on a big flatscreen TV is just not ideal.
So I sailed the high seas for some ROMs (to games I already own), installed the Dolphin emulator, and installed some 4K texture packs. My PC is ok... i7-4790 processor (10+ years old) and a 3080.
Double Dash, a game from 23 years ago now looks almost as good as Mario Kart World (you can easily find Youtube videos). It's staggeringly good. The controls and speed -- better than World, imho. The performance is fantastic.
If you took the base Double Dash or Wii game and compared to World, you would say we've come incredibly far. But, with a little upscaling, some new textures, etc., it's clear that we really haven't.
I get that Nintendo games are not known for pushing the envelope, but I think this is just one good example of how ... empty ... modern AAA gaming is.
The wokeness was definitely a dog whistle, but Civ7's structural problems go way deeper than that.
There's a lot of shitlibs who have been assmad since Day 1 that Firaxis chose to fuck with the classic formula of the 4X mechanics.
There's also some sweet poetic justice that Firaxis' ultimate downfall was copypasta-ing the failed experimental model of Sega/Amplitude's Humankind which had failed hard itself 5 years earlier despite being promoted as the latest "Civ Killer". Where Amplitude's dev team was similarly infiltrated with public-facing trannies too.
It was a civ killer, just not in the way they hoped