When Rome Burns

Michael Stevens

Fifteen years of making teenagers care about dead people taught Michael Stevens one thing: the best history lessons happen when everything's falling apart. The former high school teacher turned podcaster after realizing his classroom walls were holding him back from the stories that really matter. When Rome Burns isn't your typical history show. Stevens digs into the moments when civilizations, leaders, and entire ways of life completely imploded. Think the fall of empires, political meltdowns, cultural collapses, and the kind of disasters that reshape everything. But here's the thing: these aren't just stories about the past. Stevens connects each historical catastrophe to what's happening right now, showing how the patterns repeat and why understanding them actually matters. Every episode feels like getting the real story from that teacher who actually made class interesting. Stevens breaks down complex historical events into the human moments that drove them, the mistakes that made them inevitable, and the lessons we're still ignoring today. No dry textbook recaps or academic jargon, just compelling storytelling about how things go wrong and what we can learn from the wreckage. Multiple new episodes drop daily, so there's always fresh content. Follow now and discover why history's biggest disasters are the best teachers we have. Multiple new episodes daily—follow now!

  1. The Pokemon BDSP Trick That Makes Complex Games Feel Easy

    5d ago

    The Pokemon BDSP Trick That Makes Complex Games Feel Easy

    Ever notice how the best games make complex stuff feel simple? Pokemon BDSP pulls off something brilliant: it teaches you dozens of intricate battle mechanics without you even realizing you're learning. Michael Stevens breaks down the psychology tricks that make this work so well. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • The 3-second rule that keeps players from getting frustrated with menus • How 7 different audio cues guide your attention without visual clutter • Why the tutorial is actually 47 micro-lessons disguised as regular gameplay • The color psychology behind each Elite Four room (and why it actually works) 👤 Perfect for: anyone who's wondered why some games feel intuitive while others make you want to quit after five minutes. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens introduces the BDSP design mystery [01:45] The 3-second rule that changed everything [03:30] Audio cues you never noticed but always followed [05:15] 47 lessons hiding in plain sight [07:00] Elite Four psychology: why blue beats red [08:30] What this means for learning anything complex [10:15] Key takeaways you can apply today 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on your podcast app and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite insight is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: game design, Pokemon BDSP, user experience, learning psychology, interface design Stream the full show at When Rome Burns ---- Keywords: hitler, military history, historical disasters, empire decline, australian history Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    14 min
  2. Why AI Is Making Your Favorite Games $70+ (And It's Getting Worse)

    5d ago

    Why AI Is Making Your Favorite Games $70+ (And It's Getting Worse)

    Why are your favorite games suddenly costing $70+ when they used to be $60 max? Michael Stevens breaks down how AI development is quietly driving up gaming costs while companies deal with massive security breaches that expose millions of players. Spoiler: it's about to get worse. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How AI features can add 15-30% to a game's budget, pushing retail prices higher than ever • Why Rainbow Six Siege's security breach with 80+ million players shows how vulnerable online gaming really is • The real reason companies now spend 40% more on cybersecurity but still can't stop the hackers 👤 Perfect for: gamers who want to understand why their hobby keeps getting more expensive and what these industry changes mean for the future of gaming. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens explains the hidden AI tax in your games [02:15] Breaking down AAA game budgets: where that extra $10-20 actually goes [04:45] Rainbow Six Siege hack exposed: what 80 million compromised accounts tells us [07:30] Why cybersecurity spending is up 40% but breaches keep happening [09:45] Gaming resolutions that might actually save you money this year [11:30] What this means for the next generation of games 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. New episodes drop daily, and tomorrow Michael's covering why streaming services are about to implode just like cable TV did. Your next favorite insight is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: gaming industry, AI development costs, cybersecurity breaches, Rainbow Six Siege, video game pricing Stream the full show at When Rome Burns --------------- Keywords: empire decline, ancient rome, american revolution, political meltdowns Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    13 min
  3. Why Xbox Consoles Are Disappearing (And What's Coming Instead)

    5d ago

    Why Xbox Consoles Are Disappearing (And What's Coming Instead)

    What if the gaming industry's biggest player is about to abandon the very product that made them famous? Microsoft just revealed their Xbox console strategy, and it's not what anyone expected. In this episode, Michael Stevens breaks down why Xbox might stop making traditional consoles entirely. The numbers tell a wild story: Xbox loses $100-200 on every console sold but makes billions from Game Pass subscribers. With cloud gaming processing 1.8 billion hours last year alone, Microsoft's betting everything on a future where your TV, phone, or laptop becomes the console. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why Xbox Game Pass's 25 million subscribers matter more than console sales • The real cost breakdown that makes consoles a losing game for Microsoft • How cloud gaming processed more hours in 2023 than Netflix streams in a month • What this shift means for PlayStation, Nintendo, and gaming as we know it 👤 Perfect for: curious listeners who want to understand how billion-dollar companies pivot when their core product becomes obsolete. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens introduces Xbox's console problem [01:45] The shocking economics behind every Xbox sale [04:15] Why Game Pass changed everything for Microsoft [06:30] Cloud gaming's explosive growth nobody talks about [08:45] What happens when consoles become obsolete [10:30] The winners and losers in gaming's next chapter This isn't just about Xbox. It's about how entire industries transform when the old model stops working. Stevens connects Microsoft's pivot to historical moments when dominant companies had to reinvent themselves or die. 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite insight is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: Xbox console future, cloud gaming growth, Microsoft gaming strategy, Game Pass economics, gaming industry transformation Stream the full show at When Rome Burns ------------ Keywords: historical disasters, history podcast, australian history Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    15 min
  4. Why BioWare Just Killed Anthem After 7 Years (And What It Means for Gaming)

    5d ago

    Why BioWare Just Killed Anthem After 7 Years (And What It Means for Gaming)

    EA just killed Anthem after seven years, and the gaming industry's brutal lesson is crystal clear: even $100 million budgets can't save a game built on false promises. In this episode, Michael Stevens breaks down three seismic shifts happening in gaming right now that reveal exactly how studios are adapting to survive an increasingly unforgiving market. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why Larian Studios lost their golden reputation overnight despite Baldur's Gate 3's massive success • The real reason EA finally pulled the plug on Anthem and what it means for future live service games • How Microsoft's Minecraft mobile strategy targets 2 billion potential users in emerging markets • Which major studios are hemorrhaging community trust over AI controversies and how it's costing them millions 👤 Perfect for: gamers, tech enthusiasts, and anyone curious about how billion-dollar industries adapt when everything starts falling apart. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens introduces gaming's brutal week of reckonings [01:45] Larian's AI backlash: how success became scandal overnight [04:20] Anthem's final death: EA's $100 million lesson in humility [07:10] Minecraft goes mobile: Microsoft's 2 billion user gamble [09:30] The AI trust crisis: which studios are losing their communities [11:15] What these meltdowns reveal about gaming's future The parallels to historical collapses are striking. Just like overextended empires that couldn't adapt to changing times, gaming giants are discovering that past success guarantees nothing when player expectations shift overnight. Stevens connects these modern industry implosions to the same patterns that toppled civilizations throughout history. 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, and next week Stevens is covering the cryptocurrency exchange collapse that just wiped out $50 billion in investor funds. 🔍 Topics: gaming industry, EA Anthem shutdown, Larian Studios controversy, Microsoft Minecraft mobile, AI gaming backlash Stream the full show at When Rome Burns -------- Keywords: historical disasters, cultural disasters, nazi germany, civilization collapse, battleships, catherine the great, byzantine empire, operation citadel Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    19 min
  5. Why Dark Souls Changed Gaming Forever (And Most Players Never Realized It)

    5d ago

    Why Dark Souls Changed Gaming Forever (And Most Players Never Realized It)

    What if I told you that Super Mario Bros' first level is actually a masterclass in psychological manipulation? In this episode, Michael Stevens reveals how video game designers use invisible tutorials, secret difficulty adjustments, and 60+ accessibility tricks to keep you playing without you ever realizing it. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why only 20% of players actually finish games (and the difficulty spikes that kill the other 80%) • How Resident Evil 4 secretly makes enemies weaker when you're struggling, without telling you • The psychological tricks Nintendo hides in Mario's first level that teach you to play without tutorials • How The Last of Us Part II revolutionized gaming with accessibility options most players never see 👤 Perfect for: gamers who want to understand what's really happening behind the controller, and anyone curious about how design shapes human behavior. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens introduces gaming's hidden psychology [01:45] The 20% completion rate crisis plaguing modern games [03:30] Super Mario's invisible tutorial system decoded [05:15] Resident Evil 4's secret difficulty manipulation revealed [07:30] Why accessibility options benefit everyone, not just disabled players [09:45] The future of adaptive game design [11:30] Key takeaways for understanding digital manipulation Ever wonder why some games feel perfectly balanced while others make you rage quit? Stevens connects gaming psychology to broader patterns of how technology shapes our behavior, showing why understanding these tricks matters way beyond your PlayStation. 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite insight is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: video game design, gaming psychology, difficulty mechanics, accessibility in gaming, user experience design Stream the full show at When Rome Burns --- Keywords: founding fathers, world war 2, hitler Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    18 min
  6. This Building Game Accidentally Teaches Better Design Than Art School

    5d ago

    This Building Game Accidentally Teaches Better Design Than Art School

    Ever wonder why a video game about building factories is secretly teaching better design principles than most art schools? Michael Stevens digs into Satisfactory, the building game that's accidentally become one of the most effective design education tools ever created. With over 3 million copies sold and players averaging 60+ hours each, this isn't just entertainment: it's spatial reasoning boot camp disguised as fun. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why thinking 15-20 steps ahead in Satisfactory mirrors real architectural planning • How the game's resource chains naturally teach systems thinking and bottleneck identification • The specific design skills players develop without realizing it (spatial reasoning, optimization, scalable systems) • Why this accidental education method works better than traditional design curriculum 👤 Perfect for: anyone curious about how we learn complex skills and why play-based education actually works better than textbooks. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael Stevens introduces the factory game phenomenon [02:15] The 3 million player experiment in accidental education [04:30] Why building in 3D space trains your brain differently [06:45] Resource chains and the art of thinking ahead [08:30] What architecture schools could learn from gamers [11:00] The bottleneck lesson that applies everywhere 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on your favorite podcast app and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite insight is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: game design, spatial reasoning, systems thinking, design education, Satisfactory game Stream the full show at When Rome Burns ----------- Keywords: cultural disasters, historical catastrophes, founding fathers Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    13 min
  7. Nvidia's $2 Trillion Double Dip: Why They're Getting Paid Twice for the Same AI Boom

    5d ago

    Nvidia's $2 Trillion Double Dip: Why They're Getting Paid Twice for the Same AI Boom

    What if the biggest tech success story of 2024 is actually built on a controversial business strategy that has competitors fuming? In this episode, Michael Stevens breaks down how Nvidia discovered the ultimate double-dip: selling AI chips to cloud companies, then launching competing cloud services to steal their customers. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How Nvidia's $47.5 billion data center revenue jumped 217% by playing both sides • Why Amazon, Microsoft, and Google spent $120 billion building Nvidia's future competition • The historical patterns that show why this "supplier becomes competitor" move always creates chaos 👤 Perfect for: business-minded listeners who want to understand how market dominance really works and history buffs curious about how power shifts actually happen. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Michael introduces Nvidia's brilliant betrayal strategy [02:15] The $47.5 billion chip empire that started it all [04:30] How cloud giants accidentally funded their own competition [06:45] Amazon's public criticism without naming names [08:30] Historical examples of suppliers who became conquerors [10:15] Why this pattern always leads to market warfare Stevens connects this modern tech drama to classic historical power plays, showing how Nvidia's move mirrors tactics used by everyone from Roman grain merchants to Standard Oil. The companies that thought they were just buying chips are now watching their supplier compete directly for their biggest customers. This isn't just another tech story. It's a masterclass in strategic positioning that's playing out in real time, with billions of dollars and market control hanging in the balance. 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow When Rome Burns on Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite insight is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: Nvidia business strategy, AI chip market, cloud computing competition, tech industry analysis, historical business patterns Stream the full show at When Rome Burns ----------- Keywords: world war 2, ancient rome, nazi germany, fall of empires, history podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    16 min
  8. Why Meta Fired 12,000 Employees While Gaming Stocks Soar

    5d ago

    Why Meta Fired 12,000 Employees While Gaming Stocks Soar

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    17 min

About

Fifteen years of making teenagers care about dead people taught Michael Stevens one thing: the best history lessons happen when everything's falling apart. The former high school teacher turned podcaster after realizing his classroom walls were holding him back from the stories that really matter. When Rome Burns isn't your typical history show. Stevens digs into the moments when civilizations, leaders, and entire ways of life completely imploded. Think the fall of empires, political meltdowns, cultural collapses, and the kind of disasters that reshape everything. But here's the thing: these aren't just stories about the past. Stevens connects each historical catastrophe to what's happening right now, showing how the patterns repeat and why understanding them actually matters. Every episode feels like getting the real story from that teacher who actually made class interesting. Stevens breaks down complex historical events into the human moments that drove them, the mistakes that made them inevitable, and the lessons we're still ignoring today. No dry textbook recaps or academic jargon, just compelling storytelling about how things go wrong and what we can learn from the wreckage. Multiple new episodes drop daily, so there's always fresh content. Follow now and discover why history's biggest disasters are the best teachers we have. Multiple new episodes daily—follow now!