Category: Games

Birthday Aquisitions #4: Figures

I’m a sucker for a good figure, as you probably know, and in that regard the birthday didn’t disappoint. They were a common gift item from a few people.

I haven’t opened any of these yet. I’ve still got some work to do with a new curio cabinet before I’m ready to populate it, so all these photos are boxed.

I had thought the chance of new Guyver figures was about zero for years now, so when Max Factory announced Figmas a couple of years back I was pretty happy! Female Guyver is the second in the line and pretty snazzy. There’s actually two versions, with the other being purple and based on the anime appearance.

I’ve posted about Aegis before, and she’s still a favourite of mine! This incredibly cute not-a-Nendroid (also from Good Smile) was a gift from JF! I’m looking forward to getting this one out and putting her next to her twin sisters 🙂

Now this is amazing. It’s my first Tamashii Nations figure, plus it’s a cute goth girl and she’s wearing dress/armor based on Gore Magala from Monster Hunter. Basically this is an ubër-otaku figure right up my alley. Also… it needs some construction! When I open and make her, she’ll get a dedicated post.

Florence got me this! She knows I’m a bit disturbed by René Auberjonois famous changeling from DS9, but not so much that I’m not proud of my very own! So now I have two, and this one even has legs!

I’ll never open this one by the way. I wouldn’t want to ruin the value 😉

Birthday Aquisitions #1: Books

I used to semi-regularly post about stuff I’d recently bought (or received as gifts) but haven’t for a very long time.

But I watch a lot of streaming on YouTube (and that’s a blog post right there…) and I enjoy when the streamers show off new loot they’ve obtained and how proud and happy they are to have it.

So, for one week only (?), a return to those types of posts! It was my birthday recently and I pulled in quite a haul! I’ll go over much of it this week in five posts starting today with the books.

And even though I bought much of this stuff for myself, I’m still calling them birthday gifts 🙂

There’s the ‘normal’ books. An eclectic selection perhaps. Sin-A-Rama is the updated and reprinted version of a book I bought two years ago and haven’t read yet (it’s an art book of pulp covers essentially). The book on the bottom is an anthology of lurid men’s adventure magazines from post-WW2. 

The manga. Obviously I’m a big fan of Fairy Tail (yes I own 57 volumes…) but of this pile the Junjo Ito books would be my favourites. He’s a master of horror manga and almost everything he has done is a classic.

Two art books and an RPG monster manual. The Fire Emblem book was surprisingly inexpensive (<$20) and will be worth owning for Tharja alone! Thanks to AJW for informing me of Tome Of Beasts (which now has entered my siseable ‘monster manual’ collection).

An unusual gift (from KLS) you may think? It’s an art book of women from Hammer Horror films. I’ll get back to this on Wednesday…

Loads of pulp! Almost all of the above cost only $0.01 (plus $3.99 P&H) from Amazon and after buying a few like this in Oz I’m now on a ‘1970s Conan ripoff’ binge! Keen-eyed observers may note the Kothar and Brak series are both incomplete in this photo… but I already had the other volumes 🙂

Speaking of Conan, and possibly stretching the ‘book’ definition, I got this old AD&D module as well. If anyone is interested, I’ll review this on the blog. 

And last but not least some Guy N Smith books. I’ve wanted to read The Sucking Pit for years and now I am I can reveal it most certainly wasn’t worth the wait. From the same author of the ‘crab series’ books, this is about as pulpy a horror novel as you can imagine and was probably written faster than most would read it! The Walking Dead is the sequel from ten years later (1985) and will likely be equally trashy. But you don’t read Smith expecting high literature, so I’m satisfied.

The above are all now put into my sorted-by-category ‘to read’ pile, which has now grown to fill five shelves of a bookcase. When will I read them all? Who knows!

But read them I will, one day. And I’m pretty sure I’ll enjoy them all 🙂

My Collection: Dreamcast

Sega released the Dreamcast console on September 9, 1999. I bought mine that day, with the launch game Soul Calibur and a Visual Memory Unit (ie. save game cartridge). Total cost: $275, or about $400 today.

The Dreamcast (DC) had a rough life, burdened by piracy, strong competition from the PS2 and disinterest from the public. It failed quite spectacularly (especially outside of Japan) and when Sega discontinued it in 2001 it marked their departure from the hardware industry. Even so some publishers continued to release software for a while after, but by 2002 the system had become a memory.

While I remember the Dreamcast quite fondly I purchased fewer than 30 games during its lifetime. I own less today due to an ill-advised trade-in event I may one day dedicate a blog post to. Here (excluding an additional controller) is the entirety of my Dreamcast collection today:

Here are the games I still own:

I set it up this past week and gave most of these games a whirl. To be honest, few hold up now. While we thought the Dreamcast a beefy system back in it’s day, the 3D (polygon-based) games are a bit muddy and suffer from slowdown, and the load times on most other games leave a lot to be desired. Also – bizarrely! – many of the games don’t even use the analogue stick on the controller.

There’s also the issue of the terrible VMU, which is essentially a USB drive with a tiny LCD screen on it. It had a pathetically tiny amount of storage on it, and it’s telling that I bought a second one the day I bought my second DC game. I recall the horror of continually moving or deleting save files just because storage space was limited and I didn’t want to buy another overpriced VMU.

That said, there are some real gems on the system, including most of these:

Cannon Spike is a curiosity – a top down almost-twin-stick 3D shooter/Smash TV hybrid. It’s not great – arguably not even good – but it came out three months after Sega killed the system and is among the pricier games on the system these days.

It’s companions on the photo: Mars Matrix, Giga Wing and (the mighty!) Giga Wing 2 are the triumvirate of superb and these days very expensive DC shooters. Giga Wing 2 in particular is a monster bullet-hell tour-de-force that holds up oh-so-well even now 17 years later. If you want to play it though you’re looking at more than the cost of a Dreamcast today. In fact those four games in the above shot are probably worth collectively well over $500 today, which isn’t bad since I paid a total of $70 to buy all four of them!

Other notable games include Record Of Lodoss War (a still-unique RPG I could sit down and play for hours right now) and Sword Of The Berserk (the first game based on the manga Berserk featuring a story by Miura and the famous anime soundtrack by Hirasawa). While the latter is an important part of my collection, to be honest the gameplay is utter crap and wasn’t much better back then 🙂

And then we have this guy:

Typing Of The Dead, the utterly bonkers “is that real?” arcade machine was converted to the Dreamcast and I bought it used (complete with keyboard) for a laughable $4.95 four years after the DC was dead. The game design is classic House Of The Dead but instead of using a light gun to shoot the zombies you attack via quickly typing words that appear above the attacking hordes. It’s as insane as it sounds, but is a lot of fun and the DC port plays beautifully.

Seriously, this may be the most fun game I own for the system.

The rest of my collection includes racing games, a few fighters, some puzzle games and some RPGs that are almost unplayable these days due to clunky systems or excessive loads. Most of these games have become footnotes, or curiosities at best, and in fact rarely are any Dreamcast games included in lists of landmark games through history.

Which is why, going through my collection as I did I was surprised how much some of these games are ‘worth’. In fact the average cost per game may be higher for my DC collection than for any other system I own. I’ll never (say never…) sell them, but it’s good to know their not worth less than the space they take up.

Which reminds me, is there any interest in a blog post about the ‘stars of my collection’? I started one once but didn’t post it since it seemed indulgent. But I think there’s some good stories to be heard there about games I paid retail for that have now skyrocketed in value if you want to hear them…