Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition Review

A while back I wrote a post discussing the differences between Japanese and Western RPGs which I concluded by stating my firm preference for the latter. Though I have not changed my opinion, this does not mean I won’t play JRPGs and occasionally one comes along that I am interested in. For example, I played the Super Mario RPG remake that released in 2023 and Mario & Luigi: Brothership which was released late last year. Earlier this year, a remastered version of Xenoblade Chronicles X which was originally released on Wii U, was released on Nintendo Switch. Though there are now two numbered sequels to the original, Xenoblade Chronicles X was the first chronological release. I did play the Japanese Wii U version back in 2015 but had a hard time as it was all in Japanese which for such a text heavy game, certainly limited enjoyment; not being able to understand much outside the basics. I got about a third or so through the main story before giving up and moving on. 

I did however remain interested in the game’s concept including the Skell mechs which are a significant part of the game as indicated on the awesome front cover. Never having got far enough in to experience one of the game’s biggest selling points, I was still interested in giving the game another go. With the announcement of a remaster, that not only allowed me to play the game in my native language but with a number of quality improvements, I was keen to revisit it.

Continue reading

Posted in Game Reviews, Video Games | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition Review

Scattered thoughts on Andrzej Sapkowski’s The Witcher Series

Like many in the English-speaking world, I learned of Andrzej Sapkowski’s The Witcher series through the 2007 of the game of the same name. The first book which is a collection of short stories titled The Last Wish, was published earlier the same year. I did not play the first game until after the ‘Enhanced Edition’ was released and my interest in the game also had me seek out related media. Though the original game sold very well, it was the third game where the series really took off. The first two games were mainly PC releases though the second did get an Xbox 360 port. The third game was a much-hyped multiplatform release and one of the biggest game releases of 2015.

For anyone unfamiliar, the series is about Geralt of Rivia who has undergone mutations that significantly enhance his physical characteristics to make him an ideal monster slayer — a witcher. He is part of a dying order of monster slayers who were taken as children and managed to survive the intense training and often fatal mutagens used to become an emotionless killing machine. Though not conceived as a game, it has parallels with the science-fiction setting of Halo where the protagonist Master Chief goes through a similar program to become a super soldier. Were I better read on science-fiction and fantasy, I am sure I would be aware of earlier examples too.

I enjoyed the game series and so read a the first few books as they were published in English beginning with The Last Wish and then the first three of the five novels, Blood of Elves, Time of Contempt and Baptism of Fire before stopping and forgetting about them. The last two were not published in English until after the release of The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt in 2016 and 2017 respectively. By this time, a lot of things were happening  in my life (including my conversion to Catholicism) and I had lost interest in the series. Those familiar with the games (as well as the novels), will know they include some rather unsavoury elements such as some disturbing horror, violence and sexual content and I was generally re-thinking the kind of media I consumed at the time. This also included the Game of Thrones television series based on the unfinished novels by George R. R. Martin which contained frequently gratuitous sex and violence. This is less evident in the first novel in the series though I can’t speak of the others. 

I mentioned I was re-reading the series in a previous post and have just today finished the concluding novel in the series though there are also two prequel novels by the author which I haven’t and likely will not read. I also replayed all three of the games over the last year for the first time in a decade. This I confess broke a pledge to avoid media like this and wanting to reappraise the series a decade after the third game’s release is a poor excuse. Still, it at least inspired this post.

Continue reading

Posted in Book Reviews | Tagged , | Comments Off on Scattered thoughts on Andrzej Sapkowski’s The Witcher Series

Robert E. Howard’s Spicy Adventures

The last time I covered Robert E. Howard was in my review of the El Borak stories and at the end of that post, I stated my intention to move on to Bran Mak Morn next. It has been almost two years since and I have not yet read these stories though I have continued to acquire the various collections of Howard’s work I can find. Most recently, I discovered the books published by the Robert E. Howard Foundation and have bought a few of the hardcovers and am still waiting on one more as of writing. These more or less fill-in the missing stories not published in the Ballantine/Del Rey paperbacks I’ve mostly been drawing from; though I expect I will also find some crossovers within. As of writing, they don’t seem to have publishing rights for the better known Howard stories but I must say that both the printing quality and the editing is excellent. One of the titles that jumped out was the subject of this review which I was initially reluctant to pick up as I wondered just how “spicy” these adventures would be. Someone familiar with the stories assured me they were not pornographic and so I added these to my collection too.

As evident from the slimness of the volume as well as in the introduction, Howard only briefly wrote in this genre and all of the stories within are very short — even by Howard’s standards. This volume is about 250 pages but includes earlier drafts and a few unfinished synopses to pad it out. Had these extras not been included, the text and printing borders could easily have been scaled to fit the entire collection into less than one hundred pages. Due to a combination of the shortness of the collection, my curiosity and the length of time between my last review, I decided to tackle these stories next.

What follows will not be as detailed as I’ve tried to be with the more recent reviews, as this is the first collection of Howard’s work that I frankly wouldn’t recommend. 

Continue reading

Posted in Book Reviews | Tagged , | Comments Off on Robert E. Howard’s Spicy Adventures

Billy Hudson of The Game Chasers, Rest in Peace

In late August there was a video posted by Billy Hudson of The Game Chasers from the emergency room. This and a subsequent video indicated he was seriously ill with a brain tumour but he was upbeat and confident to the point that I thought he would recover. I offered up prayers at the time and kept him in my thoughts but learned yesterday that he died on the 18th of September.

I did not know Billy personally but I did enjoy his YouTube Channel which he began in 2011 with his friend and co-host Jay Hatfield. From all appearances, he was an amiable and fun guy to be around. I will continue to pray for the repose of his soul but I wanted to offer a little tribute to what he created below. Continue reading

Posted in Video Games | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Billy Hudson of The Game Chasers, Rest in Peace

Logos Rising Review

Logos Rising: A History of Ultimate Reality by E. Michael Jones, Fidelity Press
April 2nd, 2020

E. Michael Jones is a contemporary writer I’ve mentioned a couple of times on this blog including one post dedicated to an article he wrote on J.R.R. Tolkien. I mentioned in that post that I had been reading (but still not finished), the subject of this post. I bought it soon after it was published in 2020 and did read three or four chapters in before stopping for what I assumed would be a short time and which ended up being over five years. So long in fact, that I promised myself I would start the whole book again and work through it this year and finished reading it around a month ago. 

I should hasten to add, that this was not because I found the book wanting but that I simply wasn’t in the mood for such a lengthy work partially given the strange reality of the world in 2020. Like many, I was seeking to escape this reality somewhat which I did by retreating into Robert E. Howard’s Hyborian Age and as a spectator in the Medieval Japanese Heian Court.  On checking my reading list from that year, a lot of the non-fiction I did read were shorter works and usually with a Catholic focus. I will note that I did at least tackle Plato’s Republic that year too though one can see where my mind was in this post from late in the year.

Nonetheless, I finally got to Logos Rising this year and what follows is a short and largely positive review.

Continue reading

Posted in Book Reviews, Literature, Religion, Society | Tagged , | Comments Off on Logos Rising Review

Does the Poodle Mince His Words?

The Insider by Christopher Pyne, Hachette Australia, March 31st, 2021

I have previously reviewed two other works by Australian politicians with one by Cory Bernardi and the other by Tony Abbott. It is not a coincidence that these two as well as the subject of this review, are from the Liberal Party of Australia; which is more or/and increasingly less the conservative party in Australia. If you’re among the midwitted chattering classes of Australia, Cory Bernardi and Tony Abbott are as right-wing as you can get before having to resurrect Adolf Hitler. Though as my reviews of those two works demonstrate: they aren’t really all that “right-wing” at all. Christopher Pyne in contrast, is considered by most (and his own words), to be a moderate. As the more genuinely earnest politicians learn by experience, moderates are the ones most likely to leave a metaphorical knife in your back while crossing over to the enemy when you most need them by your side. 

Unlike the other two works, I didn’t intend to read this book or even know it existed until it came up in a library search when I was looking for the Michael Mann film of the same name. This might sound like a joke but I am quite serious and though I may now have to search elsewhere for the Mann film, this chance discovery has at least provided ample material for the post that follows.

Continue reading

Posted in Australia, Book Reviews, Politics | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Does the Poodle Mince His Words?

The Decline of South Park

Almost nine years ago in the early days of this blog, I wrote about the decline of The Simpsons which was my favourite television show growing up. I pointed out then that the show had declined in quality significantly around Season 10 and despite this, had continued for another fifteen. At the time I wrote it, I had assumed it would be cancelled within the next few years but I was very wrong and just this year it has been renewed for another four seasons which will take it to forty years on broadcast television. 

As I also state in the same post, it has carried on well beyond its cultural relevance as I still have never failed to “get” a reference to the show because they are always from seasons through the 1990s which most people of my generation are familiar with. I don’t know anybody who watches it today and I am only reminded that it exists when it comes into the news from time to time.

In the late 1990s, South Park became a hit and could be seen as the successor to The Simpsons. People might prefer to point to King of the Hill, The Family Guy or Matt Groening’s own Futurama but it was South Park that had the more comparable success; especially as it reached beyond the United States. Similarly to The Simpsons, it had a run of about a decade where I regularly watched it. As a young and morally uncertain teenager, it’s deliberately offensive social iconoclasm certainly appealed to me. And it is South Park that I’ve very lately noticed, has also lasted much beyond it’s cultural relevance. 

Continue reading

Posted in Television | Tagged , , | Comments Off on The Decline of South Park

Happy Gilmore 2: Another Pointless Sequel

As I’ve briefly written previously, Adam Sandler came to prominence in the early 1990s mostly through his success as part of the cast of Saturday Night Live. Like many, he was able to leverage this to transition to film which began with a few supporting roles in films like Coneheads and Airheads before starring in Billy Madison in 1995. The following year he starred in Happy Gilmore which was even more successful and which has led to mostly continued success up to the present.  Happy Gilmore was the first film I remember seeing him in on VHS as a teenager and I’m sure this is true for many.

Both Billy Madison and Happy Gilmore had a very similar formula and Sandler would continue to repeat this in most of his films going forward. Generally speaking, Sandler plays a sympathetic loser (often with some special gift or advantage), that he uses to succeed invariably with a supportive female love-interest. While many of these films were even more successful than his first two major successes, I would say none have ever bettered these two films. 

There are films that vary this formula a little, such as the romantic comedies 50 First Dates and Just Go With It but the essentials remain the same. As he got older and got married, he started portraying a family man instead but this was more a product of his age. He has occasionally also demonstrated more dramatic talents in films like Punch-Drunk Love and more sentimental films like Reign Over Me but his most successful films are his comedies.

What is strange is that despite how formulaic these films are, there have been no sequels except for the ensemble comedy Grown Ups and more recently a sequel to the Netflix exclusive Murder Mystery alongside Jennifer Aniston.  So it was something of a surprise to see him go back to make a sequel to what most would consider his best comedy film: Happy Gilmore.

Continue reading

Posted in Film | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Happy Gilmore 2: Another Pointless Sequel

The Galactic Plot Thickens

Starquest: Catburglar of the Constellations by John C. Wright, Tuscany Bay Books, May 13th, 2025

In my last review, I mentioned that this book was then upcoming but though I bought it soon after release, I didn’t finish it until the other day. As I write, I have the fourth book sitting on my shelf and waiting to be read which I will get to in a month or so. John C. Wright has also recently revealed the cover for the fifth book along with a second Kickstarter though there is no release date as of writing.

Continue reading

Posted in Book Reviews, Literature | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on The Galactic Plot Thickens

Thoughts on the Nintendo Switch 2

As I write, it has been almost a month since the Nintendo Switch 2 released worldwide. This was long expected and rumoured but not officially announced until early this year which was likely prompted by increasing media leaks online. Though the announcement was initially well-received, the Nintendo Direct presentation dedicated to it was received less positively for a number of reasons.

These reasons included a title Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour being a paid digital release when the title’s premise is based entirely around promoting the new hardware and features. The introduction of ‘Game-Key Cards’ which are physical cards that allow you to download and play the purchased game though containing no game data. The paid ‘Nintendo Switch 2 Edition Upgrade’ packs for Switch titles most notably for The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild and its direct sequel. The most controversial though was the pricing and most notoriously the $80US cost of the marquee launch game Mario Kart World. These controversies had many on various websites, within comment sections and social media platforms declaring they weren’t going to buy it. 

Though I was certainly bothered by a couple of things, I did purchase it on launch; mainly because the positives outweighed the negatives and given the long support life for the original Switch (that I purchased in the second half of 2017), which is still going strong. Some initial impressions and my response to some of the controversy follow.

Posted in Video Games | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Thoughts on the Nintendo Switch 2