Author Archives: Andrew Hales

Fit 4 Con Update: Week 7

Feeling good! I’m down 5 lbs now and it’s starting to show. My pants fit a little better, which is always a plus. Weight lifting is going well too. I’ve been able to really push myself and start to make some progress. It’s not much, but considering where I started, I’m pretty pleased. I’m not going to break any records, but it’s a really great feeling to get in one more curl than last time or add ten lbs to the leg press. I’d like to get to the gym a bit more often than I have been (only 2-3 days a week) but life has been getting in the way a little bit. Come Monday however, I’m off of night shift and my house is back in order, I can go back to 3-4 days a week, which is where I’d like to be. Fifty four days to NYCC and I can’t wait!

Oh Yeah!

Oh Yeah!

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Filed under Fit 4 Con, Geek Life

Around the Web August 16, 2013

This week Popular Science has given us a fun infographic about the evolution of the geek. Aside from being interesting and mildly amusing it also gives us an origin of the word geek.

geek

I bet this guy knows the origin of geek.

If geeks used to bite the heads off chickens, what does that make Ozzy after the incident with the bat?

Speaking of rock stars, apparently KISS has purchased an arena football team. I am nearly speechless on this one. While Gene Simmons has a pretty sharp business mind, somehow I don’t think the football going public is going to get on board with this one.

I have a hard time seeing this man running a sports franchise.

I have a hard time seeing this man running a sports franchise.

I get the feeling this will go the way of the XFL.

Next up is a deleted scene from season 3 of Game of Thrones. Turns out that Grand Maester Pycelle is much less of an old fool than he looks.

Not that we didn’t already know he wasn’t on the level, but the change in personality was more than a little startling.

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Guest Blog | The Last of Us

Mr Kurt Klein is the Exhibit Manager for the Virginia Air and Space Museum. He is also a life long gamer. Over a couple beers Kurt shared a unique gaming experience and I’ve asked him to share it here.

There are no two ways about it. I’m a gamer. Not a casual gamer. Not a guy who likes to play games to pass some time. I really enjoy playing games and have since I was in my single digits—back when Atari ruled the console wars with the 2600 and a

My first gaming console

Commodore 64 was cutting edge PC gaming goodness. I once traded away five games to borrow some guy’s Super Nintendo just so I could play Final Fantasy 2 (4) for a week. I have beaten well over 500 games. I have found myself checking the clock at eight pm realizing that I checked the clock at eight am when I started. Lately, however, I’ve found myself bored with playing video games. Very few hold my attention these days, but I still feel the call of the wild and so I turned to a place I hadn’t considered: YouTube.

Just like most people watch a TV series, I now watch people play games, anxiously awaiting the next upload. The truth is, I never used to be interested in watching other people play games. (There is a dark moment surrounding Karnov that I would rather erase from memory, but that’s another story for another day.) Lately, however, it seems I have learned to enjoy watching other people play.

It started slowly. I watched videos of games that I was playing at the time, looking for shortcuts, treasure locations, or NPCs glitching in strange ways. I watched cool kill shots and close calls—the usual fare for a guy who plays games. As I clicked around, I found that I was drawn to one player in particular. He’s not a particularly serious gamer. He doesn’t care if he gets the best loot or beats a level or boss as efficiently as possible. He is all the things I am not, except that he loves making a show out of playing a game. In short, he led me to a revelation.

Mr. James Heaney currently works with GameFront.com, a California-based outfit with a small contingent of two dedicated uploader staff. In a world of serious gamers trying to learn combos, find shortcuts, or just beat games, Heaney stands out as a guy who can not only accomplish these things but give them a showbiz flair. He’s also a comic and an aspiring actor. So while his carefree nature keeps his playing from getting too bogged down with technical explanation, his desire to make an entertaining video keeps him pushing forward.

Dark Souls is my top ever favorite, hardest of hard core games. It’s made not for the faint of heart, but only for the most dedicated of gamers. Shortly after I beat the game, Heaney was challenged to make it through. I wondered, “How in the world is this try-hard going to get through one of the most unforgiving games I’ve ever played?” Not only did he end up doing it, but he used just the right amount of, happy-go-lucky panache combined with his real passion: entertaining people. Mind you, it took him 190 (!) videos to get through.

A little while later, when I saw that GameFront was uploading a play-through of a game called The Last of Us, I was intrigued. I didn’t have a clue what the story was, but I had seen the cover art. Instantly I thought, “Buddy flick, I get it.” So I clicked the first episode and was riveted for the entirety of the upload.

This is what is known in gamer circles as a “buddy flick” (i.e. no sex)

The story was well written. The cut scenes made the characters loveable and appealing and had me cheering them on as the story unfolded. The plot even took Joel and Ellie, the main characters, through Pittsburgh. I have family on Troy Hill, so this tugged at my love for my adopted home town.

As the storyline progressed through Wyoming and into Salt Lake City, Heaney commented on things during quiet moments, but fell silent when anything was happening on the screen. His avatar didn’t linger too long in any one area, yet he managed to explore them pretty thoroughly, which satisfied my ingrained gamer need to eviscerate entirely a game’s mechanic and design, but kept the story moving so as not to lose the viewer. By the end, I had experienced was a great story with well-written characters told through the medium of a video game.

I mentioned I am a gamer, right? Yeah… so I dabbed my eyes free of tears, and promptly watched a couple of reviews of The Last Of Us. To my surprise, there was a lot of groaning about how certain game mechanics and AI took the players out of the story and ended up confusing them or disappointing them because they, being gamers, had to play through all the faults in the game as well as point out the detriments of telling a story through a gaming medium.

I am well aware that the story in a game is very difficult to pace and that balancing it is a HUGE part of making a good experience for a player and a fan. So after seeing that other people did not have the same feelings as I did about The Last Of Us, I started wondering what happened that caused these two opposing points of view. What I realized was that all the disappointed players actually had to PLAY the game, whereas I was able to just watch. Additionally, I must have lucked into watching an entertaining player who affected my perspective without my realizing. Because of Heaney’s play style and personality, the flaws were glossed over. I was paying attention to his playing and commentary rather than having to play it myself and getting wrapped up in mechanics and seeing the glaring flaws. In more than a few spots the AI was noticeably poor. One bit in particular was when the team has to run through a yard and keep quiet, but is being told to be quiet and stay low by a guy who is crunching, rattling and, in some cases, running right past enemies while they ignore him. Flaws are there, to be sure, and I feel very lucky to have been cleverly guided through most of them in a way that made them seem smaller than they are.

What am I to make of my discovery? I imagine a game industry that will seek particular gamers for their style, personality and wit based on what they believe will show their game in the best light. In my mind, no longer is it necessary to rack up the most points, get the most frags, have a high KDR, or even be particularly good at playing games. Playing games for an audience now seems a legitimate way to make a little cash if you can pull the numbers. Not just top players like Fatal1ty can do this, but quite possibly just a guy who makes you feel as though he could be sitting on your couch. There’s a lot to be said for that and I encourage anyone to check out some play-throughs of stellar games and, once you’ve found the story, check out different players who upload. Find the gamer who tickles your fancy and enjoy a game like it wasn’t intended to be enjoyed.

-Cheefbast

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Filed under Gaming, Guest Blog, Kurt Klein

Winning Science August 14, 2013

All the in-the-know geeks are talking about space news these days, it seems.  NASA’s space probe Juno is halfway to the planet Jupiter on a five year voyage to check out the sights and sounds.

junos_c

A five year mission…really? There had better be some boldly going.

Interestingly enough, Jupiter is also on MY list of places to visit, right after Disney World and Alpha Centauri.

The researchers who have been living in a dome to simulate life on Mars have finally emerged after a four month experiment to determine the types of foods that could be consumed by astronauts headed to the Red Planet.  Apparently, they all craved Nutella while they were there.

If this is the future of space travel I may need to reconsider my desire to go into space.

If this is the future of space travel I may need to reconsider my desire to go into space.

They also made a Cajun jambalaya out of Spam—not my choice of ingredients, but hey! Spam is definitely non-perishable.

Scientists have created a list of twelve asteroids that they say could be captured and studied.  Not only is cost a factor in roping an asteroid, but scientists also have to beware accidentally propelling an asteroid directly into the earth and causing a catastrophe.  These twelve asteroids, they say, are of an easily manageable size.

Think this, only much bigger.

Think this, only much bigger.

I never had a pet rock, but somehow the idea of a pet asteroid is far more appealing!

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