Monday, May 31, 2010

New Apartment

The new apartment is mostly set up. I've got the internet connected to my many devices and I just bought a second room fan so that I don't have to keep carrying around my old dorm fan when I move from room to room.

Still some maintenance issues that need to get fixed, and I have to finally set up my computer desk so I can start using my desktop PC again. The netbook is good for 85% of my computer usage, but I haven't done any PC gaming or art since I've transitioned over to it (for obvious reasons.) Plus, the netbook is so easy to just jump on that I find myself wasting way more time on it than I should. I might have to lock it up and force myself to think about whether or not I want to bother booting up the desktop whenever I decide to use the computer.

So anyway, I just popped in TMNT (the CGI Ninja Turtles movie from a few years back - found it for $5 at Target) and even though I heard lots of terrible reviews, I can't help but be a little excited. It's the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! In fact, it's a pretty goofy version (from what I can tell)! We'll just have to see.

(Even if the move does suck, it at least gave us the pretty awesome GBA game based on it.)

Ah well.

Cowabunga, dudes.

EDIT (12:59 AM) - Okay, that was a ton of fun and totally worth $5. Now I kind of wish there was going to be a sequel like they suggest in the ending, but I'm sure the upcoming Nickelodeon TV series will scratch that itch well enough.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Status Update

Holy crap, I have a blog?

So I just moved into my new apartment last weekend. All things considered, it went very well. Sure, I didn't have a bed until Tuesday and I only just got my internet hooked up, but I managed to find a couch, rug, and coffee table at a yard sale the day I was moving.

I've got a one bedroom only a couple blocks from everywhere I tend to go in WP, so I definitely lucked out.

Now if I could just take care of the various other problems (cracked toilet tank, busted burners on the stove, minor ant problem in the bathroom, dead outlets, etc), this place would move up in rank from "Pretty cool" to "Awesome Times, Inc."

I'd go into things a bit more, but I'm afraid I'll be wimping out with a tiny intro once again. I'm in the middle of wiping and reloading my Zune*, downloading a few new WiiWare games**, and doing my internet browsing, but all that's about to drop off to the side because I've got Super Mario Galaxy 2 sitting in front of me waiting to be played. If you know me, you know I practically worship at the church of the first Super Mario Galaxy, so this second coming brings along high expectations. The current opinions suggests I will not be let down.

*(To remove all the absurd song repeats among other Zune library issues)
**(3rd Phoenix Wright and first Bit.Trip game)

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Testing Twitterfeed again.

Just saw Iron Man 2. It was fun.

Just signed the lease on my new apartment earlier this evening. It was kind of satisfying.

That's about everything.

And, oh yeah - TwitterFeed is supposed to be working again, so this is really just a test post. Sorry.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Untalented fan-wankery

Why is it that fans of certain franchises always wind up being so terrible at being fans? I'm speaking specifically about videogames, but I think this is true for other mediums as well.

It's just so shocking to me how so many hardcore fanboys have no clue what makes the property they're into actually enjoyable. So often, you see fan projects or fan wishes for a specific game or a game series that are just so terribly contrary to what the game stands for.

The Legend of Zelda is a perfect example. Every Zelda fan game (or fake Zelda game, such as the one shown on the fake E3 listing that inspired this post: http://kotaku.com/5531964/speak+up-on-kotaku-fake-e3-leaks-dog-voting-bad-genres-and-retired-pirates/gallery/ ) has some terrible name to invoke dark imagery. Have you played Zelda? Yes, there are some darker elements to the series, but it's very clearly a positive and uplifting series. There are bright colors and cartoony characters. There is usually a cheerful sidekick who is both your guide as well as the comedy relief. Heck, friggin' Tingle exists, which should be proof enough that the standard gear for Zelda is "light-hearted."

And yet I just quickly pulled up titles of various Zelda fan projects and here's what I found:
  • Hall of the Undead
  • Child of Darkness
  • The Fallen Sage
  • Enfolding Chaos
  • The Hyrule Wars
What's with all this darkness and falling? Did these people only play the dramatic moments of the games and ignore the remaining 90% where Link is an elven boy in a tunic milking cows and playing hide-and-go-seek with a bunch of school children?

I should mention that Kingdom Hearts and Pokemon are two other light-hearted series who have insane fans that somehow think they're in desperate need for sex, violence, and terrible revenge plots. (Although, beginning with Kingdom Hearts II, it seems that series has gone into full-on Square-Enix drama mode, so it's basically just going to be emo angst forever and ever and ever. Look for Mickey to be sporting eyeliner and contempt for his parents in Kingdom Hearts III!)

I'm probably being too hard on the fanboys, but when I hear some internet kid's dream of the perfect Zelda game (or another franchise whose fanboys suffer from this sickness) and the combat-heavy, dystopian God of War-clone that they want it to be, I can't help but feel like ranting.

Besides, if you want a derivative, dark-and-macho-to-the-point-of-parody Zelda-clone, you've already got Darksiders.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Birthdays, Plans, and Imagined Memories

It's currently 3:07 AM Sunday morning and I'm calling an official end to my birthday festivities. Things kicked off this past Thursday (my actual birthday) with a homemade pizza dinner with Mayra and my parents. We then went out to the downtown bars for a few drinks and wound up staying out way later than I had planned. A few hours later I was up for a day of work that I'm embarrassed to admit was a bit more of a blur than I would have liked. Friday evening I had a special dinner of sopes with Mayra's family and then passed out in Mayra's bed instead of going to the movies like we had planned. Today was the official "party," as people actually came by to celebrate and we did the whole huge dinner/opening presents thing.

Sure, Mayra and I are heading into Queens to grab some dinner with Terry and Micah tomorrow evening (okay, technically later tonight), so I could call that as part of the celebration, but I figure I shouldn't try and get greedy. I've had a real blast the past 72 hours and I think I'm good. I've had a great time with my family, had a blast with my friends, and been able to spend many hours with the woman I love. Couldn't ask for a better birthday.

I've decided that in my twenty-fifth year, I want to increase my creative output to the point where I actually output things I've created more often than "once or twice in a year if I'm lucky." I want to finish games, write stories, and God, do I ever wish I could draw again. I'm going to try and set aside more time for these forms of entertainment where all the fun is up to me, rather than relying so much on games, movies and books for prepared enjoyment. We'll see how this goes.

As I move past this (rather arbitrary) milestone and begin planning out what it means to me, it makes me think about how I dealt with the previous milestone of graduation from college and how I had imagined that would go. No real profound thoughts, just decompressing some things I've had in my head for ages.

I'll be honest by saying that I would occasionally day-dream about the idealized graduation scenario. I'd picture myself a little nervous but ultimately excited, Mayra by my side as I finished up my last remaining classes. I saw myself spending plenty of time with my friends, enjoying the last few weeks of our relatively consequence-free lifestyles. I could hear my family congratulating me as I met with them dressed in my cap and gown with my diploma in my hands. Things only became more romantic (I'm using that word in the classical sense) in my head when Mayra decided she would be studying abroad during my final semester at college, which meant she would be returning to the US just a few weeks before (or as I imagined it - just in time for) the end of my semester. I would go visit her during spring break and once she returned home she would come up and stay with me for the week leading up to graduation. I'd play these thoughts over and over again in my mind. It's a beautiful dream that's still vivid in my head to this very day.

Of course, it didn't happen like that at all. Yes, my family was there, but Bryan had accidentally planned out an overseas vacation at that time and had to miss my graduation weekend. Sure, I had plenty of time with my friends, but real life had claimed us far earlier than planned. And of course, Mayra wasn't there. She got sick less than a month into the first semester, and was just becoming acclimated to life outside of the hospital when graduation rolled around. (She did leave a voicemail on my phone wishing me a happy graduation. Mayra's simple message meant more to me than even I thought it would.)

I'm not angry or upset that this dream didn't become a reality. It's petty to take such matters personally. And besides, my last few weeks of school were filled with amazing memories that I often think back to. But I still think back to the idealized future I had in my head for so long. I always thought of myself as the kind of person who didn't get dragged along by his immature or overly specific dreams, but I had caught myself in the same trap as the girl who plans to have children by this year or the guy who enters school knowing from day one that he'll be a top physician.

And so as I look at where the rest of my twenties will take me (and even further than that), it's not just important to make sure that my roadmap has direction, but to also give it plenty of leeway and chances to move into other areas. If there's one thing I've learned in my twenty-four years that I'll make sure to remember in my twenty-fifth year, it's that your plans are always subject to change. Look to the future, reach for the stars, but don't be afraid to change things up.

(This post partially inspired by David Willis recently re-posting his old mini-series "Roomies: Is a Song Forever?", which first got me thinking about end-of-college scenarios back when I was first in college, and has gotten me reminiscing about it recently.)