Oh, weekend!

November 29, 2007

You are nearly here. This has been a very long week, and I might not have to work this weekend, which has led me to make a totally unreasonably long list of things I want to do, including:

Watch Razor
Watch Heroes
Play Galaxy
Play Fire Emblem
Play Zelda
Play Rock Band
Bake a pie
Get groceries
Read next volume of “Y The Last Man”
Watch something in HD on my new HD-DVD player
Get some boots or at least get the boots I have fixed
Take these plates to Goodwill
Post old DVD player on Craigslist
Make new budget
Sleep

I suspect that these will not all get done.

Unrelatedly, overheard at the Ro-Ta Manor this evening:

“Stab him in the head while he’s down!”

and

“No number of capes is enough.”


Oh fail, I am so good at you

November 21, 2007

Man, thank goodness for this 12-hour cushion I give myself. I should just always post from work, obviously, but otherwise I forget, either entirely or at least until the very last minute. Last night I went home and made a command decision not to do more work, but instead to play Super Mario Galaxy with Ro. I think I was just so darn happy to be shirking my responsibilities that I didn’t even turn on the computer, and certainly it did not occur to me to post.

Which was very fun! First, it is very pretty – great colors, and they did an excellent job on the graphics, especially the water. I really did want to jump in, it looked so perfect. There are other nice touches – the fur on the Queen Bee’s back is sort of blurry because of her wings. Nice. I also love the second player options. A second player can pick up a remote and help out by collecting star bits, holding enemies and boulders still, helping Mario execute a high jump. We don’t own a ton of co-op games, since we tend toward the adventure/platformers and first-person shooters (and because they refuse to put out another straight-fighting Soul Caliber game, though I have to say the upcoming adventure-style one is intriguing) so one or the other of us does a lot of watching the other person play. Which, given the complexity and prettiness of most games is certainly not boring, but it was fun to have a little something to do, and I thought it was a really nice touch.


Exceeding Expectations

November 4, 2007

I am thrilled that I could exceed even Ro’s expectations for how long it would take me to totally forget I had to post every day for NaBloPoMo.

I am going to keep doing it though, and just post twice today.

What I had actually planned to post yesterday was a one-word review of the Zelda game for the DS. So here it is: Awesome.

Seriously, it is really good. You play using only the stylus, and that is how you move (Link follows the tip of the stylus as you place it on the screen), fight either tap an enemy or draw lines to slash you sword), use items (equip the boomerang then draw a line on the screen, and it will follow that line so you can do insane things with it). And the story is good, you don’t have to walk too far ever, and the graphics are very good.

And with that, I continue NaBloPoSoMo (the So is for sometimes!).


Heh. Wii.

November 26, 2006

There were just too many Wii-related puns I could have used, so I took a different tack. This is the story, NAY, the saga of my efforts to procure a Wii.

Ro asked as we walked off the train on Sunday morning, launch day: “Is
this the nerdiest thing we’ve ever done?”

It might be (for me – Ro quickly determined that it was, in
fact, the nerdiest thing she had ever done). The only thing I can think of that
might come close is also Nintendo-related. A few weeks before the DS Lite came out here, they were released in
Japan. Instead of just waiting a month,
I bought one off of eBay (though not for anything more than it would have cost
me here). It is light blue, a color that isn’t even available in the US (I win!).
It arrived, all set up in Japanese, and it took me a good 20 minutes to figure
out how to set everything to English. Stupid pictogram menu.

Anyway. The Nintendo Wii was released last Sunday. The release came on
the heels of the PS3 launch, but I tried to assure everyone that it would be different! And it was. While there were lines
for the console, there were fewer overnight campers, lines were calm and
orderly, and no one was shot at, actually successfully shot, mugged, or trampled. So we’ve got that going
for us. Far more units were released at launch than for the PS3 (word is 700,000),
but they still sold out in less than a day.

Ro and I dragged ourselves out of bed at 6:30. Granted, that isn’t that early, but it’s a balance – ideally you want to maximize sleep with still getting a Wii. It was my
nerdy idea, Ro was coming along for moral support/because she still hadn’t
decided whether she should pull the trigger. We scrambled to catch the 7:04 am
bus to the mall. It was freezing. And sort of raining. We reached the end of
the Best Buy line, saw how long it was, stood there for about 30 seconds, then
hailed a cab to take us to the Target a mile or so away. Our cab driver wanted
to know more about this “Wii” (as he dropped me off he also wanted me to call
him if they were not sold out so he could get one for his son). The Internets
had already told me that this particular Target had 24 in stock; after a few
minutes in line, intelligence reports filtered back that 24 tickets had already
been given out. Most of us gamely remained in line, just in case, or to look at
games. Or, in the case of the lady behind us, because she did not understand
the concepts of a) lines, b) tickets, and c) something being sold out. Since
the Target was opening in less than 20 minutes, we stuck it out and purchased
two dishtowels. Success! Sigh.

Our wait for the bus home was marred by the COLD and the
bratty townie teens who had (so we gathered) camped out all night, taken 6 of
the tickets when they were handed out, sold 5 of those tickets to others in
line, and bought just one Wii. The thing that made me want to push them into
the street was how they would not stop talking about how stupid people could be
to just show up that very morning and expect to get a Wii (when, shut up,
plenty of people did just that). The thing that made Ro want to push them into
the street was everything. Seriously, they would not stop talking.

We finally got home, and Ro smartly went back to bed. I was
exhausted but wired from my Dunkins’ large, so I laid on the couch, laptop on
stomach, hitting F5 on Amazon’s site, waiting for them to go on sale. And they
did, at 11am, for 30 seconds. I even got one in my cart (!) only to have it
cruelly moved to my saved items list after my next button-click.

I spent hours on Sunday on Amazon’s message boards and the
Internet, seeking out little bits of Wii news – where they were still available
(nowhere), when they might be so again (tomorrow, Friday, Christmas, NEVER),
and engaging in a cycle of checking eBay-seeing how many jerks were selling
their Wiis for twice the price-becoming enraged-going to the Amazon boards to
see who else was enraged-checking the PS3 auctions and being glad I don’t want
a PS3. I continued the hunt on Monday, following a trail that led to
Walmart.com (which I refused to buy because 1) Wal-mart and 2) they were forcing
people to also buy 8 games), ToysRUs.com (too late), and CompUSA.com (way too
late). I made my mom check the stores
where she lives.

I had failed thus far. I failed to do the nerdiest thing I
have ever tried to do. I had to take a break for Thanksgiving, because I was in upstate New York, land of no Internet. CB managed to venture out on Black Friday and procure one, and this gave me hope. When I got home Friday night I determined that my best bet was Best Buy on Sunday. They were rumored to be doing a second launch of sorts.

The strike team quickly went into action on Saturday. CB went to one Best Buy to investigate in person the availability of the Wii. And it’s a good thing too, as they were apparently lying outright to anyone calling the store, in order to avoid having too much of a line. We chose to hit that store, rather than the one in Cambridge, the site of my failure a week earlier. To make a long and victorious story short, CB, another hopeful friend, and I made a vague plan involving a Zipcar and 4am. A drive by at 4:50am revealed no line, so we took a nap for an hour at CB’s place before heading back to officially begin waiting in line. We were numbers 4 and 5 when they handed out the tickets three and a half hours later. There were over 40 systems, though a few latecomers were turned away. It was a fun and nerdy time spent in line.

It was confirmed, by the way, that buying that DS lite was the nerdiest thing I had ever done when one of the awesome nerds in line with me today hi-fived me when he saw it.


I DO love her

February 16, 2006

Ro has revealed my totally not-secret, not-shameful shame: I love Kate Beckinsdale. Honestly, I don’t know why. I think it’s because she is pretty. Doesn’t take much, I guess. Pretty!

I don’t love her nearly so much as Rachel McAdams, my straight-girl-crush girlfriend. She’s pretty, too! And FUNNY. You know?

Speaking of pretty, I wore the legwarmers Ro made me yesterday. They shielded my legs from the cold most admirably. Plus, adorable! It helped the adorable that I was wearing them with a skirt that had the legwarmer colors in it. So I may have not have been fashionable, but at least I didn’t clash.

Ro bought Prince of Persia: Sands of Time (POP:SOT) (also, hee!) and has been playing it for her and my amusement. It’s really a lovely game. I love video games, and I have no trouble suspending my disbelief when it comes to them. You mean picking up that heart of the ground that fell out of that guy I killed will give me more…hearts? Ok, sold. Magic bar, rupees, potions, whatever, fine. This glove I found lets me move bigger rocks? Of course it does. I can’t jump up and hoist myself onto that ledge that only comes up to my eyeballs? No, why would I be able to do that.

Ok, that last one does bug. Because come ON. In real life, even I could pull myself up on that and I have the upper arm strength of a puppy. You’re telling me that this bounty hunter chick in her super suit can’t throw a leg up? Honestly.

So one thing that is extra nice about POP is, despite the sand-zombies and magic dagger that can rewind time, the realism. Our friend the Prince can hoist himself onto any ledge if he can reach it by jumping up. You can climb almost anything and go almost anywhere in this game. And to refill life, you drink water! Water! It’s genius.

The look of the game is very fluid as well, and while not perfect, the camera is far less annoying than in many games these days. You have the ability to move the camera, something which designers have been leaving out in recent titles. And they totally stole the creepy sounds soundtrack from the terrifying Eternal Darkness. To me, actually, the whole engine looks like an updated version of the ED engine. Man, I wish they would make a sequel to that game.

I like the game a lot. That is my rating.