All posts in Geek

Hexile

Inexplicably, while facing a mental block with my game House of Whack, I had an idea for a new board game. Two days later I finished the prototype. It is called Hexile. It is a hexagon-based strategy game involving aspects of chess and, well, other stuff. It is still too early to describe the game easily or to make comparisons.

Basically, two players face off across a tiled board made of hexagons. Each has a tower from which they fire caroms. These caroms have to move across the board, avoiding black holes, ricocheting off repulsor fields, avoiding blockers, using teleporters, in order to hit the opponent’s tower. Players uncover various types of terrain hexes and the obstacles mentioned and try to place them strategically on the board. Certain hexes will allow players to upgrade their towers with catapults and tractor beams, and their caroms with force fields and blasters. All of this requires power, so the players need to discover power generators and claim them in order to have power to accomplish their goals each turn.

I don’t imagine a long development time for Hexile. Maybe adding some more hexes and balancing the number of hexes in the deck. Tweak the rules and then it is done.

Lost

Damn them.

Episode 3

And so it ends. Having seen very little to spoil any part of the movie, I was able to enjoy a Star Wars movie with a fresh perspective. I’ve come to judge these films in a class by themselves, comparing them to each other. For if they were to set foot into the larger realm of fantasy and sci-fi cinema, they are instantly decimated on several fronts by Lord of the Rings, Firefly, any number of anime series, the list goes on.

From a technical aspect, Episode 3 seemed to be about pushing the envelope in terms of scope, speed and detail. Once you have mastered the massive completely CGI set piece, there is little room for innovation. So when there’s an epic space battle, the results are astonishing and no one does it better than ILM. Lightsaber battles have also been perfected in this film and it is difficult to imagine any improvements in this arena. The fights are almost too fast, an impossible blur of flashing light.

From an acting standpoint, I felt that everyone turned it up a notch since Episode 2. Ewan definitely inhabited the role of Obi-wan this time around. Ian was perfect as Palpatine/Sidious. Even Hayden was tolerable, though slightly stiff. A big disappointment was Natalie Portman who was given nothing to work with and was downgraded to Anakin’s hand-wringing wife.

I’ve always felt that Lucas is more of a technician than a director. He has this vision in his head and at last he has the technology to translate that into a film. This visual translation seems foremost in his mind. The transmission of any kind of story seems to be secondary. While his handling of the overarching story is genius, he falters in the details, writing dialogue heavy with exposition, encouraging only passable wooden performances from his actors. If only the writers from Knights of the Old Republic could have had a crack at the script, we could have seen something more elegant. Instead, the story plods methodically towards its inexorable conclusion, words falling from the character’s mouths simply because they have to.

This is not to say that there are no brilliant moments. The seduction of Anakin, the scene at the opera, Obi-wan’s confrontation with Padme, Vader’s first words… these stuck with me. The sense of descending darkness is also effective, culminating in Obi-wan turning his back on Anakin’s charred and mutilated form.

The visual orchestration of this film was also very powerful, with Lucas quoting scenes from the original trilogy, giving moments a deep resonance. Seeing Palpatine seated on the throne-like chair as Anakin and Dooku crossed sabers in that mirror of Return of the Jedi’s Luke/Vader duel gave me chills. So too the scene of Owen Lars gazing into the twin Tatooine sunset…beautiful.

On the whole, it was a good experience which I enjoyed more than the first two films. While technical excellence won out over passion and artful storytelling, the epic themes of Star Wars were made complete in this film. The nature of Anakin’s fall is revealed and his redemption in Jedi is made much more satisfying now that we know the depth of the descent.

Catapult

Catapult
– Counting Crows

All of a sudden she disappears
just yesterday she was here
somebody tell me if I am sleeping
someone should be with me here
(cause I don’t wanna be alone)

I wanna be the knife that cuts into my hand
and I wanna be scattered from here in this catapult
What a big baby, won’t somebody save me please
You won’t find nobody home

all of these quiet battered voices
wait for the hunger to come
we got little revolvers and stupid choices
and no one to say when we’re done
(Well I don’t wanna bring you down)

I wanna be the light that burns out your eyes
`cause I know there’s little things about me
that would sing in the silence of so much rejection
in every connection I make
I can’t find nobody home
I wanna be the last thing you hear when you’re falling asleep….

Beck

“Hammer my bones on the anvil of daylight” – I’m so glad Beck is back, filling my head with the lyrical wizardry of E-Pro.

Internet Time Machine

I came across this internet archive that stores web sites from years ago, letting you browse back in time. I could go back and look at my web sites as they were in 2001!

Check it out: www.archive.org

Episode III is PG-13

Revenge of the Sith has received a PG-13 rating. This can only mean good things. I remain cautiously optimistic. I almost saw a spot they played during Lost with the “Arise, Lord Vader” scene. There was a flash of Vader sitting up from a table before I turned it off. This is going to be great: I’ve literally only seen about 2 second’s worth of images from this movie. I’ll go in completely fresh. It’s the last time I can experience a new Star Wars movie and I want to see if I can recapture the childhood wonder I felt during the original trilogy.

This is a Good Start

Robot walker I’ll take five. Be sure to check out the video of this baby in action!
http://www.engadget.com/entry/1234000043038904

Google Maps

Google Maps has recently become my route planning site of choice over Mapquest simply because it is more fun and (I think) easier to use. What I like is how you can click and drag the map around instead of clicking on compass points and moving in clunky square-shaped jumps. You can also look for non-specific addresses, like where all the Blockbuster Video stores are in a certain zip code.

Just recently they added a satellite imagery feature up in the upper right corner so you can toggle between a traditional street map and super cool satellite photos of the same view. Now I can literally see my house from here!

World of Podcasting

Since podcasting is still relatively new, the community is very accessible and friendly. I heard a very literate and high quality podcast on openpodcast.org on the topic of comparative mythology. I felt compelled to write the guy, Jerry Trowbridge, and ask if I could get a direct feed of his ‘cast instead of having to wade through the ads on openpodcast. He said he didn’t have one as yet, but would think about it. Later that day he had it all set up! We chatted briefly about podcasts and audio work in general. Very cool. Check out his feed at http://pbcliberal.users.blogmatrix.com/podcasts/index.xml

And then, out of the blue, a podcaster from what has become one of my favorite shows, Chub Creek, wrote me because he saw my mention of the ‘cast on my site. Having Dave from Chub Creek decide to write me was like getting an email from someone on the cast of “Lost” or “Stargate SG-1.” Well, maybe not SG-1. The show is basically these two Canadian guys who have been friends since childhood but drifted apart in their adult years. They are using the show as a way to reconnect. Chub Creek typically offers a well-edited collection of skits, bizarre songs, excellent original music, and random musings. Listen here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/ChubCreek

It’s worth it to download every episode from 1 to the most recent.