I used to use Disroot for email and for their git instance, but they are not going to be around for much longer I'm afraid (it's an antifa-adjacent organization, after all). I also used GitHub, but it's owned by Microsoft and also started doubling down on using Copilot and 2 factor authentication which is ugly. For these reasons and others, I have started using Mercurial for version control and hosting things here on my eepsite via a self-hosted Mercurial repository (hgweb). There is no particular reason to use Mercurial besides that I find it actually easier and more intuitive than Git and also because I never follow the crowd.
My eepsite will be around for as long as I can let it because I am a big proponent of the Invisible Internet Project. It's the web the way it should always have been, and gives everybody a way to host things without going through the motion of getting a domain and probably also a web server (both of these things aren't too different from buying a home in America today).
Since February of 2026 I have been working on a fork of VoxeLibre (a game in the Luanti engine) called Delver's Realm. The point of it is that I was fed up with how games in Luanti are either direct Minecraft clones which include the post-peak Minecraft slop, which is basically anything after version 1.8 or so, or completely different. Most people use Luanti to just run Minetest Game (MTG) with mods, which I find to be very inconsistent in how they play. Enter Delver's Realm, it is meant to be a bridge between beta versions of another certain blocky game and also MTG, especially the early versions which had things like rats and dungeon masters. Delver's Realm will deliver a unique experience that is rock solid stable. The source code, like VoxeLibre, is released under the GNU General Public License version 3 (some underlying files are subject to their own licenses) and hosted on my Mercurial instance. It is not in a playable state. The master branch will eventually be branched off into a stable one once it's playable, but there is still a long way to go before then.
Willsome EnglishSince roughly 2020 or so I started a constructed dialect of English called Willsome English with the help of my friend Varad of fee.i2p. I occasionally still write in or do things related to Willsome English but it's mostly just dormant right now. The source includes the Ewbook, a large codex which explains the fundamentals of the dialect, and a dictionary called the Wordbook.