Category: Miscellaneous

Gamebook Update

Late last year, motivated by the blog post I had made referencing it, I bought this:

It wasn’t too expensive (~$30) but took about 3 months to arrive from Japan. It’s the third of three Fighting Fantasy reprints from a decade ago, and since I had the other two I naturally had to own this one as well. This is now my fifth different imprint of House Of Hell!

As with the others the player character is now a young girl and the art (and text?) showcases this. House of Hell is a notably grim gamebook – inspired by the darker elements of 1970s gothic horror – and our poor protagonist gets herself into some tight spots in this book. I bet in the Japanese it’s a good read.

The adverts in the back suggest that Hobby Japan also printed Dungeons & Dragons manuals with an ‘anime girl’ makeover. I’ll keep my eyes open for one of them in the future…

The above is an ‘Esper Gamebook’ published by the same publishers of FF books in Japan. It’s very similar in design and style, but seems to be more of a choose-your-own-adventure than a system-based RPG book.

I can find very little about this online (it’s not on Demians for instance) and there’s no adverts or listings of any other titles at the back so maybe it was a one-off? Based strictly on the art I’m guessing the story is Akira inspired, although it contains androids and aliens as well. I bet it’s crazy!

The above is a real treasure, and I paid about $40 for it. It’s called The Four Kings and is the fourth of four ‘original gamebooks’ published by the Japanese licensor. It uses the standard Fighting Fantasy system and character sheet, and probably plays the same as well. Aside from the fact it’s not one of the original series titles, it’s essentially an FF book.

Much like the other Japanese releases from that time (this book was published in 1990, just after Sky Lord came out in Japan) it uses the Japanese numbering and writing (vertical text) system throughout and even google translate has trouble with it. I doubt therefore I’ll ever be reading it. But as a curio it’s as good as they get, and I’d love one day to find the earlier three.

It’s also loaded with advertisements for other books at the end, including all preceding 32 FF titles, all the Advanced FF books, various related titles (such as Maelstrom) and something quite unusual:

Look at the ad on the left. Google translate tells me the book is called ‘Cube of Tantalon‘ and is a JP-exclusive Advanced FF module! Here’s the translated synopsis:

Shimomura House Keiko & Group SNE’s first fantasy RPG scenario! The Kingdom of Galantria has been repeatedly attacked by militant neighbors, and now the flag color of the front line has become worse and depressed. According to the court magistrate, if you get the “cube of equilibrium”, a mysterious item that is described in the book left by the former King Tantalon, you might save the kingdom of Galantria.

King Tantalon, famous for his tasks perhaps?!? Sounds fascinating! This book is probably impossible to find these days, especially since it’s also seemingly nonexistent online, but it’ll go on my ‘list’ just in case I stumble upon it on a future trip to Japan πŸ™‚

Animal Crossing

Yesterday we visited Animal Kingdom, one of the four main Disney parks. We’d been several times before, but recently a new section was added based around the world of Pandora from the Avatar film and we were looking forward to seeing it.

I know I’ve been overusing the word but it was… amazing. As you can see the ‘floating’ rocks are massive and imposing and very, very realistic. The landscaping is a mix of real and fake plants that are blended so well it can be hard to see the difference. It also seems that the Pandoran plants are bioluminescent and would glow after dark. But at the time of the above photo it was 8 am and the park had just opened…

Yes that’s the line as soon as the park opened. How is this possible? Yesterday was ‘Extra Magic hours’ which meant people staying at Disney hotels could get in one hour early. All those people filled up the line for the main Avatar ride even before the park opened for the rest of us πŸ™‚

We never rode it, and never saw the line drop below 95 minutes all day. But we did have a FastPass (reserved position) for the other Avatar ride. Problem was it was 8 am, and our FastPass was for 7 pm. It would be a long day!

Almost immediately we rode the fantastic Everest Expedition rollercoaster and I got very motion sick! I guess I’m becoming sensitive in my waning years…

We went on the safari drive twice (one time was quite memorably since our young female driver seemed drunk), we went to every show (we both napped during Nemo), we did the animal walkthroughs, waited out a rainstorm and soaked up lots of AC in restaurants.

It was very hot and humid, especially after the rain, and I was close to death more than once. I’m fighting off a head cold and was sweating out the water faster than I could drink it.

But we pressed on! More rides and shows, more penny-pressing, (much) more walking and more sitting.

And then… somehow… it was 11 hours later and time for the Avatar boat ride we had reserved our pass for 30 days ago…

And it turned out to be a higher-tech clone of the Pirates of The Caribbean ride! Was it worth the wait? For me, absolutely it was! For most… probably not.

And that was that. Yesterday we proved that yes, you can see everything (except the most popular attraction) in just one visit… as long as you’ve got 12.5 hours and push yourself to the very limit and beyond πŸ™‚

My Collection: Virtual Boy

In 1995 Nintendo released their Virtual Boy console. It utilized monochrome red stereoscopic 3D graphics and became a legendary failure, being pulled from the market in under a year. The launch price was $180; eight months after launch I bought mine – an ex-rental – for $30.

When assembled for use it looks like this:

And is played like this:

While playing you view two screens – one each eye – which form a 3D image via parallax. It’s very effective – ‘true’ 3D – and almost impossible to photograph. But I tried:

While the 3D effect is convincing, there are three significant problems with the device:
1) The games are poor.
2) The posture required to actually play it is painful.
3) Playing hurts the eyes and for most people (myself included) causes headaches in only minutes.

It’s incredible this was ever released since these serious issues are obvious after even casual use. I remember after it launched I knew it would fail, and was never seriously interested in buying one even after the first price cut (this is an advert I kept from a late 1995 comic):

Only 14 games were released in the USA (22 worldwide) and I own four:

All of these were purchased brand new for $10 apiece (games were $30 at launch). I got Red Alarm the day I got the system, and the others about six months later. I recall playing the Wario game to completion but barely played the others.

The cartridges are large but very thin, and quite collectible today. The game shown above may be my priciest single game, with boxed copies on eBay right now for $900 (yes, nine hundred). It’s notable for being the last and rarest game for the system and for being linked to the Persona series.

I only paid $70 for my system and games. I could probably sell it all for $1000+ today. Not bad for one of the biggest failures in video game history.