Oct
28
Elsewhere on the web
Filed Under Web | Leave a Comment
Sign of the times.
You know they’re hardcore because going AFK for a marriage proposal wasn’t considered.
Guild Wars updates.
Nightfall goes live soon. Check out the third trailer, a video interview (44.7MB) with the developers and the Elona map (1.38MB).
Blocker Gundan Machine Blaster intro.
YouTube. Titled Brocker Corp Machine Blaster locally, this was the first giant robot show on TV I can recall.
Oct
25
Elsewhere on the web
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Transmetropolitan character inspirations. [via]
The artist created custom 12-inch action figures of the final character designs and used them as art references.
ISPs vs BitTorrent.
I’m reasonably confident someone will come up with an alternative to BitTorrent soon if ISPs continue to aggresively choke torrent speeds.
True confessions.
There’s a movie pitch in here somewhere.
Oct
24
Iron Fist
Filed Under Games, PSP | 2 Comments
One of the reasons I got a PSP was to play games from genres I had not tried for a long time. I’m primarily a PC gamer and PCs, though technically capable, aren’t the platform of choice for genres like fighters. I hadn’t played a fighter since Soul Edge a decade ago so I made it a point to get Tekken: Dark Resurrection last week and it’s been eating up my gaming time since.
The region 3 version of the game includes an instruction pamphlet in Chinese but the game is in English and so is the manual.
The presentation is of the highest quality and this is a title to use when showing off your PSP. You have to see it in action to appreciate just how good a game can look and sound on a portable device.
The controls didn’t bother me too much. I initially had trouble choosing between the d-pad and the analogue pad for movement. I ended up going with the d-pad but diagonals are a bit tricky and performing a quarter circle (e.g. up->diagonal up->forward) takes dexterity and finesse.
(Bandai Namco released the game in limited quantities with a d-pad attachment which apparently helps and it can sometimes be found sold separately on eBay.)
The contestants
There are over thirty characters to choose from and the character design range from the X-TR3M3 to the flat-out silly.
It’s particularly strange being thrashed by giggly little girlies in frilly dresses. The thing is it’s really a no-win situation. If you get beaten, it’s embarassing. You’ve just been beaten up by a girl in a frilly dress. Thanks, Bandai Namco. Why don’t you just chop off my testicles now? And if you happen to win, you’ve just beaten up a girl in a frilly dress. Way to go, tough guy. What’s next on the to-do list today? Kicking puppies?
Thankfully, the game does not feature puppies but it does have a bear, a panda as well as a kangaroo and its joey. The kangaroos are especially bad. I lost one fight with them in five seconds.
(Hint: If they start swinging their boxing gloves around and coloured lights start appearing, take action.)
(Hint: Hitting them would be a good action.)
The characters differ in fighting technique and they each have their own reasons for joining the Iron Fist Tournament. These motivations are shown in prologues done in comic book style with voice-over narration. Each character also has an epilogue depicted with a fantastic cinema-quality CGI movie which is unlocked once the final boss has been beaten in Story Mode. Some of the endings are humourous, some uplifting, some enigmatic and a few are quite dark but they’re all a treat to watch.
My character of choice is Dragunov, a uniformed Spetsnaz officer who uses sambo. He’s got an arrogant demeanour, an unhealthy pallor and a scarred visage suggesting a devil-may-care attitude towards shaving.
To encourage players to keep on playing, the game awards money for winning fights, tournaments and mini-games. You can use the gold to unlock movies for characters in case you don’t want to play through the Story Mode but the main money sink is character customisation.
Customisation is a lot of fun. You can make characters cooler, more badass or goofier by changing their costumes, colours and accessories. I’m currently working on earning enough gold to give Dragunov a mantle to go with his sharp-looking hat. I don’t think Russian special forces usually wear capes and mantles in battle but it looks very stylish so they should definitely look into it. It would put the special in “special forces.”
Tough enough
In terms of difficulty, I haven’t had too much to complain about despite not being adept at this sort of game. The game has a few practice modes and these include tutorials for moves and combos. The tutorials are really necessary because some of the combos are so complex I have trouble believing anyone bar adolescents juiced up on sugar and caffeine could execute them.
Still, I managed to do all right with the basic moves and did sufficiently well in Arcade Battle mode that I earned the 3rd dan rank. Of course, this was on the Easy difficulty level. I was getting a little bored with the lack of challenge and moved on to Medium difficulty thinking I was ready.
Well, I thought wrong.
On Medium difficulty, the AI can be devastating with its use of combos and special moves. The most annoying move is the floater (or “juggle” as fans refer to it). Your opponent strikes and you float gently in the air allowing your foe to continue reducing your health bar without fear of retaliation. This can go on for several seconds and while that may not seem like much but bear in mind fights against the AI usually last about 10 seconds. So you’re hanging in the air being pummelled and you can’t do anything about it. I usually spend moments like that appreciating why violence is not a particularly good way to solve problems.
My win/loss percentage quickly plummeted to about 49 per cent and I’m now a humble 1st dan. On the plus side, victories are so much more satisfying now since I have to work hard to earn them.
Iron Fist links:
- GameTrailer review. I don’t think much of the site’s reviews — the Monster Hunter Freedom review was misleading and hypercritical — but it must be said the videos do an excellent job of demonstrating gameplay elements.
- Tekken Zaibatsu. This is the fansite to go to if you’re looking to become adept at the game.
- Official Japanese site. The text is in Japanese but there are wallpapers to download and streaming videos of the trailer and intro.
- Movies. YouTube has most of the character epilogue movies. Asuka’s is amusing while Devil Jin’s is dark.
Oct
20
Elsewhere on the web
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Oh, that Fire Convoy.
First Ai-chan, now this.
Sony Media Manager for PSP. [via]
Supports AVI, MPG, MPEG-4, MOV, WMV and HTML formats.
Oct
19
Palm doodling
Filed Under Doodles, PDA, Pix | Leave a Comment



I enjoy doodling and I regularly exhaust my Tungsten E’s battery by creating doodles like the ones above with Notepad. The PDA app is meant for taking down quick freehand notes but I’ve found it makes a decent basic doodling tool.
Notepad has its shortcomings, though. It has no support for colours. There are only three fixed pen widths and an eraser which can’t be resized. There’s no undo function to instantly undo bad strokes. Finally, there’s no simple way of exporting your doodles to your PC. You can export notes as PNG file attachments in an e-mail client but if you want to simply save doodles on your PC you will have to copy the picture in Palm Desktop, paste it into a graphics program and save it. Clunky.
There are several freeware graphics programs available for the Palm PDA but I’ve had the worst luck with them. They’re all superior to Notepad but flawed in some critical way. The frustrating thing is I don’t know where to even begin troubleshooting the problems. Is it the app? Is it a conflict with another app? Is it the OS? Is it the hardware? Gah. I thought I’d list them in the hopes you have better luck with them than I did.
DrawIt, from New Zealand, gets a lot of recommendations and it’s easy to see why from the sample gallery. However, I’ve been frustrated by a bug in the app that prevents a saved picture from loading completely. Judging from comments from other users, it’s not an uncommon problem. Unfortunately, the developer has stopped worked on it so it doesn’t look like a fix is in the offing. The upside is he’s released the source code so perhaps someone could take a look at it.
PixMarker and MoePaint are both from Japan. They’re full of features (MoePaint even includes support for layers) but they both cause HotSync freezes on my PC.
PalmPaint may not have the features of the other apps but it’s still head and shoulders above Notepad. Unfortunately, it’s buggy and it appears it’s not been worked on for five years.
If anyone has managed to get the above apps working on their T|E, I’d appreciate a note since it would give me enough hope to begin looking for a fix for my problems with them. Otherwise, I’ll just resign myself to using Notepad.









