
Natalie Wynn has spent the last decade turning philosophy, internet culture, and politics into some of YouTube’s most ambitious video essays. As ContraPoints, she’s built an audience of millions by dissecting everything from shame and cancel culture to Twilight and J.K. Rowling with visual flourish typically reserved for feature films. But when we dropped her into a retro game store for Polygon’s Shelf Quest, another obsession quickly came into focus: the strange emotional power of old video games.
Wynn’s earliest gaming memories weren’t built around console wars. Raised by what she affectionately calls “PBS liberals,” she says video games were treated as acceptable only if they looked educational. Math Blaster made the cut. Pokémon almost didn’t.
“[My parents] had this prejudice against video games,” Wynn says. Logical Journey of the Zoombinis, she jokes, “really benefited from having the word ‘logic’ in the title” when it came to convincing skeptical parents.
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