Category: Otaku

Jesus Lizard

I love ‘box toys’. I love them to death.

These are toys, often ‘action figures’, sold in sealed boxes so one doesn’t know what they are buying. Each series usually has a half-dozen or more different toys in it, and half the fun of buying them is wondering which one will be in your box. In Japan, KLS and I buy vast amounts of these. For particularly good series we’ll buy several, to increase our chances of getting ones we like.

When they first appeared they were relatively inexpensive (one or two hundred Yen), so the lower cost offset the fact you were taking quite a gamble. These days they have become much higher quality, and are priced higher to match. So some of them cost more than actually buying packaged action figures (where you can see what you are getting). Even so, the allure remains, especially if the sculpts are excellent (which they usually are).

A couple of weeks ago I bought a single box from the Ultimate Monsters Godzilla series. There are six possible figures inside, and I pulled ‘version 2’ of Godzilla 2004. It was immediately obvious that this was no standard boxed figure, but in actuality a scaled down PVC model kit:

dsc02279.jpg < Unassembled

Twenty five pieces in total (I left out one sheet of spines in the image)! The body and limbs are painted PVC, and the spikes are molded rubberized plastic. Each spike was different, and coded to fit into one of the 18 slots on his back:

dsc02286.jpg dsc02283.jpg dsc02284.jpg

The attention to detail was amazing given how small the kit is, and everything fitted together perfectly. Here’s a shot of the finished beast, who stands less than 10 cm tall:

dsc02293.jpg < Godzilla!

Even though the support is shown in that picture, he doesn’t need it to stand.

All in all this is one of the most impressive box toys I have ever seen/assembled. And it’s not even a video game character or cute girl! I’ll have to pay more attention to the monster boxes from now on!

Arcader

So it turns out I’ve got mad DDR skillz! In fact, I have even bested female players ten years younger than me!

One day, I may be good enough to challenge the girl 12 seconds into this video (which was taken during our last Japan trip).

Notice, by the way, the dominance of ‘rhythm games’ in that particular arcade…

Nintendo Baby

I apologize this post has been so long in coming, especially since I know everyone has been on the edge of their seats waiting for…the 2007 game collection year in review!

2007 saw me buy a total of 98 games, which is a 17% reduction from the previous year. Dollar totals increased though (by about 10%), mostly due to the purchase of the PS3 and PSP Slim. Discounting hardware, the average cost/game of about $20.50 was almost identical to the previous year. Here’s a chart summary of both totals:

totals.jpg

The above is a breakdown of games per system. Unsurprisingly, the DS is far in the lead. 2007 saw my DS game collection pass 120 games – this year will see it pass 138 (my GBA total) to become the system for which I have the most games. 2007 also saw the ‘retirement’ of the Gamecube, as I doubt I’ll ever buy another game for it. The one Gamecube game I bought in ’07 was Odama, the microphone-based pinball simulator (which I played for about an hour and put away…). One pleasant surprise in 2007 was the re-emergence of the PSP as a viable system. I was ready to write it off at the end of 2006, but the good games finally started coming and it had a good year. This will continue in ’08, which has already seen some stellar releases for the system (Patapon, Final Fantasy 7: Crisis Core, R-Type Tactics).

dollars.jpg

The dollar totals are above. Please don’t add them up and make rash judgements about my spending 🙂

Excluding gifts (which I value as zero in my database), the least expensive game I bought in 2007 was Piyotama, the download-only game from the Playstation store, which cost a mere $2.99. The least expensive packaged game was Quick Spot, a DS puzzle game bought brand new at a CompUSA closing sale for $4.98.

The most expensive game purchase (excluding hardware) of 2007 was World Of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade Collector’s Edition which was purchased shortly after midnight on the day of release and cost $80 and nearly much more, since I fell on ice on the way back to the car and landed painfully on my wrist! The game on which I spent the most in 2007 was easily World Of Warcraft, since my account was active for 6 months (about $90) on top of the cost for the expansion.

The best game of the year, at least that I bought? That’s a tough call, and depends on what mood I am in. Contenders would certainly be World Of Warcraft (PC), Osu! Tatakae! Ouenden 2! (DS) or Monster Hunter Freedom 2 (PSP). I’ll leave you all to decide which one I enjoyed the most 🙂