Wednesday, September 30, 2009

The Blue Rose vs. Conan Debates

From the ancient crypts of the RPG.net archives:

Subject: Blue Rose is the anti-Conan


NPC JPL
And thus the cosmic balance endures.


Cith
I thought Cat Fancy magazine was the anti-conan?


NPC JPL
No, man --- Cat Fancy is raw, pulpy stuff. Not for the faint of heart.


Bailywolf
Originally posted by NPC JPL
And thus the cosmic balance endures.
Yes, but can you slam them together and thus power a starship? Can the Conan/Blue Rose drive flip a vastly and beweaponed star-fortress across the galaxie magestic?



Future Villain Band
Originally posted by NPC JPL
No, man --- Cat Fancy is raw, pulpy stuff. Not for the faint of heart.
My cat has gigantic mirths and gigantic melancholies.


Phantom Grunweasel
I vow never to rest between four walls until I have run a Conan/Blue Rose crossover.

It will be the roleplaying game of mighty-thewed, silver-haired barbarian gay mages looking for love in a savage world. And I will run it. Yes, I will.


Bailywolf
Glam-Fantasy!


Chris Aylott
Man, you so have to check out Ellen Kushner and Delia Sherman's The Fall of the Kings. Conan + Blue Rose would be perfect for that setting...

(The book is actually a sequel to Kushner's novel Swordspoint, which is a minor classic in its own right, but is sadly lacking in shapechanging gay barbarian wizard kings. The Fall of the Kings corrects this oversight. :D)


budman
I am sure my group will turn it into screw the hot princess


NPC JPL
Apparently this subgenre requires that you hold her afterwards.


ascendance
And if you must sneak out to go adventuring, you really should return her calls. Or at least, the calls from her psychic horse.


mathey
Who is named "Starflame" and poops rainbows.


Cam Banks
Stir in a healthy dose of anthropomorphic pegasus-stallions and unicorn-maidens, and you're good to go.


CleverName
Originally posted by Cith
I thought Cat Fancy magazine was the anti-conan?


And the difference between Cat Fancy and Blue Rose is?...


Actually, you get a trial subscription of Cat Fancy with each purchase of Blue Rose. Conan comes with a choice of either ManDate or Soldier of Fortune.


Phantom Grunweasel
"Conan! What is greatest in life?"

"To have someone truly sensitive to your needs. To have someone who'll laugh at your jokes and hold you when you cry. To have a magical psychic blue-eyed bunny rabbit named Floppy to follow you around"


And the antidote:

Eilonwy
This whole thing kind of confuses me. Because, sure, there are big happy animal familiars with deep shining blue eyes in Mercedes Lackey. But there's also brutal gang-rape in store for approximately half her protagonists, judging from the Valdemar books. So are the people making the game taking out the supergritty fantasy world where rape, childhood sexual abuse, and other such things run rampant, and just focusing on the happy jumbly bits?

Eilonwy, scarred for life by a Valdemar book at age 12.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

RPG Camp

I've had this idea for awhile that it would be neat to run a week long camp that involved some hiking, outdoor activities, and some RPG play intentionally interspersed.

Cory Doctrow pointed out on Boing Boing that D&D summer camps have existed in the past. The interview he references is an interesting read and kind of inspiring, though not exactly what I had in mind.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Communication: Building . . . SOMETHING.

Someone at work put up this motivational poster awhile back, with the encouragement that we should use "Communication" to "build bridges, not walls":



This immediately made me think of a different purpose to which communication is often put:



A copyright non-infringing version alternative can be found here.

The Kirghiz Light

"Forgive him as you forgave Tchitcherine at the Kirghiz Light."

Gravity's Rainbow
Thomas Pynchon


Never found any other reference to the Kirghiz Light. Thought maybe it was related to the Tunguska event.

It's only referenced in Gravity's Rainbow in a couple brief passages like this. In my recollection the character Tchitcherine is not such a great guy, but apparently the Kirghiz Light was a life-changing and spiritual experience for him. The idea of boundless forgiveness and experience of awe.

It came to mind now because of the previously posted Nostalgia of the Infinite.

The Nostalgia of the Infinite



I love this painting and even just it's title. But the combination is magic.

"Nostalgia of the Infinite" inspires awe in me. Also a sense that it's not just awe at a potential thing that might theoretically exist. But instead at something that you know, and had known and experienced and enjoyed at one time, that you remember fondly (ie. theophany on a grand scale).

It warms the heart and produces a hope and yearning.

May have been silly, but commenting on my sister's blog it inspired me to write:
Remember, before we started constantly breaking everything down into tiny pieces to analyze and control? It used to just stretch out there before us, vaster than worlds, boundless and heart-shaking, beyond imagination.

Man, I long for that feeling again.

(And, via the wonder of "nostalgia" here it is!)

Joe Christmas (Scrabble Girl, etc.)

Joe Christmas was one of the standard bands I played as a DJ on WXAC in the mid-to-late 1990s. Scrabble Girl in particular was my fave, caught the idea of a sweet, burgeoning relationship well. Just the thing to listen to while pining away with unrequited infatuation (fortunately not an issue anymore, but . . . those bitter-sweet memories).


Coupleskate is pretty good too.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Demon Seed

"I am going to bypass your forebrain and appeal directly to your amygdala."
- Proteus         
Demon Seed

Demon Seed was a 1977 psychological horror movie involving an AI that wants to create a child and has no qualms about using any means to produce one.  Kind of a tough flick to watch.

Still, found the quote amusing.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Bourgeois Shangri-La (Miss Li)

The commercial:


The "I version a CD to Youtube" version (probably soon to be gone):


Neat tune. One of the singers voice reminds me of the woman from the Noisettes.

The Thousand and One Nights

(A.K.A. Arabian Nights)

Hope to get around to reading this at some point. Apparently available at Bartleby.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Black Tiger

Have you seen this man?



This ball-and-chain wielding, knife-spraying thug in a horned helmet is the protagonist of the Black Tiger arcade game.

This game stuck in my imagination for years, along with Gauntlet (and some unidentified game mentioned later) in defining what a sword and sorcery videogame should include. It has always been an icon of nostalgia for me. I think the only thing necessary to make this picture complete would be Benjamin Bird (the local arcade god) carrying a tube full of quarters on a lanyard.

My hat is off the guys at Everyvideogame.com who helped track down the title based on my sketchy description. Imagine my surprise and delight to find it available free online!

Playing it again (now with unlimited quarters to fuel my sorry gaming skills) Black Tiger still lives up to my expectations. Gameplay is a treat, the graphics are nice (though some of the upper levels seem to have glitches), the backdrops are evocative, there hidden treasures to plunder, and sweet looking weapon upgrades to purchase.

But I think most of all I love the monsters. There are a pretty wide selection, but a couple I've always loved include:


Betentacled, poisonous, chomping mandrakes that spiral up out of the ground at you.


And hulking, flame-spewing, cycloptic mummies.


At this point there's only one other beloved arcade game of yore I've never been able to track down. Anyone able to find a game fitting this description would certainly earn my gratitude:
IIRC the character was a little guy with a sword. I think each level would begin with the hero falling down a shaft into a dungeon. At different points in the dungeon you could climb up using ropes.

There are only three things I can remember about the monsters:
  • One type of the standard wandering monsters resembled a disembodied eyeball, cut of steak, or paramecium which would bounce down the corridor toward you.
  • I think there were several bosses that were dragons.
  • Some of the bosses (or maybe not bosses, just opponents to be overcome?) consisted of swarms of something. Like I seem to recall one where you entered a room you couldn't climb out of and there was a magician who would send a swarm of flying brooms or pixies or magic wands or something to attack you. But maybe I'm not remembering this accurately.

Daedalus Blue (Comic)


Daedalus Blue was a web comic I followed for awhile. Not a huge fan of yet another Christian-fascist regime being portrayed (didn't care for it in "V for V" either for that matter). But the illustration is interestingly done. Artist apparently goes by the name John Aggs.

Unfortunately it seems do have been discontinued.

Site here.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Treat or Goblins


Song: Treat or Goblins
Sung by: Hayashibara Megumi & Mamie D. Lee
Music by: Sagisu Shirou
Anime: Abenobashi Mahou Shoutengai (opening music)

Lyrics here (mostly in Japanese).

Anata no Kokoro ni (Hayashibara Megumi)


Song: Anata no Kokoro ni (In Your Heart)
Sung by: Hayashibara Megumi
Anime: Abenobashi Mahou Shoutengai (closing music)

Lyrics here (in both Japanese and English).

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Depression as a useful adaptation.

By Paul W. Andrews and J. Anderson Thomson, Jr. from Scientific American:

Many other symptoms of depression make sense in light of the idea that analysis must be uninterrupted. The desire for social isolation, for instance, helps the depressed person avoid situations that would require thinking about other things. Similarly, the inability to derive pleasure from sex or other activities prevents the depressed person from engaging in activities that could distract him or her from the problem. Even the loss of appetite often seen in depression could be viewed as promoting analysis because chewing and other oral activity interferes with the brain's ability to process information.


But is there any evidence that depression is useful in analyzing complex problems? For one thing, if depressive rumination were harmful, as most clinicians and researchers assume, then bouts of depression should be slower to resolve when people are given interventions that encourage rumination, such as having them write about their strongest thoughts and feelings. However, the opposite appears to be true. Several studies have found that expressive writing promotes quicker resolution of depression, and they suggest that this is because depressed people gain insight into their problems.


Much more on the subject in the actual article.

Via Boing Boing.