Archive for the ‘Toys’ Category

There Is No Hope When Commanders Go To War

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

In the tradition of the last two years, I am bringing Magic decks with me to Australia. And to continue the trend, this year the number ups by 60 once again to an impressive 600 cards!

The theme this year is Commander (aka. ‘EDH’), a special ‘casual’ MTG format based around 100 card singleton (only one of each card) decks. Each card contains and is defined by a ‘General’, which must be a legendary creature card. The colours permitted in the deck are restricted to those used to cast the general, and the basic idea is to build decks based around the abilities of the General. Players start with 40 life, and the games tend to be longer both because of and to enable the inclusion of high CMC cards. In other words, the games are varied, flashy, and fun πŸ™‚

Here are the six decks in no particular order. For each deck I show the General and one of the “I win” cards that players would hope to cast…

Infinite Soldiers

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A monowhite deck based exclusively around generating large (in some cases *vast*) amounts of soldier tokens and pumping them up to be monsters. There’s a lot of nice cards in here that combo well with each other. Mana is barely an issue, and the deck has some nice removal as well. While it is (theoretically) vulnerable to some weenie-killing effects in the other decks, my (2-v-2) playtests have shown me that this one wins more often than it loses. Lots of fun to play!

Bigger Than Big

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This single-minded deck doesn’t really care what the opponents are doing, it just focuses on getting some really, really big monsters out as quickly as possible. Who cares about ridiculous mana costs when you have Mayael in play? And if all else fails, reset the board. This is the gambler’s deck – finicky and mana-sensitive (it’s the only tricolour I made) and slow – but almost impossible to beat when it gets one or more of the truly, truly massive beasties on the board. I expect some laughs when this one goes off πŸ™‚

I Think Not

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I’ve barely played any Commander, but I know enough that one basic rule is ‘keep a low profile’. We may be playing 4 player games in Australia (Me, BS, AW, PB), and if any 3 gang up on the 4th they’ll die very quickly. So a strategy is to seem to be not much of a threat, and bide your time. Good luck doing that with this deck, which is designed to stop the opponents from doing anything. Grand Arbiter Augustin IV (the General) has a massive target drawn right on his face from the word go, so you better bet this deck has some strong defenses to stay alive once it makes life difficult for all it’s opponents. A cold, calculating and controlling deck. Intellectual and evil. I love it!

Vampires

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Look at that – two Innistrad cards! I saw them and loved them both and just wanted to use each so built a deck using Olivia as the Commander. Think ‘Vampires & direct damage’ and it’s not much more complex than that. Testing has shown that Olivia is a maddeningly frustrating card to play against, so I think this deck will be a favourite target of all opponents. Good thing it’s got a few tricks up it’s sleeve…

Token Apocalypse

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Almost every card in this deck allows the player to put one or more tokens into play. The idea is to get a bunch of stuff out, and use Kamahl’s second ability to overwhelm the opponent. What raises the deck to the next (or perhaps even next-squared) level is Doubling Season, which has the honor of being the most expensive MTG card I ever bought. With the help of Doubling Season and another card, during one test play this deck put 44 tokens into play in one turn and each of them was a 55/55 creature! Of course the chance of having Doubling Season and Parallel Lives out at the same time is tiny, but we can all dream to be playing the deck when it happens πŸ™‚

What’s Yours Is Mine

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Does it even matter what’s in your own deck when you have the opponents cards to play with? Wrexial thinks not, and when he mills fifty of your cards and then casts your own supercreature then you’ll see the meaning of traumatize. Another not-so-high concept deck that works best when it stops the opponent from working, which suffers from the drawback that it seems very strong in 2-v-2 but possibly much weaker in multiplayer. We shall see…

On and off, these decks have been a few months in the making. I can’t wait to try them out against each other.

It’s More Fun To Compute

Monday, December 12th, 2011

Another graduation gift I received is the TI Voyage 200 calculator. This is pretty much the Rolls Royce of calculators, and (I firmly believe) may be the best chip-based calculator ever made.

This shot shows it next to my iPad, which itself displays a life-sized image of the calculator. How meta!

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It’s a super device that can do almost anything you can imagine. A machine brain that makes me, a mere human, humble.

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Newer TI calculators are more like tablets, with colour screens and apps. This guy is old school, and although it can run apps (downloaded from the PC) via USB, the main function of the device is in a dedicated chip.

Did I mention the manual is 1080 pages in length? πŸ™‚

Anyway I’m going to write a basic game for this one day. You can expect a blog entry if I succeed…

Not So Bad After All

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

I’m feeling a little Halepule today, so this entry must be brief to give me a period in which to convalesce.

What’s this photo?

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Yep, it’s Mario facing down a Dalek. This was taken with my 3DS, using an ‘AR card’ which makes Mario appear in the image on top of his card. You can actually move him around and even animate him, but I kept him on the card so you could see the effect. It’s a bit nifty as you can see, and several different cards are supported by the OS.

Here’s another little feature of the 3DS OS I like:

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I’m still disappointed Nintendo hasn’t yet embraced a robust online identity with all the trappings (such as achievements), but I suppose extensive stat-tracking on a device is the nearest and next-best thing. You can see in these shots how the OS ranks your use and even keeps track of it on an hourly basis. This should be fun to look at years down the line…

I’ve now got a few games for the 3DS, including the two ‘big’ ones (Super Mario 3D Land and Zelda Ocarina Of Time). I haven’t yet played either though – I’m saving them! But I have been playing Samurai Warriors and Pokemon Rumble Blast and they are both pretty good. The 3D effect, although I rarely turn it on, is effective and occasionally very impressive. Even if the system did not have 3D though it would be quite a beast. Obviously much more powerful and much higher resolution than the PSP, this feels like a next step in handhelds and I think it may have a long and successful life ahead of it after all.

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That’s a screenshot of Monster Hunter Tri G, which comes out next week in Japan. I’m still hoping the game sees a US launch, but I’m starting to think that even if it doesn’t the 3DS may be worth buying after all.

There was an OS update today, which added the ability to record 3D video. I tried it out. My reaction…? Well it was a bit like this:

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I’ll have the 3DS with me in Australia. So some of you can eventually see for yourselves πŸ™‚

Platinum Again

Monday, December 5th, 2011

What’s this?

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Not sure? Here’s the back:

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You got it! It’s the 2011 Club Nintendo Platinum reward, a set of Mario pins. But not just pins – pins that come packaged in boxes that can be separated…

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…and reassembled into three different Mario murals…

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All this could have been yours had you earned 600 coins in this years redemption program. That’s $600 spent on Nintendo products.

Yes, $600. Yep. 25 crappy pins πŸ™‚

Walking Battler

Saturday, December 3rd, 2011

Let’s continue with the topic of graduation gifts. Here’s another I received, a Striiv:

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This nifty little device is a pedometer with all sorts of additional features. In addition to keeping track of steps, stairs, calories and ‘energy’ the Striiv incentivizes the user with Trophies!

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So for trophy junkies like me, that’s a win right there. The system has extensive stat tracking as well (which I love) and can challenge the user to do more exercise than they usually would:

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The currency earned is used in a little fantasy simulation game called Myland. It’s purely a distraction, but not bad for a pedometer.

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Many of you know how much I loved the DS pedometer software i used to use. This guy is all that and much more, plus it’s all there in my pocket. I’m loving it so far πŸ™‚