The first time I remember hearing to the Beatles was I was six or seven years old. I was at my friend’s house jumping on his bed. We decided it would be better to jump listening to some music, so he put a random CD into his CD player. I kind of liked it and he told me it was the Beatles. I found myself singing the lyrics to myself a few days later and making up my own versions of the song. I was into environmentalism and a bit fatalistic so I sang, “We all live in a big trash bag,” instead of, “We all live in a yellow submarine.”

I didn’t think much about it then, but fifteen years later I own almost all the Beatles songs.

My second exposure to the Beatles was watching Yellow Submarine with my parents. I loved the silly little characters and the infinite catch phrases that my family has adopted. My favorite Beatle became Ringo because he was nice to the Nowhere Man.

After watching the movie I insisted that my parents give me all the Beatles music they could find. My parents gave me most of their old CDs. I bought a few at the record store on my own as well. I started listening to them all the time on my walkman. I even started spelling the insect type of beetles as beatles because I thought that was how you spelled it. I took my favorite Beatles CD, the Yellow Submarine soundtrack,  with me to summer camp. I stored it in the same bag as my sun screen. The sun screen leaked out and ruined my Beatles CD case along with my Elvis and The Who best hits CD cases.

My parents told me that Ringo was the voice of the the conductor on Thomas the Tank Engine’s TV show. I freaked out and tried to watch the show whenever I could. I was sorely disappointed when I learned it was no longer on the air.

I still listen to the Beatles quite often. I wouldn’t say they’re my favorite band. That title belongs to the Barenaked Ladies. The Beatles are still the band that I own the most albums of though.

That’s all for today!

-Mister Ed

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I’m Isaac

Welcome to the GoCorral website! I’m Isaac Shaker and this is a place for me to write about D&D and occasionally other topics. I host a podcast called Setting the Stage that interviews different DMs about their campaigns. I’m currently focused on completing the Cimmeria campaign setting and turning it into a book.

Setting the Stage Podcast

81 – Biopunk 2287 RPG (Seiya and Synesthesia Synthetica) Setting the Stage, Campaigns for D&D and Other RPGs

Seiya tells us about his TTRPG system and setting, Synesthesia Synthetica (SNS). SNS is a biopunk game adjacent to the cyberpunk and steampunk genres. After an asteroid induced climate disaster, Earth has rebuilt itself using bio-technology instead of the metal based tech that surrounds us in the real world. Genetically modified humans have split into distinct species and mutant horrors prowl the wastes outside civilization. The rich rule from their space stations up above but resistance is growing in the streets below.During the episode we discussed a piece of art that Seiya had made for the game. A picture of that bio-tank is available for you to look at.At the moment, Synesthesia Synthetica is available for free as an early access game on itch.io and DriveThruRPG.If you want to learn more or find a group to play with, you can do that on the Synesthesia Synthetica Discord.Remember to nominate your favorite TTRPG shows/creators/things for the 2026 CRIT Awards!Check out the Setting the Stage website!Want to be on the show? Fill out this survey.Join our Discord!Support Setting the Stageon Patreon! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  1. 81 – Biopunk 2287 RPG (Seiya and Synesthesia Synthetica)
  2. 80 – Dynamic RPG Countries (Travis and Tetara)
  3. 79 – Dragon Age Degenerates (Zoe from Degenerates with Dice)
  4. 78 – D&D in Suburbia (Ryan and Serenity Springs)
  5. 77 – KPop DnD Hunters (Dan and Idols of the Neon Dark)