Articles Reviews Barnestorming #248- Empires of the Void in Review, Gameshark, We3, Midnight Express
 

Barnestorming #248- Empires of the Void in Review, Gameshark, We3, Midnight Express Barnestorming #248- Empires of the Void in Review, Gameshark, We3, Midnight Express Hot

empires-1I would have called Empires of the Horrible Black Void...

The Truth about What Happened at Gameshark

OK, since Pete asked about it in the forums this week, I think I'm clear to let the cat out of the bag about why Cracked LCD is not at Gameshark anymore, ending its five year (!!!) run there. As you may or may not know, Gameshark is owned by Mad Catz- the company that makes those crappy "guest" controllers as well as some really damn good fight sticks. Gameshark was originally their support site for their Gameshark product, which was basically a cheat code generator. Of course, none of the current consoles support that kind of silliness, and it eventually became just a video games site. Bill Abner took over Editor-in-Chief duties back in 2007, shortly after he hired me.

Anyway, at the behest of Mad Catz, Gameshark kind of shifted gears earlier this year. They cut the budget and decided that they only wanted to run reviews of AAA games. No XBLA or PSN stuff, no indie PC stuff, and so forth. Which of course, left really very little to cover and us writers all but twiddling our thumbs. But Cracked LCD was still funded, because it was and always has been extremely successful. They also decided to not send anyone to E3. Bill, Brandon, and Todd are out there right now on their own dime for No High Scores. Crom bless 'em.

A couple of weeks ago, right after the Destined Hero review was posted, Bill sent me a "call me now" email and I pretty much knew what the deal was because it was one of those "writing on the wall" cases. Sure enough, he had been let go and Mad Catz was pulling the plug on the site. Frankly, I'm surprised it took them so long to do so since the site really had nothing to do with their products and the brand is pretty much dead in the water. But the end result is that my good friend Bill is out of his full time job, and I'm out of my #1 freelance gig. Everything you see written by me until further notice is pro bono.

So that's that, Gameshark RIP. We don't know if they're going to take the site down or what, it's still up and the full Cracked LCD archive is still there. I've got almost everything stored away locally, and once Gameshark goes dark we're looking at doing a new series at NHS, Cracked LCD Classics. It'll be the classic articles with some commentary and reflection. Looking over some of that stuff from five years ago is hilarious and awkward. I can't believe I actually recommended Descent!

Anyway, Bill needs a job. Any hiring managers out there looking for a writer/editor?

On the Table

Empires of the Void is definitely a good game, but it’s one of those where it’s coming into a genre that’s pretty much dominated by a couple of titles (TI3 and Ecilpse along with some second-tier efforts like Ascending Empires). The question becomes if we really need- or even want- another space 4x game. The good news is that Empires of the Void does a couple of things differently that are worth noting, and its tone overall is closer to Merchants of Venus than TI3 and I appreciate that. Overall, it’s derivative but not unappealing, and it’s a quicker and lighter game than I expected. You misguided people that huffed and puffed at Eclipse because it focused on the economy might want to check it out.

Review is at Cracked LCD’s new home at No High Scores.

Abbadon showed up today…odd how little attention it’s getting. It looks fun as hell, opening it up and seeing those old timey dice that you put the stickers on made me think of Mutant Chronicles, Battle Cry, and Queen’s Gambit. It has that same kind of look and feel. It’s kind of tacky but it sounds like it’ll be big dumb fun. I’m probably going to solo the hell out of it tonight before settling into my nightly video game coma.

On the Consoles

E3, blah blah blah. A bunch of corporate rah-rah and razzle dazzle, and I’m not seeing much that looks very exciting. Watch Dogs, maybe. ZombiU? Seriously? Most of the stuff shown- Assassin’s Creed 3, Borderlands 2, Black Ops 2, Halo 4, etc. all seem like foregone conclusions than new “reveals”. Dishonored looks awesome, but I was convinced of that last year. I had planned on joining Abner and the gang out there this year but with two little ones at home that wasn’t a good idea. I don’t regret not going. Do I really need to travel 2000 miles to see Nintendo announce that Wii U will have a fucking Mario game?

Anyway, Dragon’s Dogma. Still playing that damn game. For all of its fumbles,I’d say it’s the second best game of the year after Witcher 2. It _definitely_ takes its time in revealing why it’s great to you. There is something very compelling about setting off on a journey in this game, much more so than in a Bethesda game. Last session, I trekked out to this fort with a goblin problem. Routed them, fought their Cyclops on a rampart (pretty exciting), and then headed back. I had lost one party member and we were limping back to the main city. Night fell, and we were getting hammered. But I saw some campfires and headed in that direction, bow ready in case it was bandits. It wasn’t. The Duke sent a crew to set up a camp for us out in the wild, complete with a resting spot and a peddler. What a relief.

I think this game will be a major cult hit, particularly once it lowers in price and circulates a little more. It’s sold well, but it had mixed reviews. But it’s far, far more engaging than a lot of the other AAA releases this year. And right now I’d rather be playing it than any of the E3 titles I’ve seen so far.

On IOS

Or, the Comixology section. :-P

We3 was something of a disappointment. I liked the concept a lot, there was some awesome layout and paneling, but by and large what could have been a poignant and emotional story about animal abuse and exploitation in the name of science was turned into a gore story more about violence and empty shock value.

It made me think of Milo and Otis as written by Garth Ennis. I expected a lot more from it and from Morrisson. Oh well, three bucks down the tubes.

I also read a couple of issues of Locke and Key, which I absolutely hated. Hate the artwork, hate the story, hate the characters.

Animal Man had a free first issue, that was really good and slightly goofy so I may read some of those…I absolutely love the “Court of Owls” Batman story arc…1602 is kind of silly, but I like it. You just can’t take “Peter Parquahr” and “Sir Nicholas Fury” too seriously.

I’ve also looked at some of the free Batman Black & White shorts…the ones from Karl Janson and Bruce Timm are must-reads. Janson’s is about Batman’s birthday. Timm’s is a killer little noir piece about Two-Face.

On the Screen

After some truly dreadful kidflick garbage- Despicable Me, Puss in Boots, Monsters vs. Aliens- we finally hit a good one and from shitty kidflick masters Dreamworks at that. How to Train Your Dragon was actually really good, a fun and spirited story without incessant “hey adults!” pop culture references and crude humor. I thought it was heading south early on with the nerdy main character and all, but it turned out to be charming and funny. Still not on the level of Pixar, but at least they aimed a little higher than butt jokes and Smashmouth songs this time.

The dragon looked straight out of Pokemon, that was my only real issue with it.

On the more adult end of things, I watched Midnight Express on Netflix. I’d actually never seen it all the way through. It’s a tough movie, I like prison movies and this was probably one of the better ones. It gets a lot of flack for the way the Turks are depicted and Oliver Stone(who wrote it) issued some big apology to Turkey for making them seem like evil, subhuman monsters in it. But the thing is, it’s REALLY effective in conveying a sense of being imprisoned in a foreign, unfamiliar place by people that you culturally do not understand. Yeah, some of it is a little over the top, but it’s a very stylized film. As expected from Alan Parker.

Man, I don’t know if there’s a more pathetic scene in all of cinema than the last time his girlfriend visits him and he gets her to show her breasts. Such a lonely, desperate scene.

Oh, and that soundtrack. Simply awesome.

On Spotify

Still no cassette adapter for the Ford Tempo I allegedly drive, still no music. The Sounds of Silence.

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Comments (34)
  • avatarBlack Barney

    How to Train Your Dragon was utter genius. It would have won the oscar against most of Pixar's other stuff but they just happened to have Toy Story 3 that year.

    I actually didn't mind Despicable Me. nice surprise (made me cry).

    good write up, thanks.

  • avatarJosh Look

    Yup...Court of Owls is amazing. Damn near anything by Scott Snyder is worth taking a look at. His Detective run is superb as is Swamp Thing. Haven't read American Vampire yet, but I hear good things.

    Empires of the Void looks interesting. I like Eclipse, but I've come to find it isn't quite the game I wanted it to be. It's a damn good economic game, but I wanted to be more than just an economic game. So I'd be interested in seeing if this more along the lines of what I'm looking forward to. Anyone in Atlanta own it and want to bring it?

  • avatarAncient_of_MuMu

    I just started reading Locke and Key last weekend after being given the first trade paperback for my birthday. I really loved the more human elements of it, looking at how one copes after a disaster, and learning what we are really capable of doing if the situation arises, but found the paranormal stuff bland and lacking in innovation. I will give the next volume a go, but don't have high hopes.

    I have been pondering buying a copy of the second print run of Eclipse, as I really want a 3-4 hour 4X game, but maybe I will hold off a bit longer and see how people are rating it in a year. Maybe Empires of the Void is more my style, I don't know.

  • avatarJonJacob

    WE3 is the best work that Frank Quitely has ever done. That's my main reason for not letting go of it yet, I also liked how Morrison used language and played with what the animals thought and or said. I seem to recall it being kind of sad... it's so short there isn't much time to develop anything but the art alone is worth the price of admission.

    A comic with amazing art and a mediocre story is, for me, better then a comic with mediocre art and a great story. Mainly because when I pick them up the 4th or 5th time to flip a few pages the art is what brings me back.

    I started reading Scalped based on what was said on these pages and I like it well enough... but the writing reminds me of Garth Ennis or Brain Azzarello... far too macho. A lot of tough guy talk about drugs and fighting. Really corny. I am enjoying the story though even if the art is predictably filled with too much black ink. It's good though, I don't want to sound too negative. Fuck of a lot better then 100 Bullets or Preacher (is that series written for 14 year olds?) but very similar in style. I'm on issue 25 or so now, I'll buy the whole thing. One of the better comics I've read in awhile. I just wish the art was more original and the script style a little less cliche. It's nice to see a story about the Native American population, even if it does encourage too many negative stereotypes.

    The iPad is a great comics reader. I love it. I don't see myself buying too many actual comics any more.

    I don't get the love for How to Train Your Dragon. I went to the theatre all excited and walked away feeling like I just saw the biggest formulaic, cliche kids film around. At least Despicable Me felt for awhile like it was trying something new. There were some great moments in there but ultimately it became too saccharine for my tastes as well. But the central conceit was far more interesting and novel. Truth be told I enjoyed both well enough, even Monsters vs. Aliens was all right in that regard but I kind of had to turn the brain off. If I was with a kid it would be fine but I see no reason to return to these films.

    However you've convinced me on Dragons Dogma and since Platinum has delayed every game they announced I'm probably going to pick up Dogma in a week or so.

    I just have to figure out what to sell... my ass is seriously down in value.

  • avatarJosh Look

    MuMu - My last 4 player game of Eclipse was over in under 2 hours. Also, the game sort of sucks hard with 6 players.

  • avatardragonstout

    Does Snyder's Batman get a LOT better written after the first issue? 'Cause I was pretty much anti-sold after the painfully-written but oh-so-proud-of-itself opening "Gotham is..." monologue/narration in that issue; seemed like classic bad comics that get wildly overrated because people buy into the idea they're selling that it's clever. Art is pretty lame too.

    We3 has awesome Quitely art, but best? Dang. He's done a lot of great things, especially with Morrison. Flex Mentallo is great, and All-Star Superman is my favorite Morrison after Doom Patrol. And both better written than We3. Some totally amazing action sequences in We3; I think that's basically what that book is very worth reading for, though I agree that it's disappointing because it had such a promising concept. Finish Doom Patrol, dammit! And if it was Morrison doing animal rights that you wanted, his Animal Man run is the place for that.

    All you Garth Ennis haters who disliked Preacher should still check out his Punisher MAX. Less indulgence in his adolescent sense of humor. Preacher still gets me, though. 100 Bullets was very intelligently written, but far too cold for me. I didn't care about any of the characters. Art was amazing, though.

    PS: I have a paperback copy of We3 for sale if anyone wants it.

  • avatarSagrilarus

    Despicable Me was two or three movies all trying to fit into one. In the end none of them got the attention they deserved. The result was yet another movie where they feel obligated to explain why the bad guy is a bad guy. Phhlt. If I may paraphrase Homer Simpson, "I like my beer cold, my TV loud and my bad guys evil."

    How to Train Your Dragon was written by someone that did their homework. There's a good slice of Beowulf in its concept and that was much appreciated by at least one of its fans. Fine story, fine writing, beautifully executed.

    S.

  • avatardragonstout

    I just realized: you read We3 on a frickin' iPad??? That's a book that relies very very heavily on double-page splashes. I can't imagine that translating well. Obviously the story doesn't get any better or different but the visceral impact and feel of the action scenes would be completely ruined when the double-page splashes are *shrunk* instead of extra big.

  • avatarozjesting

    There are a select few movies that have shaped me on a deep level. Jaws (seen at age 7!) means I will never go more than ankle deep into the ocean.
    Basic Instinct has kept me from EVER cheating on my spouse and Midnight Express made DAMN sure I never smuggled drugs!
    I consider all these good things ;)

    Side note; Deliverance made me fear banjo music for years, but Steve Martin made it ok again ;)

  • avatarJonJacob  - re:
    dragonstout wrote:

    All you Garth Ennis haters who disliked Preacher should still check out his Punisher MAX. Less indulgence in his adolescent sense of humor. Preacher still gets me, though. 100 Bullets was very intelligently written, but far too cold for me. I didn't care about any of the characters. Art was amazing, though.

    I own one TPB of Ennis's Punisher stuff. It was the origin story where he's in charge of some place in Nam. It portrayed him as a bad guy more then anything and I actually liked it. Is that the same series and if so what are the good books in that run. I've always loved Punisher but just never found a series that did the character justice. I think he has great potential.

    I don't know about best Quitely art, perhaps I stated that wrong. His panel layout in particular in WE3 is just amazing. All Star Superman is good, I liked it and bought them as they were released but it didn't quite click with me the way his Batman run did. I especially like the scene where Batman is taking out the bad guys in the art gallery. There's some pretty funny and clever scenes in that episode. Some even accidentally so.

    I never considered the double page thing on the iPad but that's a good point. 300 for example and anything in widescreen would look kind of stupid on it. It's the one thing I'll miss, like the huge foldout in Ultimates 2 just couldn't work. I'll have to be carefull what I buy on there and what needs a print copy.

  • avatardragonstout  - re: re:
    JonJacob wrote:
    I own one TPB of Ennis's Punisher stuff. It was the origin story where he's in charge of some place in Nam. It portrayed him as a bad guy more then anything and I actually liked it. Is that the same series and if so what are the good books in that run. I've always loved Punisher but just never found a series that did the character justice. I think he has great potential.

    I'm always talking this series up, even now that I've already sold my extra paperbacks of it. But yeah, the book you've got is the prequel to that series: you want the Punisher MAX run, not his earlier Punisher run (which is ladled with extra crotch punch jokes). Frankly, I think that prequel in Nam and the second book of the proper series are the two weakest stories in the entire run, so if you liked that you're probably good. The third book is the best for crazy awesome action, and I think the last few are the best (it ran 60 issues in all, plus the Nam miniseries and 3 one-shots; overall, it takes 12 paperbacks). I have both nostalgia for and stronger emotional connections to Preacher, but I've come around to thinking that Punisher MAX was Ennis at his best. Also, lots of Ennis cliches are absent (I think it might be the only series he ever did that didn't heavily feature male bonding over drink, or a fixation on how hilarious disfigured people are).

    It's definitely still macho, though. But very very dark, and not just because violence + serious anti-hero + savage villains necessarily means dark. It's very much a character study, but of someone almost completely closed off and cold.

  • avatarMattDP
    Quote:
    Man, I don’t know if there’s a more pathetic scene in all of cinema than the last time his girlfriend visits him and he gets her to show her breasts. Such a lonely, desperate scene.

    Fuck, I'd forgotten about that scene. Simultaneously repulsive and sympathetic. Quite an achievement, managing to simultaneously evoke two completely opposite emotions in the audience.

  • avatarThirstyMan  - re:
    ozjesting wrote:
    and Midnight Express made DAMN sure I never smuggled drugs!

    The scene where he is in the bathroom, sweating, with dope taped round him is EXACTLY like it is when I try to smuggle alcohol into TKWIL. I have bandeleros of 1/4 bottle scotch taped to my torso and a big loose coat over the top of it all. I ALWAYS think Midnight Express when I'm 'taping up' in the bathroom at Heathrow. Luckily I have never been surrounded by gun toting police.

    Course, when I get caught I just have to hand it all over and sign a pledge saying I will never do it again, promise....and then smile nicely, plead ignorance etc so they don't actually charge me.

  • avatarrepoman

    Mike, seeing as Empires of the Void was a kickstarter thing, do you think if it had been picked up by a established publisher that the problems you see in it would have been worked out in development?

  • avatarSuperflyTNT

    Sorry to hear the gig fell apart for you and Bill, Mike. I put my "feelers" out this AM across a couple channels, see if anyone is looking for a writer/editor for him. Who knows...I've had good luck thus far, maybe it will hold and we can get Wild Bill hooked up.

    I asked for an Abaddon copy from the guys at TV because I hadn't heard SHIT about it, but they told me they had no review copies left. Which kind of makes me laugh...you run out of copies to sell, you're out of review copies. It does look fun, and I hadn't seen dick about it anywhere. Looking forward to hearing if they saved me 6 hours of my life or if I missed out.

    Shame on you for calling Ascending Empires a second-rate effort. It's not that it's second-rate, it's that it shoots for light and scores the 3 pointer.

    1602...OMG. Man, I read that two years ago, maybe more. My nephew brought it over on a trip from PA. Steven Rogers as a "white guy raised by natives" was clasic. Terribly obtuse motivation...what posessed them to go in that direction? It was silly, and the art was pretty neat, but overall, left me wondering why I didn't crack open 300 instead.

    Somehow, we are on some mystical wavelength for some reason. I just had a seriously bad bout with this ear thing on Saturday and was completely unable to move without truly oppressive nausea. So, the girls went to Kohl's to drain my bank account and I turned on a flick: Midnight Express. Totally agree with the way you've stated it; it's a "stranger in a strange land" film, set in a prison. Neat film that I'm glad I saw once, but not one that I'd go out and watch again.

  • avatarjay718

    1602 gets a lot of flack and was by no means a great book, but it was certainly entertaining. It's not something I'd seek out for my shelf, but I enjoyed it. For a cool animal comic y'all should check out Evan Dorkin's Beasts of Burden. Cute but not cutesy. Great read and amazing art. Not as great as Guarnido's art in Blacksad, but that's a differnt type of thing altogether (but another AMAZING book.) I picked up a HC copy of Court of Owls vol. 1 for a few bucks the other day at the Strand based on Josh's recommendation. I'll probably get around to reading it this weekend.

    Back in school we read Midnight Express then watched the movie and the teacher got in trouble for showing it to us because one of the kids parents took offense to that scene in particular. Never mind all the other depraved shit going on in that flick, god forbid high school kids see breasts.

  • avatarShellhead

    I disliked 1602. Usually I like or even love Neil Gaiman's writing, but this was a half-assed effort. The story was just barely a story, really more of a contrived excuse to display silly alternate versions of a bunch of classic Marvel characters.

    Jay, I agree that the artwork in Blacksad is great. Really great. It's criminal that more people haven't been exposed to it here in the U.S., where DC and Marvel have such a deathgrip on comic fans.

  • avatarjay718


    I disliked 1602. Usually I like or even love Neil Gaiman's writing, but this was a half-assed effort. The story was just barely a story, really more of a contrived excuse to display silly alternate versions of a bunch of classic Marvel characters

    I generally love Gaiman's work as well; American Gods is one of my all time faves, but it feels like he was commissioned to do 1602. It really doesn't seem like a 'Gaiman original.' As for alternate versions of Marvel characters, I did enjoy the few (Cage, Daredevil, Punisher) Marvel Noir books I read.

  • avatarMichael Barnes

    The secret to enjoying 1602 is to take it for what it is- a jumped-up "What If". You can tell that whether or not the quality is up to Sandman or Miracleman, Gaiman had fun writing it and working out how to get the characters in there. It's not High Comics Art, but it's fun and history nerdy.

    As for the issue of reading comics with double page spreads on the iPad...I beg to differ. The big splashes in We3 were probably more effective because you see the entire image unbifurcated by the stapling/binding. It's not "shrunk down" dramatically. And it does display in landscape, you know. :-P

    I _love_ reading comics on the iPad. Not just for convenience, but I also like that the folks that do the scanning and digitizing actually take care to "edit" the images and panels in sometimes clever ways. Most books you can read full page on the iPad, but on the phone the panel-by-panel reading is the way to go.


    I do not miss the pages at all. Or storing the books.

    I read and liked Preacher, but I am not much of an Ennis fan. His whole whiskey-and-cigarettes schtick and post-Tarantino lowlifes and extreme violence thing gets really, really old. I HATED his first Punisher run,never read Max.

    I got the first Guardians of the Galaxy ('08) by Dan Abnett last night...I actually really liked it. It's fun. Funny reading it along with Infinity Gauntlet, seeing Adam Warlock in two entirely different tones.

  • avatarMichael Barnes

    Mike, seeing as Empires of the Void was a kickstarter thing, do you think if it had been picked up by a established publisher that the problems you see in it would have been worked out in development?

    Now _this_ is a great question, and it's one I think we'll see asked a lot of the Kickstarter stuff that we'll be swimming in soon.

    Yes, I think that there are definitely some minor things that would have been ironed out in development. Nothing major, I don't think it would be a completely different game or anything like that. And it is absolutely competently- and confidently designed. But there are some things like the imbalance in the tech tree that would likely have been smoothed over if this game were at FFG, for example. The game feels tested, but it does seem like an "internal" design if that makes any sense.

    In some ways, Empires of the Void reminds me of playing games from the 1990s, when development wasn't as much of an issue with games makers...more squirrely bits got through, and there was less "polish".

    But with third-person development, you would lose the DIY, independent spirit of the game. The thing is, I actually _like_ some of the roughness and lack of polish.

    Banditos wasn't Kickstarter, but that's an example of a game that needed development.

    It's an interesting subject...probably worth an article at some time, the difference between design and development.

  • avatarjay718

    I loved Preacher when it was coming out until about halfway through when it degraded into one of the dumbest things I think I've ever read. I feel the book overall was one of those 'game-changers' though, pushing the comics industry in directions it hadn't been before and opening doors for all types of stuff that wouldn't have seen the light of day otherwise (at least from a major publisher.) Although I like his work on Hellblazer and The Boys, most of Ennis' other stuff I can really just take or leave.

    I think I'm just about sold on the ipad between the gaming and comics. I wound up with a kindle fire that was left unclaimed at work and the size of the screen was just a bit too small. No good games for it either.

  • avatardragonstout  - re:
    Michael Barnes wrote:
    I read and liked Preacher, but I am not much of an Ennis fan. His whole whiskey-and-cigarettes schtick and post-Tarantino lowlifes and extreme violence thing gets really, really old. I HATED his first Punisher run,never read Max.

    I also hated his first Punisher run. The Max run could not be more different. Does not take place in the Marvel Universe, for one.

    He's definitely got several schticks, and Punisher Max avoids most of them (except for his interest in violent heroes with extremely strict moral codes, and I think the IRA are involved in one of the stories). No Punisher drinking whisky or smoking cigarettes.

    You can skip vol. 2 "Kitchen Irish" altogether, and you can come back to read the Nam story "Born" (though it is important), if you just want to start with a great 1-2 punch of "In the Beginning" and "Mother Russia".

    If I keep harping on it, it's only because it and All-Star Superman are the only Marvel/DC runs from the past 10 years that I was really impressed by, and Punisher in particular came as a big surprise, I only picked up some paperbacks because they were seriously discounted.

  • avatarShellhead

    I read the first three trades of Preacher, thanks to the local library. There were some interesting ideas and some incredibly stupid ideas (Arseface, for example). I could see the potential for it to get even worse, so I didn't continue reading after that.

  • avatarMattDP

    I'm sure I once mentioned either in an article or the forums that I ran out of patience with it after the firs two or three story lines, which were excellent, but after which it became amazingly stupid amazingly quickly and got nailed for saying so. Glad to find some people agree with me. If I remember correctly it was once The Grail were out of the picture that it ran off the rails, although the last couple of issues got some of the old fire back.

  • avatarMichael Barnes

    Yeah, Preacher had a nasty tendency to either get completely sidetracked or lose the thread. All the Grail stuff was great- Star, Masada, Saint of Killers, Allfather and so forth. Great stuff. But then there was silly stuff like the Meat Man and Arseface (one of the top five WORST comic characters of all time).

    But man, when Preacher was good...it was REALLY good. Nasty and clever.

    Two of my favorite lines...one was when the Allfather was getting off a helicopter (causing it to tip because he was so big) and someone remarks "His two favorite things are mass murder and giant pies". The other was at Masada when the Grail was getting blown to shit by the Saint of Killers, "the bullets aren't stopping him!" And Allfather's command- "then drown him in your blood"

    I loved Jesse and Tulip's relationship, I liked Cassidy (particularly when he fell in with the goths), I liked a lot of the storyline. I actually liked the call-outs to Bill Hicks and the Pogues. But too often the book just got stuck up in its own ass or outright silly.

    I just blew my Fun Budget on a bunch more comics...some All Star Superman, more Irredeemable, the Moore Swamp Thing run I haven't read since the '80s...such a damn junkie. Almost bought the first Before Watchmen out of morbid curiosity, but I ain't paying $3.99 for a 23-page issue of anything.

  • avatarShellhead

    I love the cover to All-Star Superman #6. It was a decent run, though I sometimes didn't enjoy the ugly faces that Quitely draws.

  • avatarSuperflyTNT

    Punisher Max is the shit, Andy. I ended up standing at my local FLG(aC)S and reading a couple of them. Kind of a dick move, but I bought some blind boosters for my kid, so they got paid.

    Funny thing about kids: those fuckers have the most awesome luck ever. I give my 11 year old the boxes, tell her to pop them...3 Rares 2 Uncommons and the one uncommon we liked the most. Lucky little shit, that one.

  • avatarChapel

    I was supposed to play Empires of the Void last week, but a sickness pre-empted that. I am jonesing to really get this one to the table, and it looks like it may offer something different than TI:3 and Eclipse. It's no worries though, as I love these kind of games so am not to worried about it on my shelf regardless.

  • avatarStan Leer

    Don't listen to Barnes- Locke and Key is great. You have to start from the beginning where you can become invested in the characters which are well done and thoughtfully executed. I'm not a huge fan of the art but it shines in showing the characters expressions and their emotions and in that way it serves the story line and their emotional turmoil is rendered well in how the faces are drawn.

    The continual twist of the knife in the fact that villian remains one step ahead of the protagonists is done really well. Sadly I don't think that Locke & Key does well as a pick up and read in any particular story line as the whole progress of the book is headed in a realitively unified direction. The individual books are difficult to take out of context from the whole story line.

    I have been enjoying Scalped based on its mention here. First 8 trades all from the library! Yay!

  • avatarNotahandle

    You think Eclipse has the technology angles completely cornered and excels. Really? I thought the tech lists poor and random. As for Empire's tech tree being short and shallow, that's what I thought about Eclipse. Empires does tech better.

    The pick any three Actions with all but Mine being able to be taken again works really well, giving a lot of flexibility in a turn. The Diplomacy benefits of allying with neutral planets are well chosen, as is the player alien powers. Between them, you can get some choice combos and a lot of replayability. The game has character and is a very good light 4X game.

    I suspect - and hope - it plays best with three due to the symmetrical setup; there're far too few games that do that.

  • avatarJonJacob

    Punisher Max isn't available on the iPad reader yet. I might go pick up the trades at some point... I still buy actual stuff too.

    Scalped is getting better but it's still full of cheap stereotypes.. good series though, I'd still recommend it. Red Crow just got fucking cool last night.

    I thought Preacher was awesome after the first trade, after the second I thought it was good and by the time I was done I almost hated it... not just for ass face but also that dick head character... thats two of the dumbest comic book characters of all time. Too bad because it had great potential and there is some good stuff mixed in there.

    The iPad comic reader is seriously missing a lot of stuff. It seems great when you first open it and then you realize, no Dave Sim, no Seth Fisher, Dark Horse, Astro City, Fear Agent... it's missing a fuck of a lot. Still a great app but they really better get a move on.

  • avatarThirstyMan

    Actually, I bought Locke and Key from the beginning and I like it too.

    1602 is a bit boring especially comparing to Sandman. I kind of get the geeky refences but is that it ??

    Read the Dr Who which was yeah, yeah, meh.

    Like Irredeemable but its goddamn expensive. Read the trade but I'm fucked if I'm paying $4 an issue

  • avatarsgosaric

    On Gameshark
    - I've been recently checking on the old articles and I found a tresure of "theory" articles that for me are of great relevance (on emergent gameplay, transparency, fun, theme, eyecandy, gaming reviews, "auteur" and several articles on the state of the gaming industry). So I hope all these are availble on net and if new comments will be added, that much better (though some articles probably don't need them).

    On Empires of the Void
    - I hear Vasel comment "this is Nexus Ops (even more) in space". And that got my attention as I won't buy FFG's Nexus ops (ugly) and I can't get to old NO in Europe, so this might be my NO replacement?
    Can anyone comment how similar are these two games, can EotV work as "replacement" for Nexus ops?

  • jason10mm

    Dang, all I saw was "Midnight" (the Express part was cut off) on the splash page and thought you were going to review that FFG movie! I made it about 20 minutes into it and then realized that with the power of Netflix I could be watching ANYTHING else :)

    Sucks about Gameshark, but in glad your column landed elsewhere. Be interested to hear about Abbadon. Had a copy in my hands but even Borgs name couldnt overcome the wariness.

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