AernaLingus

joined 3 years ago
[–] [email protected] 8 points 16 hours ago

Tfw you're having a nice dream where you're at a big gathering with friends and family and then suddenly you realize, "Oh fuck, I'm not wearing a mask," and then you panic internally about COVID for the rest of it catgirl-flop

[–] [email protected] 5 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

Mega mega THREAD THREAD FrogPog

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

Finally got caught up on Rock is a Lady's Modesty (11/13 episodes) and I'm enjoying it well enough, but I'm not sold on it as a music anime. I think it's the same reason I didn't really enjoy Your Lie in April: it feels like a sports anime wearing a music anime's clothing. There's nothing wrong with sports anime—Chihayafuru is one of my all-time favorite shows—but music is really important to me, so if the show goes in-depth about how people engage with music and it feels inauthentic, it really takes me out of it. It's clear that effort has been put into authenticity in the music itself and the animation, since they did motion capture of Band-Maid actually playing the songs, but the writing feels off, especially when they're just throwing out jargon randomly. I'd be curious to hear from anyone who's actually played in rock/metal/punk bands, though.

There's plenty of shows I've enjoyed that have music as a theme but focus more on the interpersonal stuff that I've enjoyed, such as K-On!, Girls Band Cry, and Bocchi the Rock!. But as far as music shows go, I doubt anything will ever hold a candle to Hibike! Euphonium. Truly a love letter to band geeks the world over.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago (2 children)

VTuber postingLooks like Niji privated Twisty's accounts, so I assume the termination announcement is incoming packwatch I got bad vibes from her from the beginning. There's nothing inherently wrong with cringe comedy, but she really harshed the vibes in a lot of collabs. More importantly, she said some very sus stuff even in the few hours total that I watched of her right after debut that reeked of channer, which was completely borne out by the recent leak. Feel awful for her genmates...they drew a bad enough hand as it was with the timing of their debuts, and they really stood beside her during all of her difficulties.

Unrelated, but apparently the would-be shooter at the Nashville No Kings protest was a fan of Kirsche and Pippa surprised-pika-messed-up Kirsche is just VTuber Asmongold, but as far as Pippa goes, who could have possibly predicted that using Nazi dogwhistles on stream might attract an unsavory audience?

(if for some reason you're still reading this and you have no idea who I'm talking about, I'm sorry for exposing you to even more dumb streamer shit. I mean, even if you do, I'm still sorry! Streamer news is basically a guaranteed cognitohazard. I just needed to vent a bit.)

In more uplifting news, Hololive Justice 3D debut at the beginning of August yippeeeeeee! I am not ready for Autofister in 3D. Also looking forward to Niji Hopcon at Anime Impulse next month...hoping for more Enna peak.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

I cropped it to a smaller square (without the extra padding) and made it indexed so it's 5.3x smaller without any quality loss

[–] [email protected] 38 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Damn, this guy just doesn't know when to quit...

also

His latest return to the political stage — this time for a City Council seat that covers Union Square and the East Village — pits him against state lawmaker Harvey Epstein, whose name’s unfortunate proximity to convicted sex offenders Jeffrey Epstein and Harvey Weinstein inspired a “Saturday Night Live” bit, along with a handful of other low-key candidates.

lmao

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

EGM's take on September 11th from their "Top 10 News Stories of 2001" (found on page 129 (RetroMags p. 139) of Issue #155 from April 2002)

Image transcription

THE TOP 10 NEWS STORIES OF 2001

10) METAL GEAR SOLID 2

After all the hype, was MGS2 worth the wait? You bet'cher stealth camouflage it was. We won't be forgetting this heady sequel anytime soon.

9) ONLINE GAMING

Online gaming on consoles got a kick in the pants in 2K1 with Phantasy Star Online, Outrigger, Sega/Visual Concepts' sports games.... The Dreamcast was just hitting its online stride when the system stalled for good.

8) THE LEGEND OF "CELDA"

Whether you're for, or against, The Legend of Zelda's makeover, you've got to admit that its new Looney Tunes look threw you for a loop. More than a couple fist fights have already broken out here at EGM over this very controversy.

7) GAME BOY ADVANCE

As much as we love the GBC, it was so overdue for a retirement. Enter the GBA, with its hard-to-see screen and library of SNES rehashes, here to save the day. Just kidding. We really do love this lil' bundle of joy.

6) CONKER'S BAD FUR DAY

Second-party developer Rare's drinkin', swearing and money- grubbing sonuvabitch named Conker flushed Nintendo's family-friendliness down the toilet, and was a sales disaster on the dying N64.

5) RESIDENT EVIL MAKES JUMP TO GAMECUBE

One of the shockers of 2001 was Capcom's announcement that the RE series was going GameCube-exclusive. Good news for mature 'Cube owners who want more than just the usual kiddy stuff.

4) SEPTEMBER 11TH

Just as American life changed dramatically after the events of Sept. 11, so, too, did the video games we play. Some games were cancelled, while others underwent last-minute changes before their final release.

3) XBOX AND GAMECUBE SYSTEM LAUNCHES

When the Xbox and GameCube launched three days apart (on Nov. 15 and 18, respectively), our wallets were begging for mercy. Oh sweet mercy.

2) VIDEO GAMES GO TO THE MOVIES

Video games hit the theaters big time with Tomb Raider and Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within. For 2002 and beyond, we'll see flicks like Resident Evil, Crazy Taxi and Duke Nukem.

1) SEGA GOES MULTI-PLATFORM

"The world of games is changing, so Sega must change, too." With that statement, Hideki Sato, Sega's chief operating officer, made it official: Sega was leaving the hardware business to publish software on all systems. After this bombshell, we were distracted to notice that hell had frozen over.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 days ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago

Mega mega THREAD THREAD elmofire

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

Plan looks good to me! DST is a fuck, especially when dealing with cross-regional inconsistencies, and I refuse to think too much about it, but I'll assume that you handled it correctly. As for the post-series extras, I'm curious about the 1986 film, somewhat curious about the G5 movie, and definitely interested in watching Star vs. the Forces of Evil. Never heard of the show before, but Wikipedia says it's a magical girl series so I'm down!

 

If you want to dive right in, here's a link to the Cyan collection in the VGHF digital archive:

https://archive.gamehistory.org/folder/22cf9aa2-812b-4f39-b42e-e87a3c153b8c

26
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Video description:

This video is for transgender, non-binary, and gender nonconforming people, and anyone else who has been pushed to the margins.

You face unspeakable adversity. So many voices shame you and want you to be diminished to a more palatable effigy of yourself, and many don't care if that means the material or metaphysical disillusionment of who you truly are. The voices come from your government, from strangers on the internet, from your coworkers, from your family.

One of the voices probably comes from inside you.

Every voice in this video is from someone rooting for you. I'm rooting for you.

When you're too broken to work, too broken to play, too broken to even get out of bed, know this:

Every breath you take is a radical refusal to acquiesce to the voices that want you to be diminished. Your cellular metabolism follows the same basic chemical equation as any other fire. Focus on taking your next breath. Feed the flame oxygen and Don't. Be. Extinguished.

 

The Video Game History Foundation does some great work, and it's really cool to see this project getting off the ground! Their project to vastly improve OCR for magazines seems pretty awesome--curious to learn about the technical details of that project.

Only poked around a little, but here's a random tidbit: while perusing the E3 2001 Directory I learned that CliffyB (of Unreal and Gears of War fame) used to maintain a website called cat-scans.com which was home to literal cat scans (scans of cats on flatbed scanners). Also Tommy Tallarico was at that year's E3 as part of the "How to Break into Gaming" panel...lmao.

Also, if you're into video game history I definitely recommend their podcast (RSS link)! I thought their most recent episode with a couple who worked at GamePro was a lot of fun.

edit: also perhaps of interest to Hexbears: this collection of zines from Game Workers Unite, which helped spark the movement to unionize workers in the game industry back in 2018

 

Link to the site (it's a series of 12 strips, so just keep hitting "next" until there's no more Mario)

https://www.noncanon.com/comics/2017-12-12%20Lovely%20Notions.html

 

This cover is my happy place

 

The long-awaited sequel to one of my favorite videos of all time, Can you beat Pokemon FireRed while blind and deaf?, wherein MartSnack devises a single sequence of inputs that will beat Pokémon FireRed with >99% probability using clever strategies and a lot of number crunching--definitely check that one out first if you haven't seen it already.

In this video, MartSnack kicks it up a notch and comes up with a winning sequence of inputs for EVERY SINGLE RNG SEED in Pokémon Platinum (he gives the figure as ~4.2 billion--I would have guessed it's 2^32 which is more like 4.3 billion, but perhaps the RNG function is such that there are some sequences which are identical even for different seeds). He gives himself additional constraints like keeping Pokémon levels to a minimum and using Nuzlocke rules to keep things interesting, so he's not just grinding a Pokémon up to Level 100 and facerolling through the game.

There are some incredibly ingenious techniques employed, and it's a wonderfully produced video with all kinds of great visual aids. He gives just as much detail as you need to appreciate the strategies, introducing them as they come up without getting bogged down in detailing every single battle. So while it's a bit over an hour long, it's packed with content--this is the result of two years of hard work, not padded-out YouTube slop.

 

Was wondering about how Pikmin 2's procedural music works and came across this beautifully crafted video explaining the whole intricate system.

This channel seems like a treasure trove--if you just wanna jam, check out this sick Driftveil City arrangement for starters

16
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Really cool work from Aaron Collins (a.k.a. The Mask Nerd) and his team. They're also working on an open source condensation particle counter which can be used for quantitative fit testing (among other things).

If anyone wants to learn more about the nitty-gritty of the respirator prototyping process, there's a longer video in the description, and the projects are all available on OpenAeros' GitLab, where the hardware is licensed under CERN OHL-S v2, software under GPLv3+, and documentation under CC BY-SA 4.0.

They mention that in particular they're looking for artists/designers/industrial engineers to help with the aesthetics of the mask, so if that interests anyone you can reach out to them using the email in the description (or if you know someone who might fit the bill, share this video with them).

 

There were a few posts showing interest already

https://hexbear.net/post/2909543
https://hexbear.net/post/2955745

so I figured I'd let people know! Idk if there are any scanlations in the works (let alone an official English localization), but if you're decent at Japanese I'd say the first chapter is pretty accessible. My kanji knowledge is pretty terrible but I was able to muscle through with only looking up a few key words and just relying on context for the rest. This is just a setup chapter, so there's not much to go on:

brief summaryIt introduces you to the setting and the main character, teaches you a bit about how ordinary Russians benefitted from communism, tells you about the MCs hopes and dreams, and then has everything come crashing down after Nazis roll into the village accusing them of harboring partisans and start summarily executing people.

 

The art is great, IMO--to be expected of the mangaka of Our Dreams at Dusk (highly recommended if you haven't read it already, and a short read at only four volumes!). Also there was a neat touch which I haven't personally seen before: when German is being spoken, it's still written in Japanese but typeset in the typical Western horizontal style which makes it clearly stand out without requiring any annotations. Look forward to seeing where it goes, and I hope it'll get an official localization to maximize its exposure to Western audiences! Also from a raw reading perspective, it's nice to get in on the ground floor since it can feel really daunting to have 100 chapters ahead of you when reading is somewhat slow and effortful.

13
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Love how the rhythmic hitch caused by the "missing beat" makes the bass groove so hard

Oh yeah, post your favorite 7/4 tunes! I went for the low-hanging fruit, but I'd love to hear some others, especially ones with different beat groupings (e.g. 2 + 3 + 2 instead of the 2 + 2 + 3 used in "Money")

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