The Digital Dystopia Descends

I thought opening this post might be a great opportunity for me to metaphorically dance around about how right I have been proven in the last few weeks on a observations I’ve made in a couple of earlier posts. But as with most of my observations, I am going by what others have said and have observed and my thoughts are not wholly original. Secondly, and perhaps most importantly, for most of the predictions I make, I would be far happier if I turned out to be wrong. This is certainly the case with the subject that follows. 

The context for this post is the announcement late last month that the “physical” edition of the highly anticipated Grand Theft Auto VI would be an activation code in a rather useless box. Not content with this, they also announced the game would retail for $79.99USD or I should say from that price as additional game content is locked behind an ‘Ultimate Edition‘ that costs an additional $20USD. The Australian pricing puts the “Ultimate” and $159.95 which is a price I’d only previously seen for deluxe collector’s editions of games that include a number of novelties as well as the physical game. 

As if to justify all this, Sony, the company that famously mocked Microsoft’s clumsy attempt at bringing an end to physical media in 2013, has officially announced the end of physical media for PlayStation beginning in 2028. This came after another revelation that customers would be losing access to digital films they had bought in September which follows on from another such incident in 2023 that I had heard they backed away from following through with. Microsoft is unlikely to capitalise on this the way Sony did all those years ago and so we will probably see the era of physical media all but ending for video games. 

Naturally, I have some thoughts about this. Continue reading

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Splinter of the Mind’s Eye Review

Splinter of the Mind’s Eye is a Star Wars novel published in 1978 that directly follows the events of the first film. It was written by Alan Dean Foster who also ghostwrote the original film’s novelisation. As it is the first original novel published in what later became the Star Wars Expanded Universe and it released before the direct theatrical sequel The Empire Strikes Back, it has become a curiosity for Star Wars fans. I bought a copy of a paperback reprint from the mid 1990s a few years ago and finally got around to reading it recently. Continue reading

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The Conan Chronicles by Robert Jordan

The Conan Chronicles by Robert Jordan, Tor Books, June 15th, 1995

Robert Jordan is an American author best known for his The Wheel of Time fantasy series which began in 1990 with The Eye of the World and spanned fourteen novels; the last three being written by Brandon Sanderson after Jordan’s death in 2007. Prior to his breakout success with this series, he was commissioned to write a series of Conan pastiches including the novelisation of the 1984 film, Conan the Destroyer through publisher Tor Books. He was one of many authors to take on Robert E. Howard’s character during this time and he even produced his own series chronology placing his and other author’s works with Howard’s.

Though I’ve not read any of The Wheel of Time series, I was interested in his Conan pastiches as I’d been led to understand they stood out from the crowd. The collection to be reviewed here includes the first three of his six original novels collected into an omnibus. The other three are collected in The Further Chronicles of Conan with only his novelization of Conan the Destroyer being omitted.

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No, Time to Die

This past week has seen the release of the first video game based on the James Bond 007 since 2012’s poorly received 007 Legends. Outside a couples of pastiche novels, it is also the first major piece of media based on the franchise since 2021’s No Time to Die. I have not played and have no interest in the new game which is titled 007 First Light and serves as an origin story for the character. Nor, for that matter, have I seen the last film and though it is readily available on streaming services, I have no interest in seeing it.

My loss of interest was initially due to rapid decline in quality of the films starring Daniel Craig that began in 2006 with Casino Royale. I didn’t mind the first film but I hated Quantum of Solace and Skyfall got a pass mark for not being as bad but I didn’t much enjoy it either. I’m not absolutely sure if I saw Spectre but that simply means it was forgettable.

As someone who used to love the franchise, this is quite a change. I have read all the original Ian Fleming novels and seen all the films from Sean Connery’s first in 1962 through to the Pierce Brosnan era; many of these multiple times. I was also in the perfect demographic for the now classic video game GoldenEye 007 based on the 1995 film. I played most of the games that followed (and at least one that came before); including many of the bad ones too.

How did a once beloved franchise fall so far in my esteem?

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The Face that Launch’d a Couple of Bark Canoes

If you follow entertainment news even vaguely, you would have heard about Christopher Nolan’s upcoming epic, The Odyssey based on the Greek Epic of the same name. You will also have heard that “based on” should be emphasised as it usually is for so many films that draw on any works of literature as well as those drawing from real life events. This isn’t always a bad thing as 1995’s Braveheart is still an entertaining film though also littered with some truly bizarre errors and anachronisms that would have a historical purist tearing their hair out. The same is true to a lesser extent of Gladiator which I have reviewed here previously.

From what has been revealed in the trailer and through promotional interviews so far, suggests that this will be a disaster for more than a few reasons and I truly hope it is.

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Reginald Pole was the last Archbishop of Canterbury

I have discussed Christianity on this blog numerous times over the years; especially as I began writing on it regularly around the time of my conversion and before I was received into the Catholic Church in 2017. This naturally meant it was on my mind and I often wanted to write about it and share what I was reading and learning. I even have an entire unpublished story of my conversion that I may still make public one day; when I feel it is ready. This may never be. 

In these posts, I know I’ve mentioned at least once that I was brought up in the Anglican Church of Australia which is part of the Church of England. Until, the 1970s, this was the largest Christian Church in Australia but it has dropped off significantly in observance since then. To say “significantly” is classic British understatement and “disastrously” is perhaps more apt. This was also around the time churches within the “Anglican Communion” began “ordaining” women beginning in the United States Episcopal Church. This began in Australia shortly after my birth though I didn’t really know of it until I was older. Christianity as a whole, has seen steady decline in Western nations but due to mass immigration, the Catholic numbers have been more steady in Australia.

The reason why I’ve used the “scare quotes” above is deliberate. The Anglican Church is at best, separated from the Catholic Church and should not be regarded as a legitimate church by Catholics. This is even more so now that it claims more acres than it does adherents and has continued to depart from even the most basic tenets of Christianity. More importantly, women can not be ordained to the priesthood and so can not be bishops or even deacons. This is an ontological impossibility and not up for debate or serious discussion. This has special relevance now because since earlier this year, there has been a woman who dresses up as a bishop and claims to be the Archbishop of Canterbury. More scandalously, the public head of the Catholic Church has written an official message to her on the Vatican website and even received her in Rome.

As someone who left Anglican Church for the Catholic over this and a number of other issues, I have a pretty strong opinion on this.

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John Scalzi’s Cat Book

Starter Villain by John Scalzi, Tor Books, September 19th, 2023

It may be hard to believe but the United States came really close to legalising rape in late 2012. You might scoff but this was all but a certainty according to many reputable pundits and major news sources; especially on the Internet. If the Republican candidate Mitt Romney had won, binders full of women would have been raped and the men who did the raping wouldn’t have faced any consequences at all! This was of particular interest to John Scalzi who made a timely post on his blog thanking conservative politicians for their work making it easier to rape as well as declaring his intention to vote Republican. He also claimed this was satire but it doesn’t read like that. Whatever the truth, Barack Obama won a second term and no more women were raped in the United States until after inauguration of Donald Trump in January, 2017. We will thankfully never know just how many would have been raped had Mitt Romney been elected.

John Scalzi isn’t just a rape apologist someone that is really good at getting into the mind of a rapist for the purposes of satire. He is also an author and not just any author but a Hugo Award winning and New York Times bestselling author. That I have not read any of his books until recently is a personal scandal of mine that I’m glad I’ve finally addressed by reading one of his most recent novels.

My review follows below.

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A Review of Sid Meier’s Memoir!

Sid Meier’s Memoir!: A Life in Computer Games by Sid Meier, W. W. Norton & Company, October 12th, 2020

Around the time I picked up John Romero’s autobiography, I noticed Sid Meier’s also listed in the recommended section on Amazon. I didn’t pick it up initially because unlike with Romero and id Software, I had little experience with Sid Meier’s games though I certainly knew his name. I had played the 2004 remake of his Pirates! game and (I think), a little bit of Civilization III. Outside of these two games, I don’t think I’d played anything else he had designed and even the former, I did not play to completion until a few years ago. Still, he is undoubtedly one of the great designers in computer games and I eventually did pick this up about a year ago and finished reading it just the other day.

As I’ve reviewed quite a number of books based on gaming history, this was certainly worth adding to the growing list. 

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How Inspired?

Though I have previously revealed a distaste for most Boomer era music, I do like some Beatles songs and one of my favourites is ‘Let It Be’ which was written by Paul McCartney. This is the official story of course and there is certainly a question of how organic the Beatles were. I haven’t looked into any of this enough to offer an opinion though I suspect there is truth to it. I mention this only because, McCartney’s authorship is assumed for what follows, regardless of the truth. 

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Joining Team Tux

A few posts ago, I mentioned that I would be changing over to Linux on my main rig soon and I have now done that. This post was written on my main rig which is now running Bazzite. Before doing this, I had installed Linux Mint on my work computer and my previous desktop (which amazingly still works). I wanted to force myself to get used to the change before fully committing and this did help the adjustment. As bad has Windows has progressively gotten, it still has familiarity on its side and I briefly entertained the idea of running a stripped down version of Windows 11 to keep myself in my computing comfort zone.

I’m glad I didn’t chicken out though and after trying Linux Mint, Bazzite and even Zorin, I am quite happy I forced myself to make the change.

This post will just cover some general experiences and observations. Continue reading

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