Dancin’ Shoes
Not only can this woman move, but those shoes are damn slick.
Not only can this woman move, but those shoes are damn slick.
In case you’ve not seen it yet:
PIXELS by PATRICK JEAN [dailymotion.com]
Here, Ben Folds shows how to win at Chat Roulette [youtube.com]. Here’s the original that he is paying homage to [youtube.com].
Take a few minutes of your time today to enjoy this music video from, of all things, a game soundtrack [youtube.com]. There’s just so much life in these cute little robots. I love how this is put together, the zooms to the beat, the understated visual effects, the short depth of focus. If I ever shot a music video, it would likely be something similar to this.
This is a sobering look into the minds of Japanese game developers. [kotaku.com]
So. Broken.
If you’re playing through Final Fantasy XIII [finalfantasy13game.com], make sure that you go into the Datalog option on the menu screen after every cutscene and look for new/changed entries about events, places, characters, and lore. Unlike other RPGs with some form of journal (Mass Effect [masseffect.bioware.com] immediately springs to mind), the Datalog in FFXIII is not optional if you want to understand/enjoy the story. Trying to follow everything and understand character’s motivations by ‘just’ playing the game leaves a lot of holes and WTF moments. As a result I wasn’t really enjoying it until I discovered that the datalog wasn’t just extraneous and/or redundant information.
I think this was a bad design decision, but that’s a discussion for another day. The point I want to make is that the game can be made a lot more enjoyable if you read the datalog after every cutscene. I wish someone had told me that this was the ‘right’ way to play the game earlier, so now I’m trying to spread the word as much as I can.
Via Dubious Quality [dubiousquality.blogspot.com]:
“Details of the OnLive launch were released today, and I have a hard time understanding why anyone would still be interested.
First off, there’s a monthly “service fee” of $14.95.
What does the monthly service fee get you? According to OnLive’s website, it includes access to game demos, video profiles, and community features.
What does it not get you access to? Games.”
Go read more there. Suffice to say I have no remaining interest in this product.