The Games of 2024

It was always going to be hard to top 2023 but 2024 didn’t even come close in my opinion. I of course don’t play everything that comes out but there also wasn’t a lot I was really interested in. Probably the biggest AAA release that I wanted to play but didn’t this year was Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 which was a long-awaited sequel to a game I quite enjoyed. I am sure I will get to it sometime and by all accounts, it was very good. Apart from this, the only two games that I wanted to play but haven’t are Animal Well and Penny’s Big Breakaway. The former was the first title published by Bigmode which was founded by YouTuber “videogamedunkey” and his wife. The latter was a new game behind the creators of Sonic Mania. As with Space Marine 2, I am sure I will get to both of these eventually.

Most of the games I’ve played are once again Nintendo published and interestingly, Nintendo didn’t win even one of the “super official” Game Awards for 2024 for all that matters. The big winner for those was the PlayStation 5 exclusive Astro Bot which honestly does look fun and something I would play if it were to become available on PC or another platform. It is hardly something that would prompt me to spend hundreds of dollars on a new console though.

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Lucy Pulls Away the Football Again

The main problem with conservatives is they don’t conserve anything. That’s all you really need to know as that alone makes all their political posturing utterly worthless. Another problem, and what will be the subject of this post, is that they’re also extremely gullible. Years ago, Vox Day wrote a short but then topical post titled “The Charlie Brown Republicans”. The background of this was the issue of health care reform in the United States and the initially genuinely grass roots “Tea Party” movement. The Republicans were then, as now, pretending to be hard on spending cuts before inevitably caving in exchange for vague promises that are broken and/or a few negligible temporary cuts to tax or spending. As the linked article shows, this game goes back before my birth and unsurprisingly still goes on today.

Conservatives to their credit, have generally stopped falling for promised spending cuts, as the linked article in the post by prominent cuckservative Kevin D. Williamson demonstrates but they still continue to fall for another deception. This comes when any prominent non-conservative says anything even vaguely against the “current thing”. Following this, they will be lauded and immediately trusted by conservatives. A good example is J.K. Rowling who “bravely” believes that men who have (or at least had) a penis, should not be allowed in the ladies room or to participate in female sports. Outside of this single example of moral sanity she is openly left-wing, describes herself as a feminist and otherwise supports transvestitism. Accepting biological reality is then one of the minimum standards for being a conservative — what ever else you may believe. She of course doesn’t want or care about this support and so is no friend to anyone even vaguely right-wing. 

Most recently (and currently as of writing), we have the new conservative of circumstance: Elon Musk. He has very quickly pulled away the proverbial football by vociferously defending the corrupt H-1B that it is mainly used to bring in cheap tech workers instead of employing the millions of Americans already available for employment. It isn’t worth getting into the debate about this as the promoters of this program are shameless liars. Musk is one of these liars and certainly one who financially benefits from these programs. He was one of the most prominent figures to come out in support of Trump in the recent US election which is how he became the most recent honorary conservative. Prior to this his “conservative” or “right-wing” credentials had been demonstrated because he bought Twitter (now known as X), and restored many (though not all), of the accounts suspended mostly during the shenanigans of 2020. 

As with Rowling, both Musk’s life and public statements should have put to rest any notion that he was one of “our guys” and it was a shame to see so many on even the dissident right believe he would be anything but another resident of the swamp. Continue reading

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The Broken Author

The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin, Orbit, August 4th, 2015

The Fifth Season is the first book in N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth Trilogy which scored a hat trick of Hugo Award wins in 2016, 17 & 18. Before getting into the review, I should probably start by giving a brief background on how I became familiar with the author. This will in part be to make plain my bias but also just because it is worth going over as these controversies; as I believe they contributed to her three Hugo wins more than the quality of her writing.

In June of 2013, she gave a speech at the Continuum Convention in Melbourne, Australia. Although not named directly, she referenced Vox Day in her speech and described him as:

a self-described misogynist, racist, anti-Semite, and a few other flavors of ***hole

Vox Day responded stating that he does not describe himself this way though his detractors have. He then described Jemisin as:

an educated, but ignorant half-savage, with little more understanding of what it took to build a new literature by “a bunch of beardy old middle-class middle-American guys” than an illiterate Igbotu tribesman has of how to build a jet engine

The context for Jemisin’s attack was that Day had recently ran for president of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) and lost to author, Steven Gould. He unsurprisingly lost by a significant margin but even receiving 10% of the vote was too much for Jemisin. Now whether or not you think Vox’s reply was particularly charitable, he was not the first to fling the dung and there had been a lot more flung at him before this. The above quote provoked proverbial (and probably no few literal), shrieks from the SFWA “community” and led to his expulsion from the organisation. It has often been quoted (and misquoted) since and usually without the context. I found Vox’s response highly amusing and agree with him completely.

Something I’d forgotten is that Jemisin opened her speech with a spiel about feeling unsafe in Australia and other countries though to my knowledge, was never lynched, mugged or even harassed on her visit. Had anything like this happened, we’d certainly have heard about it. She stated after spending some time in the country that:

This is not a safe country for people of color. It’s better than it was, certainly, but when the first news story I saw on turning on my first Australian TV channel was about your One Nation party’s Pauline Hanson… well. Still got a ways to go.

This was given to an audience in Melbourne who were likely mostly left-wing, so she wasn’t called out on any of the inaccurate things she said in just the first few paragraphs. In reality, those residing in Australia (regardless of their ethnicity), generally have a lot more to fear from people that look like her than any other group; as is certainly true in the United States. The only evidence of Australia being unsafe she had was seeing a politician who advocates immigration restriction on television. If you can stomach reading it, you’ll also observe how devoid it is of the topic of speculative fiction which is the stated purpose of the convention.

The next time her name came up for me was during the Rabid Puppies Campaigns in 2015 and 2016. The Fifth Season was published in 2015 and she was nominated and won the Hugo for Best Novel in 2016. This win, as well as her two subsequent wins were used as evidence that the Rabid Puppies had failed when they actually demonstrated exactly what Vox Day had been saying about the politicisation of the awards going back years.

So this should be enough context before I proceed but I will add that I my initial expectations for this novel would be that it would be simply bad and that Jemisin was promoted not because of her ability, but because she is a black female. After reading it, I would say that these are certainly reasons but not the most important.

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Do people realise Ghostbusters was a comedy?

One of the early posts on my blog was some brief commentary on the trailer for the all female Ghostbusters reboot from 2016. I’ve still not seen the film but by most accounts, it was as bad as I expected it to be and perhaps worse. The film wasn’t a total financial disaster but it still likely lost money when advertising expenses are factored in. It wasn’t so disastrous that the franchise was abandoned though and Ghostbusters: Afterlife followed in in 2021. This was directed and co-written by Jason Reitman, the son of Ivan Reitman who directed the original. He was clearly well aware of the fan response to the female reboot and so held more consciously to the series roots — at least superficially. The film was received well and I actually watched it — though I didn’t like it! Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire was released earlier this year and was a direct sequel to Afterlife with the cast all returning with the original setting of New York also being brought back. In my previous post, I mentioned how belated sequels to old films tend to be bad or pointless and these two films are good examples.

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Top Gun: Maverick – A Worthy Sequel

In my review of the original Top Gun a few years ago, I briefly mentioned the then upcoming sequel and described it as “probably unnecessary”. This cautious cynicism is a result of how often sequels coming years after, if not terrible, are unnecessary at best. Examples include sequels to eighties classics like Coming to America and this year’s sequel to Beetlejuice. There was absolutely no need for these sequels to exist and they usually just follow the same beats of the original; seldom distinguishing themselves from the original enough to justify their existence. Whereas the better sequels either do something to differentiate from the original or else come so close after the original as to seem like a genuine continuation. Top Gun: Maverick certainly follows similar beats to the original but it is a new song and I’m happy to admit my early scepticism was wrong. Continue reading

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Jagged Alliance 2 Book Review

Jagged Alliance 2 by Darius Kazemi, Boss Fight Books, August 25th, 2014

This is a book I had long been interested in but held off buying despite it being dedicated to one of my favourite games of all time. It was not so much the book itself but what I considered the pretentious aesthetic chosen by the publisher: Boss Fight Books. Certainly a petty reason but contrary to the popular aphorism — you often can judge a book by its cover. And the cover suggested it would be a meandering personal narrative of the author’s experiences with the game and so a waste of time, money, ink and paper. While this certainly seems to be the case for at least a few of the books published under this label, it is not the case here. Darius Kazemi knows his subject well, interviewed a number of the key development staff and often includes extended quotes from them within the text. He also gives a concise history of both the publisher Sir-tech and the Jagged Alliance series before delving into Jagged Alliance 2‘s development, design, story, features and legacy. It is short but little space is wasted. His experiences of the game also mirror many that I have detailed in other posts about the series on this blog.

I am labelling this as a review but what follows isn’t going to follow the typical format I usually adopt for these. It isn’t really necessary as I absolutely recommend the book to anyone familiar with the game and encourage the curious to read an exert published here.

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Borderlands: A Barren Wasteland

I have rather fond memories of the original Borderlands which released in 2009. I got a copy for PlayStation 3 along with a small group of friends and a number of fun multiplayer sessions followed for some months afterwards. It was not the kind of game that would normally appeal to me; as the object is less about getting to the game’s end than it is about finding better equipment and grinding up levels. It was the well integrated cooperative play, the generally unique design and the quirky tone that drew me in. Although the sequel Borderlands 2 is usually considered the better game, I didn’t do more than play through the story and I can’t recall many details about that game off the top of my head. I have barely even looked at the series since — with the sole exception of Tales from the Borderlands, an episodic adventure game from the now defunct Telltale Games released in 2014.

Borderlands was a surprise hit for Gearbox Studios who had previously been known for the two expansion packs for the original Half-Life, some notable PC ports and the Brothers in Arms series. Borderlands was so successful that it has become the main series the studio is known for— even though it came ten years after the studio was founded. A film has long been a possibility and so it is not surprising it finally got one.

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Beyond a Gaffe

gaffe (noun)

1. A social or diplomatic blunder

Merriam-Webster

The other day I noticed an article concerning a member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly referring to AI (artificial intelligence) as “A-One” for an entire speech presented to the National Tech Summit. This might seem on the face of it to be a minor mistake but I believe this goes beyond a regrettable political “gaffe” as described. 

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The Return of the Trump

It has been some years since I wrote about Donald Trump or American politics in general. I first started this blog in late 2015 when the events that culminated in the 2016 election of Donald Trump were unfolding. A lot has happened since then and after Trump’s somewhat disappointing first term and the blatant fraud committed during the 2020 election, I had lost interest what had become much more literal political theatre. I still followed more or less what was happening but expected the rug to be pulled again though still confident he would handily win a fair election. Despite all this, he has won and won very convincingly with Arizona and Nevada now turning red and giving him a total of 312 Electoral College votes as well as the popular vote.

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The Baffling Design of Sonic Superstars

Sonic Superstars was one of the games I was interested in last year but decided to give a miss after seeing some of the more critical (read: negative) reviews. It also just released in a year of big releases and even within a few days of the release of Super Mario Bros. Wonder. As I’ve detailed, there were a lot of great games that monopolised the limited time and money I put aside for gaming last year and so this one was not a priority. Nonetheless, I knew that much like with Sonic Frontiers and earlier with games like Sonic Forces, that I would get to this one eventually. And eventually I did when I found it for less than half the retail price a few weeks ago.

The short of it is that I found most of what the negative reviews had said about it to be spot on and normally this would be the end of the matter. What has prompted this post is that I played the Switch version and I noticed that some of what was written online was inaccurate with regards to the performance of that version of the game. And so unlike with my review of Sonic Frontiers, all the screenshots I have included in this post are captured from my Nintendo Switch. Continue reading

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