"COUNTER/weight" is real good. I knew that I'd like friends at the table a lot ("marielda" was my first full listen because I needed to learn how to GM for blades in the dark and then I got sucked in by the worldbuilding and the characters and the fucked up trees, right, the fucked up trees), but I'm about 27 episodes into this space opera/gundam/symphogear/cyberpunk melange and it's rewriting things inside my brain.
the concept of the divines are already so cool. but then austin-underscore-walker hits you with the deep haunting abyss, how this thing has had 1000s of years, millennia, long enough that humans have fundamentally changed in ways weird and strange and delightful and uncanny, and these horrific giant mechs were connected in ways that don't entire make sense to normal people, but once there was a lumberjack who was an unknowing pilgrim for a divine, someone who wanted to make a life for themselves, who was instead led off the beaten path, who tried to rise and was swatted down like a bug back into the woods, who was still never forgotten by the mechs that mattered most, even if their name was erased