Note: This piece overlaps my three essays on my week with Isobel series (I–III), though it approaches that week from a different direction. Where those pieces follow the arc, this one lingers on the moment before it resolves—the pre-game, as I’ve come to understand it. It is also a direct response to the book The Game, by Neil Strauss. In what follows I don’t intend to rebut Strauss so much as correct what I see as a fundamental weakness in the subculture he dissects. The reader will judge whether I succeed.
Epigraph
“No one else could play that tune, you know it was up to me.”
— Bob Dylan, Up to Me
Part I: Ippei
I’m at Zaza, the club on Kiyamachi. It’s around 11 PM and just getting going. Zaza is a late night place. It doesn’t peak until well past midnight, and at this hour it’s still stretching, still finding its rhythm.
I’m there by myself, drinking a White Russian.
A Japanese guy comes up to me. He’s about fifty-five. No preamble, no easing into it. He introduces himself—let’s call him Ippei—and within seconds he’s in.
“See those two ladies over by the window,” he says. “Want to help me pick them up?”
I’m intrigued. Not because I’m especially interested in the outcome, but because I’m a curious guy. I want to see what he’s doing.
“Ok,” I say. “What’s the play?”
He doesn’t hesitate.
“You’re my old friend from California. I haven’t seen you in twenty years. I just ran into you here. Take it from there.”
That’s it. That’s the entire setup. Handed to me fully formed.
I ask him, just to check, “Is this going to work?”
He smiles, completely unbothered.
“Yeah,” he says. “I do this every night. Had a threesome last night.”
Alright then.
We walk over. He starts talking immediately, in Japanese, smooth, fast, confident. “This is Matt, my best friend from California. Would you believe I just found him here?”
I met him five minutes ago.
It doesn’t matter.
In no time the two women are completely engaged. Smiling, leaning in, laughing. The story has landed. The reality has been accepted. They’re not being approached. They’ve been included.
And I’m there, but I’m not really there. I’m not trying to win anything. I’m not trying to escalate. I’m watching. Taking it in. The nightlife anthropologist, just observing the field.
After a while I step out to the balcony to smoke.
Twenty minutes pass.
When I come back down, he’s still there. Still going strong. Still inside the same story.
That’s when it clicks.
He didn’t need me.
He needed the role I filled.
He needed a premise.
Part II: Neil Strauss
REVISED STRAUSS ENTRY (replace your current Strauss opening)
That night at Zaza stayed with me, not because of what happened, but because of what it revealed.
There is a whole body of writing—call it a subculture, call it a system—that attempts to explain and formalize moments like that. The most famous version of it is The Game, by Neil Strauss, which I’ve read twice.
I want to be clear about something before I go any further.
I’m not anti–Neil Strauss. In fact, I respect him. He’s an elite investigator of subcultures, and I love subcultures. He embedded himself in a world, learned its language, mapped its hierarchies, and reported it out with real precision. That’s not easy to do. It’s a serious piece of work.
What follows is not a dismissal of Strauss.
It’s a response to what the game represents.
Because once you move from observing a system to adopting it, something changes.
At its core, the game assumes that attraction can be engineered. That with the right language, the right sequence, the right calibrated signals, you can break down resistance and produce an outcome.
It’s a kind of linguistic technology. NLP at its worst. A system designed to move someone from one state to another.
And for me, that’s where I part ways.
I’m not anti–Neil Strauss. In fact, I respect him. I’ve read The Game twice. He’s an elite investigator of subcultures, and I love subcultures too.
But I don’t like what the game represents.
At its core, the game assumes that attraction can be engineered. That with the right language, the right sequence, the right calibrated signals, you can break down resistance and produce an outcome.
It’s a kind of linguistic technology. NLP at its worst. A system designed to move someone from one state to another.
And for me, that’s a massive turnoff.
Because it flattens everything.
It scripts what should be alive. It reduces seduction to a manual. It turns something unpredictable into something repeatable. And in doing so, it drains it of the very thing that makes it worth pursuing in the first place.
There’s no space for real connection.
No space for the unexpected.
No space for the moment where something happens that neither person could have predicted.
No space for the kind of encounter that might actually change your life.
And beyond that, it produces a life that I don’t want.
The guys in The Game end up living together in this kind of shared house—Mystery, Strauss, Courtney Love—surrounded by other guys, talking about women, thinking about women, analyzing women. It’s a sausage fest. And it’s not cool.
The Gamers think they’re players. I prefer to think of them as incel-adjacent. They’ve optimized the system, but they’ve lost the thing itself. They’ve mastered the game and stepped outside of life.
Part III: On Action
I’ve had a handful of sexual partners that I’ve gone all the way with. The precise number is under an NDA. I’ve made out with more. But I haven’t been especially active, at least not in the way the game would define it.
What I have done is flirt with, connect with, and develop crushes on dozens of women.
And the truth is, I enjoy it.
I actively enjoy the pre-game.
I enjoy getting close. The moment before something becomes something else. The tension. The ambiguity. The recognition that something might be there, and neither of you has named it yet.
The thrill of newness and the possibility of a spark.
If it burns, great.
If it flickers, that’s also good.
For most men, the pre-game is a means to an end.
For me, it’s the end.
That’s the difference.
This doesn’t mean I’m not interested in action.
I am. Very much so.
In fact, I’m something of an action junkie.
But I’m a highly specific kind of action junkie.
Like Wittgenstein, who was said to have manufactured his own oxygen, I manufacture my own action.
I don’t chase it blindly. I don’t optimize for it. I don’t try to force it into existence through systems or scripts.
I generate it.
Selectively. Intentionally. In moments where it actually means something.
Part III: Luna
I’m at Umineko with a friend—call him Mr. Editor. It’s early, maybe six in the evening. We’re mid-bar, having a beer, when I notice a woman sitting off to the side.
She’s stunning.
And I have to go talk to her.
Not because I expect anything to happen. Not because I’ve calculated the odds. But because the moment demands it.
I tell Mr. Editor what I’m about to do. He nods. “Go for it,” he says. “I’ll watch.”
I walk over and ask her name.
She smiles. “Call me Luna.”
We speak in Japanese. The conversation flows. I bring everything I have to the moment—attention, presence, curiosity—and it lands. There’s a spark. Not forced. Not engineered. Just there.
We talk for a while. Long enough for the room to shift slightly around us.
Eventually I ask for her Instagram. She gives it to me.
I walk back to the bar and sit down next to Mr. Editor.
I’m on Cloud 9.
The next day, in the late afternoon, carefully timed, I send her a message.
She doesn’t reply.
Failure?
Not for the pre-gamer.
Because the pre-gamer already got what he came for.
The moment. The spark. The approach. The brief, electric possibility that something might happen.
That was the action.
That was the point.
For the Strauss guys, the night ends when the text goes unanswered.
For me, the night ended at the bar.
Up to this point, the pre-game is contained. Safe, even. A space where things can happen or not happen without consequence.
But sometimes it doesn’t stay that way.
Isobel Revisited:
I have written about my week with Isobel extensively elsewhere, however part of that story is pertinent to what we are discussing here. I met her at the Faculty of Astrological Studies, held at Exter College, Oxford, in late August 2018. We spent the week together and I fell in love. But I didn’t sleep with her. My choice. What follows is a light re-write from my essay “On My Week with Isobel: Part II”:
Wednesday.
I wake up and we have breakfast in the dining hall. By this point, people are noticing us. Comments here and there, sideways smiles.
Morning and lunch blur into one long conversation—the garden, the bench, a little grass, nothing hidden. We’re finishing each other’s thoughts. I’m in deeper than I’ve ever been.
We don’t attend much of anything.
In the afternoon break she goes to change. I go back to my room and put on The Mendoza Line with the full weight of obsession.
She comes back later and tells me, without shame, that she had pleasured herself during the break.
Just states it.
This is a complication.
That night she changes again. A red dress. Short, but not careless. Stunning.
We sit at dinner whispering, touching lightly, laughing against each other. Everyone knows by now.
After dinner there’s wine again, talking with the tutors, the long courtyard. I meet Darby Costello in person for the first time. She’s fully alive, drinking wine, holding the room effortlessly. I’m so happy she’s my astrologer.
But I’m elsewhere.
We stay late. Clear the courtyard.
Around two in the morning we part. Cheeks touched. No bedroom. No act.
Back in my room, lights low, Mendoza Line still in my ears, I lie on the narrow bed and I know exactly where I am standing.
I will keep going. I will see where this leads.
But I will not sleep with her.
I can’t.
It’s not that I don’t want to. I do. Completely. And more.
But I can see it. The complications. For her, for me. The chain of events that would follow. I’m old enough to see it coming.
And I know, standing there in the courtyard, with the last of the wine and a cigarette burning down, that it’s on me.
I have to be the one to say no.
That’s the shape.
That’s the decision.
=====
Up to this point, the pre-game has been something I could enter and exit at will. A space I could step into, generate action, feel the spark, and leave intact.
With Ippei, the action was scripted.
With Strauss, it was systematized.
With Luna, it was self-contained.
But there’s another version of the pre-game, and it’s the one that matters most. The one where the moment doesn’t stay light. The one where it deepens.
Where the spark doesn’t just flicker—it starts to take shape. And at that point, something shifts. Because now it’s not just about whether something will happen. It’s about whether it should.
This is where the line from Dylan starts to carry real weight. No one else could play that tune.
There’s no system here. No script. No borrowed language. No Ippei handing you a premise. There is only the moment as it actually exists, and your ability to see it clearly.
And then the second part:
It was up to me. Not to escalate. Not to optimize. But to decide.
The game ends when something happens. The pre-game ends when you decide it should.
Dedication
For pre-gamers everywhere.
May you get a little action tonight baby.