Archive for the ‘Blog’ Category

Shin Musha Gunpla

Saturday, April 21st, 2012

Over two years ago, on our last trip to Japan, I went menerk and purchased on our penultimate day a suitcase full of Gundam kits. You can glimpse some of them in the photo of loot from that trip shown in this entry. Some of those kits have since been assembled, some have been gifted and others sit on the shelf waiting for their day.

And for one particular kit – the biggest, best and most daunting, that day had arrived.

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It’s the Master Grade 1/100 Shin Musha Gundam kit. This is an imagining of Gundam as if they were designed in medieval Japan. I fell in love with it when I saw it in a store, and despite the large box had to get it. I recall even now the effort getting that suitcase packed (I didn’t joke above; one suitcase was literally packed with just Gundam kits) but I’m glad I did.

Years of just admiring the box however had to eventually end, and two weeks ago when I decided to finally assemble it here’s what I found inside:

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Lots of plastic! Lots and lots of pieces! Dozens of pages of instructions! A lot of time ahead of me…

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The instructions are (obviously) all in Japanese. But the crafting of the kit is of the highest order, with every piece immaculately molded and labeled. Furthermore this is a snap-together kit (as are all Gundams) with multicoloured plastic, so paint and glue is unnecessary.

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The first shot shows the different coloured plastic even on the same sprue, and the second shows the rubberized plastic used for joint pieces. Model kits have come a long way…

Assembly, while not difficult, was time consuming to say the least. The only tools I were using was a small pair of scissors (to remove the pieces) and an emery board (to file down edges), but after several hours work I ditched the scissors and purchased a pair of pliers to make the job easier. The kit contains many, many small pieces with pointy edges, so I found myself working in small batches (< 2 hours) because of sore hands and sore eyes.

In total, I estimate somewhere in the vicinity of 12-15 hours total assembly time.

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The kit is assembled in stages. Head, arms, legs etc., and then everything is put together at the end. I’ve made a few Gundams over the years, but never a Master Grade kit, and I was constantly amazed (and showing a mostly disinterested KLS) by the detail. For instance, the almost-complete right leg shown above contains forty individual pieces, a large portion of which are so that when the joints bend moving pistons are visible. Given that 99.999% of these assembled kits will be sitting motionless on a shelf and these inner parts are therefore mostly invisible one can’t help but be bemused by the level of detail ๐Ÿ™‚

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The above shot shows the weapons, which are the last pieces assembled. Yes the sword has a working scabbard! Happily, the kit has articulated fingers (!) so he can hold any of these weapons as he sees fit. But I’m content to leave them stored for possible future use.

Here’s a close up of my kit after I had finished:

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Not the best photo I know, but the best one I took that shows how his hand is resting on his sword hilt. I’m quite proud overall of how he turned out, especially given I won’t be painting (or ‘Gundam-markering’) him. Even so, a photo in the instructions show’s the potential of a professionally assembled version of this kit:

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Here’s a last shot of mine, showing scale versus Lego Sherlock Holmes.

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He looks quite impressive, don’t you agree?

The kit cost me Y3600, which was about $40 when I bought it. These days it seems to retail for US$60-100 (depending on the seller), and even for that price I’d say it’s worth it as (by far) the best and most fun Gundam I have ever assembled. I can virtually guarantee that making this guy has shorted the remaining time my other kits will remain unassembled on the shelf!

One last bonus shot! I found a photograph of a custom assembly made by a Gunpla รœbermensch. I can barely believe this is the same kit:

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Fan Boy

Friday, April 6th, 2012

Did you ever join a fan club?

Remember those things? In the pre-Internet days you could often send off some money to become a member of a ‘fan club’ for a movie, or TV show, or band or sports team. They were quite common and, I imagine, quite popular. Of course they’ve all turned into facebook pages now, but I was recently thinking of how much quainter and special it seemed to be to actually get something in the mail from (someone probably only tangentially associated with) the band or brand you were a fan of.

Thinking back to my youngest days, I don’t recall actually sending off to join a fan club. I remember seeing the solicitations, in magazines or comics or even on TV. I’m sure there were some I wanted to join but for various reasons (probably the fact they were all in the UK or the USA) I never actually sent off for any.

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Until 1991 that is! That was during my second year of college. I’d somehow established myself as the editor/updater of one of the most complete and extensive Depeche Mode discographies in the world, and was maniacal about getting my hands on as big a collection of DM (vinyl) records as possible. Somewhat irked that I’d missed out on a certain promo record available to UK fan club members several years before, I knew I just had to joint the US fan club in 1991 since the next issue of their magazine came with a free Flexi of a (then) unreleased song. So I sent off the money – in the form of international reply coupons – and within a few weeks was the happy recipient of the magazine and the flexidisc.

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I still have both, somewhere. The above photo (which I found online) shows the pair, which these days is worth a pretty pennyย  (over US$100, according to online auctions). As it turns out, membership in the US DM fan club was a loose term, since the magazines were sold issue-by-issue and there wasn’t much else that the club could offer to non-Americans (or non-Californians, to be precise). So I never sent them money again.

Anyway this emboldened me, and very shortly afterwards I sent off to join the brand new Fields Of The Nephilim fan club after seeing an advert in Melody Maker. In time a brown envelope arrived in the mail from the UK (this was in ’92) containing a very pretentious but nicely assembled fanzine that contained some awful hippy-ish material written by proto-goth’s but very little actual news about the band. And a solicitation to send more money!

Unbeknownst to me at the time, KLS was also a member of this fan club. In fact we would both remain members throughout it’s entire existence (about 3 years), during which time I would move to the USA and the club’s offerings would become increasingly apologetic since the band had broken up and nothing new was forthcoming and – oh by the way – here’s some lovely glossy photos of the band in their prime!

I still have every issue (2 copies of each in fact) and all the assorted paraphernalia that was sent with them. Here’s a photo I just took:

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Fans of FoTN will recognize the script on the left page there, since it was used extensively on their later albums. Amusingly, some of the letters sent to us by the fan club were written in this script, including one hand-written missing letting me know they were unable to accept my cheque since it was not drawn in sterling. I wonder if that was the same person that did the script for the album sleeves?

In 1996 KLS and I joined the ‘official’ X-Files fan club. I have no recollection as to how we found out about it, but membership came with (amongst other things) personalized FBI badges, a magazine, glossy photos and a booklet of merchandise for sale. I still have it all somewhere, although my fruitless attempts to find it for this blog suggest it’s packed away somewhere in the attic. I seem to recall this club was – once again – something that promised far more than it delivered, and was troubled by long delays and lack or any information about the show. We never extended our membership, such that it was, and I don’t even remember what seemed so compelling about the club that caused us to join in the first place.

The last club I joined – and it was probably about the same time as the above – was the official Star Wars fan club. I joined this mostly to get Star Wars Insider magazine, which at that time (mid ’90s) was not yet available on newsstands. So it was basically a magazine subscription with bonuses masquerading as a fan club. That said, it was absolutely worth it at the time, since every issue came in a big envelope packed with all sorts of bonus items including posters, stickers, a cloth patch and other things I don’t recall. I was a member for a few years, until the prequels started up and the magazine went to the newsstands (and even then I continued to buy it for a long time).

And that was that. A brief, perhaps 5 year flirtation with fanclubs is all that this lifelong fanboy can claim. If even I didn’t join every club I could, then who did? Were they ever truly successful? Did they ever truly deliver? And more importantly, were they ever better – from a fan’s point of view – than just writing to the artist directly?

Because I did the latter. Twice actually. And my results were astonishing. But I’ll save that for another entry ๐Ÿ˜‰

Momo Reviews Magic The Gathering Comics!

Wednesday, March 14th, 2012

I just hired a new writer for the blog. Here’s her first entry (click to enlarge):

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A Long Time Ago…

Sunday, February 12th, 2012

Almost 12 years ago, back in March of 1999, I lined up for hours in the cold to pre-buy tickets for Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace. I was beyond excited. Of course I was a child of the Star Wars era (having been born at the right time) and had been a fan most of my life. In those days – when everyone knew Episode I was coming but no-one had seen it – everyone was enthusiastic. It was going to be one of the biggest and most important films ever.

In those days I was buying Star Wars figures a lot more than I do now. I was avidly collecting them all (or at least trying), which wasn’t too difficult since they had only relatively recently been relaunched and not too many were in stores. Of course fans were excited about the Episode 1 figures that would soon be released, and had marked their calendars for a particular day: May 3, 1999.

That was the “street date” on Episode I merchandise. I was looking forward to buying stuff and was looking forward to that very day. In the week or so previous, I was surprised to find bits and pieces of Episode I merchandise in stores. Such as Darth Maul boxing shorts, or a Darth Maul towel, or an Anakin Skywalker plate. I bought them all. I still have them all ๐Ÿ™‚

I even made my first ever TV shopping network purchase: a Darth Maul cookie jar from QVC. I still love this item:

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On the evening of May 2 KLS and I lined up outside Toys’R’Us to wait for the midnight launch. I was so excited! When the doors open I surged in with the (sizeable) crown and bought one of almost everything. When I checked out I received a certificate to say I attended, which I still have to this day:

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I got even more excited looking at the figures and imagining what the movie would be like. The trailers were out, the ads were on TV and it just looked spectacular. I ate the marketing up, accumulating vast amounts of toys and merchandise, including massive amounts of garbage from the Taco Bell, Pizza Hut (I specifically went to Pizza Hut, a restaurant I dislike, to buy Star Wars merchandise) and Burger King. I collected the Star Wars cans, even going so far as to buy 12 packs of soda I hated and pouring it all down the sink just to get the empty cans. You wouldn’t believe some of the crap I bought, and still have to this day, in many cases still in the packaging. I should dig it out one day and put some of it on the blog. (For example, I have every single item on this page.)

I was buying almost anything with a Star Wars tie-in. I had gone menerk for Episode I!

I’m describing all this to give you an idea of how excited I – at the age of 27 – was to see the film. It was as if 16 years of missing a new Star Wars movie was going to pay off in one go. I just couldn’t wait!

And then, on May 16, Episode I was released…

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It would be easy here to insert jokes about how awful the movie was (and is). The crushing disappointment felt by zillions of fans as they watched their childhood destroyed and went straight home to toss their Watto cup-toppers (from the Pepsi promotion) into the garbage.

But you know what? I loved it!

I absolutely loved the film. I probably had tears in my eyes I loved it so much. I loved Jar-Jar and the Neimodians and the battle droids and even little Jake Lloyd as Anakin. I had no problem at all with the plot or the script or the acting. I wasn’t a fool – I knew much of it begged criticism (and deserved it), but I can honestly say that the Star Wars fan in me didn’t care, and I for one was in no way disappointed by Episode I. In fact I went back and saw the film again the very next day, and once again even before it left cinemas. I would even see it a fourth time before Episode II was released. Every time I loved it ๐Ÿ™‚

None of the stuff I had bought – including the cup-toppers – ended up in the trash!

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We all know the story, how it became trendy to hate not only Episode I but the prequels as a whole. Yeah yeah; it’s called forgetting why you loved the Star Wars films in the first place. I won’t get into the argument of why the prequels are immune to criticism here, but I will say that Episode I worked for me, and although I (as with most) agree the prequels got better as they continued, for me that meant rising from a high to an even higher high. For those six years I was a Star Wars madman, and the merchandise buying continued at a healthy rate ๐Ÿ™‚

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Yesterday we went and saw Episode I again in theatres – this time in 3D. For me personally I believe this was the 5th time I’d seen the movie on the big screen, and once again I loved every minute of it. Although my Star Wars fandom had quietened a bit in recent years (says the guy who still watched Clone Wars, buys action figures and SW lego sets), I can’t deny the fact I am still a massive fan and love all the films.

Watching Episode I again after not having seen it for so long made the experience very new. Of course I know the film like the back of my hand, but it was entertaining once again to see how cool Qui-Gon is, or marvel at the (still superb) special effects, or sigh at the dreamy Padme Amidala…

What can I say, I’m an unabashed fanboy of all things Star Wars. It’s no surprise I loved it in 3D, and if you were expecting even a hint of critique I’m sad to say you’ll have to go away disappointed ๐Ÿ˜‰


The Year Apple Broke Games

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

Time once again for the much-beloved annual summary of my game-buying habits (now in it’s fifth year!).

During 2011 I added a total of 129 games to my collection, although my choice of words here is arguable, since a whopping 59% of these games were iOS downloads. That’s right – this past year represented by far the smallest amount of retail game purchases I have made in 18 years of keeping figures.

Here are the charts. Let’s start with total games acquired:

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That’s 67 iOS games, at an average price of just over $2 apiece. Note I did not include free games in this list (since many of those are quickly deleted never to be looked at again). Note the sliver for the Wii – only 2 games in fact. 2011 is probably the year in which the Wii has died for this player. Note also an unusually high amount of PSP games (18 actually). This is because the system has effectively died, and it was time to ‘fire sale’ a lot of games I had kept my eye on for a while.

This next chart shows the percentage breakdown in terms of dollars spent:

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As expected, iOS is a much smaller portion of the pie here. That’s what happens when the margin price is set so low. It’s interesting to note that overall, a far greater percentage of my game-buying (and playing, obviously) has been on portable games (iPad, DS, PSP, 3DS). This is not that unusual – I’ve always been a big fan of portable systems – but it was helped last year by the fact I spent large portions of the year working on my dissertation and simply didn’t have the time to sit down and devote myself to a console game. Which would have been PS3 only, given how the Wii died and I don’t have an XBox 360.

In total, I spent $1545 on games last year, a slight increase from 2010 but still well below the high-$2000’s from a decade ago. Do I play less games? No I don’t (the total number of purchases is higher than a decade ago), I just play cheaper ones ๐Ÿ™‚

The best game of the year? Well I’ll have to give two awards here – one for iOS and one for retail. The best iOS award would go to…

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The above game owned my life for a few weeks in the same way it’s predecessor Llamatron did back in 1991. Jeff Minter has iOS by the horns right now (geddit!) and I’m a happy man about that ๐Ÿ™‚

As for non-download games, this guy here gets my nod:

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Tactics Ogre: Let Us Cling Together for PSP. Yes, another re-release. I still own the (now very expensive and collectable) PS1 version and played it to death, so I had wondered if there was much interest for me in the PSP update. Well yes Robert, there was. As in 200 hours of it! A must-buy if you like tactics games and have a PSP. (This game also inspired one this years more unusual blog posts)

Note that I did get an (as yet unplayed) new Monster Hunter game for Christmas (portable 3rd), so the broken streak of games-of-the-year will probably return in 2012 ๐Ÿ™‚