2015: The Ugly

Time for the dubious awards of Ugliest Books I read this year. It should come as no surprise that this year’s winner is:

The Art of the Deal by Donald Trump

The Art of the Deal by Donald Trump

Nothing is uglier than a picture of Donald Trump, 80s style lol. Unless maybe it’s Donald Trump 2015. The rest:

101 Things You Need to Know and Some You Don't by Richard Horne

101 Things You Need to Know and Some You Don’t by Richard Horne

Boring

The Frazzled Female by Cindi Wood

The Frazzled Female by Cindi Wood

OMG I’m so frazzled, I’m trying to talk on two different phones while doing the dishes and holding random toys. WOMEN

Gender Blender by Blake Nelson

Gender Blender by Blake Nelson

I get what this cover is trying to do, but the color scheme is all wrong.

Love and Miss Communication by Elyssa Friedland

Love and Miss Communication by Elyssa Friedland

Boring AND misleading

Here's the Situation: A Guide to Creeping on Chicks, Avoiding Grenades, and Getting in Your GTL on the Jersey Shore "by" Mike Sorrentino

Here’s the Situation: A Guide to Creeping on Chicks, Avoiding Grenades, and Getting in Your GTL on the Jersey Shore “by” Mike Sorrentino

Oh god, do I even have to say

Fall On Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald

Fall On Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald

I actually liked this book, a family saga set in a remote seaside town. But the cover is doing nothing for me.

Interview with a Vampire by Anne Rice

Interview with a Vampire by Anne Rice

So much vampire iconography to choose from, and they go with this boring, terribly-colored thing

Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit

Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit

Boring

The O'Reilly Factor for Kids by Bill O'Reilly

The O’Reilly Factor for Kids by Bill O’Reilly

Has Bill O’Reilly on it

Rubyfruit Jungle by Rita Mae Brown

Rubyfruit Jungle by Rita Mae Brown

Boring and bad color scheme

The Atlas of Languages

The Atlas of Languages

Boring

Things I Have to Tell you: Poems and Writing by Teenage Girls ed. Betsy Franco

Things I Have to Tell you: Poems and Writing by Teenage Girls ed. Betsy Franco

This cover doesn’t stand out at all. Even if it was color instead of black and white it would be more appealing.

Tiny Beautiful Things by Cheryl Strayed

Tiny Beautiful Things by Cheryl Strayed

Boring

Uncommon Arrangements: Seven Portraits of Married Life in London Literary Circles 1910-1939

Uncommon Arrangements: Seven Portraits of Married Life in London Literary Circles 1910-1939

So boring

Previously: 2015 The Bad, 2014 The Ugly
Next: Bonus Post: 2015 The Pretty

2015: The Bad

I guess it’s a good sign that there were only 16 books I gave 1 star to in 2015, and some of those were for Hate Book Club and my Reading Things I Disagree With project. It’s hard to pick the WORST book, but I’m going to have to go with:

Don't Be That Girl by Travis Stork

Don’t Be That Girl by Travis Stork

Maybe because I can’t even get past the cover without being insulted. I read this in February as the book I disagree with. Travis Stork backs up his claims on why you should probably quit your job because men are intimidated by a woman with a career by repeating that he’s a doctor a lot. Ugggggggh.

The 40 Laws of the Alpha Male: How to Dominate Life, Attract Women, and Achieve Massive Success by Derren Nash

The 40 Laws of the Alpha Male: How to Dominate Life, Attract Women, and Achieve Massive Success by Derren Nash


This book I got for free on Amazon for my Books I’ll Disagree with Project. Maybe because I went into it with such low expectations, but it wasn’t AS bad as I thought. It talked a lot about how you need to be confident in your relationship with Jesus?? Which is not something I thought MRAs were into, but whatever.

The Art of the Deal by Donald Trump

The Art of the Deal by Donald Trump

Read the full review here. In summary, Donald Trump was way more boring than offensive in the 80s, at least by comparison.

I Am Having So Much Fun Here Without You by Courtney Maum

I Am Having So Much Fun Here Without You by Courtney Maum

This book is terrible. It got some good reviews, but the characters are all horrible, particularly the narrator, who whines a lot about how he just wants his wife and kid back while also pining for his mistress. I only kept reading in the hopes that he would die horribly. Alas.

Here's the Situation: A Guide to Creeping on Chicks, Avoiding Grenades, and Getting in Your GTL on the Jersey Shore "by" Mike Sorrentino

Here’s the Situation: A Guide to Creeping on Chicks, Avoiding Grenades, and Getting in Your GTL on the Jersey Shore “by” Mike Sorrentino

Read the full review here. Another excellent Hate Book Club choice.

My Unfair Lady by Kathryne Kennedy

My Unfair Lady by Kathryne Kennedy

Okay, I had to give this book one star because of what it is, but it was actually pretty hilarious to read. Summer Wine Lee grew up as a half-Native American prospector’s daughter in The Wild West before her dad found silver and became totally nouveau riche. She hires the English Duke of Monchester to turn her into a proper lady so she can marry into old money, but of course he ends up falling in love with her instead. Basically, her fakey Old West accent changed my life.

Grey by ELJames

Grey by ELJames


I was coerced into reading this by tumblr. You can see a PAINSTAKINGLY DETAILED review compiled over several months there.

Love and Miss Communication by Elyssa Friedland

Love and Miss Communication by Elyssa Friedland

I tried to read this book because it looked like a modern epistolary novel, and you know I’m a sucker for epistolary novels. But I’m pretty sure the author wrote a novel about “detoxing from modern technology” without really understanding modern technology. I think the main character is supposed to read as “delightfully over-the-top” but instead I hate her.

The Island of Lost Maps by Miles Harvey

The Island of Lost Maps by Miles Harvey

I thought this was going to be one of those great non-fiction books that read like a novel, but instead it was one guy’s rambling.

How to Fight, Lie, and Cry Your Way to Popularity (and a Prom Date) by Nikki Roddy

How to Fight, Lie, and Cry Your Way to Popularity (and a Prom Date) by Nikki Roddy

This book looked like it was going to be a funny parody of teen movies, maybe with some analysis thrown in, but instead it was a bland summary of them

Gender Blender by Blake Nelson

Gender Blender by Blake Nelson

I read a lot of books about gender identity, but this… is not one of them. It’s about a middle school boy and girl who switch bodies Freaky Friday style. Hello, outdated gender stereotypes.

The Internet is a Playground by David Thorne

The Internet is a Playground by David Thorne


This book was free on Amazon. That is the extent of my memories about it.

The Frazzled Female by Cindi Wood

The Frazzled Female by Cindi Wood

I read this book in March as the Book I Disagree With. It’s basically an article from Ladies Home Journal stretched to 122 pages with an extra dose of Jesus.

The Divorce Papers by Susan Rieger

The Divorce Papers by Susan Rieger

Another epistolary novel that let me down. This book was WAY boring. You can tell this was written by someone with a lot of law experience, because she chooses to include WAY more information about contracts, court documents, and legalese than a normal author would. The story itself was pretty bland and uninteresting.

101 Things You Need to Know and Some You Don't by Richard Horne

101 Things You Need to Know and Some You Don’t by Richard Horne

This was aimed at teens, but would probably be more appropriate for a 3rd grader. I remember nothing else about it.

How to Spice up Your Marriage in 7 Days by Imogen Barnet

How to Spice up Your Marriage in 7 Days by Imogen Barnet

This was free on Amazon, and I was desperate to read a book I disagreed with. It’s best advice was to stare unblinkingly into someone’s eyes for four whole minutes. “Set your phone alarm.” Okay, creeper.

Previously: 2015 The Good, 2014 The Bad
Next: 2015 The Ugly

2015: The Good

This year I read 148 books! Here are the ones I rated five stars on GoodReads.

The Girl with Ghost Eyes by M. H. Boroson

The Girl with Ghost Eyes by M. H. Boroson

This was my favorite book I read this year!!! A great mix of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Kung Fu movies, I learned a lot about Chinese folklore in this historical fiction-fantasy-adventure. Set in 1800s Chinatown, this book follows Li-lin, a Daoist priestess who can see into the spirit world as she tries to save her city from the vengeful ravages of a man-made monster.

Lumberjanes Volumes 1 & 2 by Noelle Stevenson

Lumberjanes Volumes 1 & 2 by Noelle Stevenson

These graphic novels are awesome! The Lumberjanes are like more badass girl scouts who must survive a summer camp in a forest full of mythical monsters. Also, friendship bracelets!!

Illuminae by Alice Kaufman and Jay Kristoff

Illuminae by Alice Kaufman and Jay Kristoff

This book fucked me up. It’s a sci-fi/horror/epistolary/adventure of badassness.

Becoming Nicole: The Transformation of an American Family by Amy Ellis Nutt

Becoming Nicole: The Transformation of an American Family by Amy Ellis Nutt

This memoir tells the story of Nicole, a transgender girl, and her family’s experiences as she grew up. It’s a really interesting portrait, not just of a transgender individual, but of the family and community around her and how they react and are affected by her transformation.

Voracious: A Hungry Reader Cooks Her Way Through Great Books by Cara Nicoletti

Voracious: A Hungry Reader Cooks Her Way Through Great Books by Cara Nicoletti

This book talks about one book per short chapter, a personal essay about it followed by a recipe. I liked the essays so much, because they mirrored some of my experiences with certain books (Anne of Green Gables) and otherwise just spoke to growing up as a reader and how books can affect your life. Plus delicious food!

Rad American Women A-Z by Kate Schatz

Rad American Women A-Z by Kate Schatz

I learned a lot from this book!!! There were plenty of rad American women I’d never heard of.

The Wacky and Wonderful World Through Numbers by Steve Martin

The Wacky and Wonderful World Through Numbers by Steve Martin

This was a fun, interesting book that anyone who likes statistics or world records would enjoy!

Dietland by Sarai Walker

Dietland by Sarai Walker

THIS BOOK. I loved its message of militant body positivity and feminism, and all the different variations of each. It’s so rare to have a fat lady protagonist who doesn’t end the book living happily ever after by losing weight. I found this book really inspiring, especially when the main character muses that being fat is kind of a super power in that it shows you how people really are. The people who are jerks to her may have hid their inner jerkiness if she were pretty, but she knows their reactions to her are their genuine selves, good or bad. I think about that a lot.

The Folded Clock: A Diary by Heidi Julavits

The Folded Clock: A Diary by Heidi Julavits

This was like a cross between a diary and a series of personal essays on many different subjects. I really like Heidi Julavits’ voice and sense of humor.

Microshelters: 59 Creative Cabins, Tiny Houses, Tree Houses, and Other Small Structures by Derek Diedricksen

Microshelters: 59 Creative Cabins, Tiny Houses, Tree Houses, and Other Small Structures by Derek Diedricksen

I don’t know if I could ever live in a tiny house myself (especially not with Steven and Olivia), but it was so interesting seeing the different creative ways people packed what they needed into such a small frame.

An Age of License by Lucy Knisley

An Age of License by Lucy Knisley

This is a travelogue graphic novel about a pretty epic trip through Europe. I’ve read a few of Knisley’s graphic novels, and I really enjoy her art style and down-to-earth writing.
Read the rest of this entry »

2015 Goals: I pretty much rock

Goodbye, 2015!!! Thank you for being so much better than shitty 2014, although of course there is still room for improvement. Here’s how I did on my goals this year:

1. Read 1 Book Each Month I Think I’ll Disagree With: 100%

I have to admit, Hate Book Club really helped me out with this one.

October: My Unfair Lady

My Unfair Lady by Kathryne Kennedy

My Unfair Lady by Kathryne Kennedy

We’ll talk more about this during my yearly book roundup later, but it’s a romance novel that features an American prospector’s daughter trying to learn how to be a real lady from a duke. It’s everything you can imagine and more.

November: Interview with a Vampire

This one was for Hate Book Club, and it really let me down. The hype had led me to believe it would be re-goddamn-diculous, and it ended up just being kind of boring.

December: Eat This, Not That

This one is like… if you want to eat healthy but only at fast food restaurants, here are the things that will kill you the least. Needless to say, it did not win me over.

2. Finish I Detonate Around Him: 100%

Bam! I know in my last update I said I was technically finished, but now I am FULL ON finished. With the stupid original trilogy, and the even stupider follow-up book ELJames published this year. Now it’s done for real. Until she writes something else, I guess.

And this will forever be in my "Read" list on GoodReads. THANKS, TUMBLR

And this will forever be in my “Read” list on GoodReads. THANKS, TUMBLR

3. Visit Every Restaurant on my Restaurants to Visit List: 87%

This is the one I really fell down on at the end. I have 4 restaurants left:

–Angus Barn, which is a hella expensive steak place with a “chef’s table” where you get to sit in the kitchen. That thing is booked solid for the foreseeable future.

–Abyssinia Ethiopian, which I legit TRIED to go to once, but their website lied about their hours, and I ended up going to a great cafe next door. After being burned once, I wasn’t willing to trust again.

–Pho Far East, which is like 40 minutes from here. That’s my only excuse.

–Saint-Jacques French Cuisine, which is also pricey.

I’m okay with this outcome. I discovered a lot of GREAT restaurants, that I have definitely been back to since.

4. Review at least 1 thing a month online: 100%

I’m a little disappointed in myself on this one, because I fell back on reviewing a lot of books on GoodReads. It’s the thing I feel most qualified reviewing. I did leave a critical review of a local store I have vowed never to go to again after being uncomfortable too many times, which is something I probably never would have done without this project.

5. One Guest Post a Month: 100%!!!!

This was the best one!!! But also the hardest. For all of us. In October, Steven wrote a post about his hobby of the moment, leatherworking. I was hoping he would write about his undying love for My Little Pony, but alas. In November, my friend Adrienne wrote about what it’s like to move abroad to Spain!! With great pictures! And in the final moments of the year, James Fox bookended 2015 with a guest post about video games!

I reread most of the guest posts last night, and they’re maybe my favorite New Years project ever. They’re all so different and funny and interesting. Thanks, everyone, who helped make it possible!

January: Bad Animes: First Blood, Part II (section 3.b) by James Fox
February: A Scholarly Ranking of America’s Next Top Model Winners by Rob
March: Mom Ladd on being Mom Ladd by Mom Ladd
April: Treasures of Pinterest by Melissa
May: How to Soup by Anna
June: The 10 Best BBC Miniseries Adapted from Novels by Alana
July: The REAL Story of the Dahlgrens’ trip to Europe by Cynthia
August: What it was like being “Dad Ladd” by Dad Ladd
September: All the Stuff I forgot to do in College by Brian
October: Adventures in Leather Costumery by Steven
November: The Rain in Spain by Adrienne
December: VIDEO GAMES, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bouncer by James Fox

6. Knit a Sweater: 100%!!!!

I can’t believe I did it!!!

Look at this beast

Look at this beast

7. Get Hella Into a Different DDC Class each month: 100%

The saving grace of this goal was that I wisely never specified a way to quantify “hella into”. I may have read only one book in each category towards the end but I DID IT, regardless.

Total: 98%

I’ll take it!! I’ll post my goals for 2016 soon.

Previously: 2015: 75%

VIDEO GAMES; or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The Bouncer

Welp, looks like it’s time to bookend the year with another post about my own silly personal interests. Don’t worry though, I’m not gonna make a bunch of gifs about some anime that may or may not have directly inspired the creation of Indiana Jones and the Crystal Skull. What I am gonna do is write a bunch of words about a random collection of games I’ve played!

 

The Bouncer

This game was ostensibly supposed to be a “playable action movie” that blended the best parts of action games and narrative heavy RPGs, featuring some of the slickest visuals of the time and the entire film’s worth of voice acting, complete with language settings and subtitle options. If The Bouncer had come out today, I have no doubt that there would have been a director’s commentary option in there as well, and honestly, I kind of wish the existing game had that, if only because it would provide some insight into the design process for this game, Re: WHY IS EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS GAME SO TERRIBLE

The plot of The Bouncer is that the three bouncers who ostensibly work at a bar inexplicably named DOGSTREET witness the main character’s homeless not-girlfriend (described in the game booklet as having become DOGSTREET’s “mascot”, which is BULLSHIT BECAUSE DOGSTREET’S MASCOT IS CLEARLY THE DOG EMBLAZONED ON ALL ITS PARAPHENALIA JESUS CHRIST THIS GAME WAS WRITTEN BY MONKIES) get kidnapped by a ninja wearing what appears to be Mankind’s facemask, and then spend the rest of the game skipping work so they can pummel their way up the corporate ladder of the local evil Solar Energy Conglomerate. You see, kidnapper/CEO Dauragon C. Mikado has decided to take revenge on the society that failed to save his sister’s life by using his newly constructed remote energy transfer satellite as an ORBITAL DEATH LASER. His plan to accomplish this involves kidnapping some random homeless girl because HUGE SURPRISE it turns out that she’s the robot clone of his sister. Or she’s his sister’s cyborg zombie. Or something. Either way, Mikado needs to plug his giant telescoping satellite laser into his robosister so he can blast hot vengeance all over the face of the earth because [SCENE MISSING]

ACTIVATING EXTERMINATION MODE

The best part is that they spring this on you literally out of NOWHERE

Less hilariously, the “playable” portion of this “playable action movie” is, at best, aggressively shitty. You basically run around a bunch of rooms  in various locales with no interactible objects or useful geometry to distract you from the game’s incredibly repetitive combat, usually consisting of using the same one or two techniques against a group of identical triplets who have decided to try to rough you and your fellow bouncers up. Boss battles play identically to normal enemy encounters and the only real variation in gameplay comes if you choose a different character to play as, and even then, the only difference is the animation of whatever attack you are repeatedly using to stunlock the feckless computer enemies into oblivion. Also you probably shouldn’t be playing as more than one character your first time through the game, since only the character you choose to play as will gain BOUNCER POINTS at the end of battle, which are required to learn new techiques that aren’t complete ass and otherwise make it so the final boss won’t require upwards of six billion dropkicks to the nuts before keeling over and admitting defeat.

DOGSTREET

If you want an idea of what the gameplay of The Bouncer is like, just imagine this dipshit donkey kicking a security guard in the face, FOREVER.

Oh man, speaking of the final boss, in true Squaresoft fashion the CEO of the evil electric company is a multistage beat down against his various transformations, by which I mean, you kick his ass, and then he takes off his edgy trench coat, revealing that underneath he has been BARE-CHESTING SUSPENDERS this entire time, at which point you have to fight him AGAIN, his shirtless suspenders somehow granting him a SECOND LIFE BAR and UPGRADED ATTACKS. Did I mention that if you beat the game with all three characters (which requires you to play through this game THREE SEPARATE TIMES (WHY WOULD YOU DO THIS TO YOURSELF)) he will get back up after round two and dramatically unbutton his overalls, REVEALING A MAGICAL DRAGON TATTOO THAT ALLOWS HIM TO USE EVIL PURPLE FIRE KUNG FU

The Guy with the Dauragon Tattoo

Yeah Dauragon knows what the ladies want *FLAME PUNCHES THE LADIES IN THE GUT*

From this progression I can only assume that if Dauragon were to remove his pants he might literally ASCEND TO GODHOOD.

Oh and in case you can’t tell JUST BY LOOKING AT THEM, the characters in this game were all designed by the now infamous Tetsuya Nomura. After the downright mainstream designs he put out for Final Fantasy 7 and 8, he must have removed his shirt and reached his FINAL FORM, because this some next level shit from the future inventor of some of the most memorable fashion disasters in video game history. Like I don’t even know where to begin with some of these designs, shit is like some kind of Fashion Chernobyl.

And no, they NEVER explain what the fuck is up with Volt's horns

NOT TO SCALE

 

The SaGa Series

Make history, or you'll BE HISTORY

Pictured: A SaGa game being remarkably candid about your chances of success

The SaGa Series is a group of Japanese RPGs created by mad genius Akitoshi Kawazu in an attempt to give the player the ability to organically shape their role playing experience to their own tastes with the unintended unifying theme of outrageously complex underlying game mechanics which are never explained, and quite often never even revealed, to you the player. I think I’ve seen like ONE SaGa game that has any in-game tutorials available, and for every aspect of gameplay that it explains, there are like SIX other game-defining concepts that it doesn’t even so much as HINT AT.

And I’m not talking like the game never tells you the secret method required to unlock a cool ultimate treasure or something. Which it doesn’t. But more to the point, I’m talking like one time I killed one too many lizards in the lizard cave, which caused a frontier town the other side of the world to get BLOWN THE FUCK UP by a giant bedazzled sandworm. I’m talking about the time I randomly pressed the right control stick in as though it were a button and discovered that doing so activated a core gameplay mechanic vital to completing most of the dungeons in the game. I’m talking about the primary method the game expects you to increase your characters’ power being to routinely choose one of three random abilities presented to you at the end of a scenario and place it in one of seven spots on a hexagonal grid with literally no explanation of how what you’re doing works beyond showing you a preview of how a bunch of unexplained numbers will change depending on where you stick it. I’m talking about how you’d better figure out REALLY FAST whether the game is scaling the enemies based on the numbers of battles you’ve won, especially if you’re playing the game blind and flailing around too much in the early game trying to figure out where to go. Because again, why would SaGa tell you where to go? What, does SaGa look like your mom to you? DO YOU WANT SAGA TO TUCK YOU INTO YOUR GOD DAMN BED AT NIGHT WITH A PECK ON THE CHEEK AND GLANCE IN THE CLOSET TO ASSURE YOU THAT YES THERE ARE NO MONSTERS IN THERE? WELL THE JOKE’S ON YOU KID BECAUSE WHILE YOU WERE SCREWING AROUND IN A PLOT-IRRELEVANT CAVE OUT IN THE MIDDLE OF NOWHERE YOU KILLED ONE TOO MANY GOBLINS AND NOW YOUR CLOSET’S FULL TO THE FUCKIN BRIM WITH ALL MANNER OF GREATER LICHES

I like these games. I really do. But my enjoyment of them is directly proportional to the number of GameFAQs pages I have open at any given time while playing.

 

The Xeno Series

Not pictured: A character named Sellers who looks EXACTLY like Dr. Strangelove

Pictured: Two characters from the SAME GAME

What if you were anime Jesus and you had to kill the anime Demiurge using a giant kung fu robot whose power source was the literal Judeo-Christian God trapped in a lower plane of existence as a disembodied field of electromagnetic radiation? What if you had to kill the anime Space Pope with the help of android Mary Magdalene before he could use his giant robot cathedral to annihilate his two sworn enemies, Gnosticism and Secular Government? What if the Devil sent a bunch of robots to wipe out all the sentient lifeforms God had created and God retaliated by transforming said lifeforms into HORRIBLE MINDLESS ABOMINATIONS, and it was your job, as anime Jesus, to BEAT THE SHIT OUT OF BOTH OF THEM?
The answer to all of these questions, of course, is that you would be playing a game from the Xeno Series, because these games are all fucking INSANE

Why have chu forsaken me

Reminder: Chu Chu died for your sins

 

 

Sonic ’06

To clarify for the uninitiated:

Sonic the Hedgehog (1991) is the game where you play as a mascot character codenamed “Mr. Needlemouse” who uses his Bubsy-like speed and in-your-face 90s commercial appeal to defeat an overweight animal hoarder with way too much time on his hands.

Sonic the Hedgehog (2006) is the game where a human princess character unique to this game becomes Sonic’s love interest and eventually kisses Sonic on the lips to bring him back to life after he gets stabbed through the heart by another character unique to the game, Mephiles the Dark, who is a spikier shadowy counterpart of Shadow the Hedgehog. Yes, you read that right, this game’s villain is THE DARKER EDGIER VERSION OF THE DARKER EDGIER VERSION OF SONIC THE HEDGEHOG

Seriously, this dude is like some kind of Deviantart SINGULARITY

ORIGINAL CHARACTER (DO NOT STEAL)

Sonic ’06 is a game where it often feels like you’re just constantly hoping that when you press the attack button, it will actually cause Sonic to attack, and not, say, launch himself into outer space, or blast him through the floor into inescapable lava, or breakdance off into the horizon while you and the camera are left behind, watching the shot dim as the game deducts a life and restarts the level. No breakdancing allowed, the game chides, as it silently replaces every button with BREAKDANCE.

Sonic ’06 is a game with gameplay SO BROKEN that the game will often completely take control of your character away from you whenever the track you’re running on gets any more complicated than a straight line, for fear that you might accidentally rub up against the wrong wall and PHASE INTO ANOTHER DIMENSION. Even when the game is ostensibly in control, though, there’s a hilariously high chance that Sonic may just FLY OFF THE RAMP he’s running on and die ANYWAY. There’s a sequence where you run through a loop and you can’t actually adjust your angle during it, so Sonic will just run forward in whatever direction you entered the loop, meaning that if you don’t have the foresight to know that the game is about to remove your ability to control the character there is a 1000% probability that sonic is, at some point during the loop, going run off the edge of it at roughly MACH 5 and is now careening into the skybox, where he will die, restart the level.

Sonic ’06 is a game whose failure states for this game are so bizarre and poorly implemented that I am entirely capable of believing that literally no bug-fixing was done prior to the game’s release. When you die in Sonic ’06, and you will die, it is the rule, rather than the exception, that it defies logic. Sonic flies through an invisible death wall and suddenly just noclips through a mountain? WORKING AS INTENDED. Sonic jumps over a wall at 400mph and the camera doesn’t know how to handle it, causing the entire stage to vanish, leaving Sonic breakdancing above the black void of Hell? IMPLIMENTED AS DESIGNED. Sonic gets caught in a programming oversight and is condemned to being repeatedly flung against an invisible wall, trapped in an endless purgatory of horrible looping voiceclips? IT’S NO USE IT’S NO USE IT’S NO USE IT’S NO USE

Basically what I’m saying is you’d have more fun (and much more responsive controls) trying to use your controller to direct the actions of a real live hedgehog.

 

Final Fantasy: Dirge of Cerberus

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PLAGUEDDARKNESS.TUMBLR.COM

What if The Force Returns had starred a Jedi Master Jar Jar Binks and ended with a sequel hook where Samuel L. Jackson showed up and recruited him for the Avengers?

What if when Go Set a Watchman was published we found out Harper Lee’s reluctance to release it was because it was a terrible AU Twilight fanfic with the main character’s name blatantly find/replaced to X Billups?

What if the final chronological sequel to Final Fantasy VII was a poorly implemented 3rd person shooter that starred completely optional and entirely plot-irrelevant looks-27-but-is-actually-57 glampire VINCENT VALENTINE, and its plot assumed that you were not only familiar with his (again, entirely optional) backstory as laid out in the original game but were desperately interested in playing an ENTIRE GAME REVOLVING AROUND IT? What if Vincent’s support team consisted of Final Fantasy VII’s OTHER totally optional character, a serially ineffectual electric company executive, and original character slash walking fashion disaster, with a later appearance by a now DISTRACTINGLY TEXAN airship pilot, a blink or you’ll miss it cameo by everyone’s favorite Super Smash Brother, and a FORCED STEALTH SECTION where you play as god damn CAIT SITH, aka nobody’s favorite gameplay mechanic featuring nobody’s favorite character?

And no, she's not winking; she's missing an eye and wearing an eyepatch would just look SILLY

Shalua what is even HAPPENING HERE

What Gothy McBroodgun had to fight against a heretofore unmentioned cabal of bad guys with a vague connection to PREVIOUS GAME’S ANTAGONISTS who now pose a serious threat to world peace, no really guys, these dudes are serious business, please take my OCs seriously

What if Alucard Von Shootman’s love interest in this abortion of a game ended up being a 19-year-old girl in the body of a 9-year-old who’s had the mind of our 57-year-old protagonist’s now tragically deceased and also unrequited one true love downloaded into her brain?

Why don't you have a seat right over there

Also she’s Shalua’s sister

What if the game ended with a literal self insert of Camui Gackt showing up

How the crap did this jagweed outlive Sephiroth

GAME OVER
RETURN OF GACKT


GAME OVER

And that’s pretty much it for this installment of my ongoing Master’s Class in Having HORRIBLE TASTE. Tune in next time when I write like a million god damn words about every horrible manga I’ve ever read

 

Pinkie Pie and the Rockin’ Ponypalooza Party!

notebook paper

It has been SO LONG since we’ve had a Middle School Book Report!!! In the spirit of Goddess Girls, Steven and I decided to start a new series of tween girl books that speak to both our expertises’. Namely:

pinkiepiebook

It’s going to be great.

Summary of Amazingness
By Patricia
In the middle of one of Pinkie Pie’s awesome parties, her way-less-enthusiastic family shows up wanting to see Princess Twilight. They’re in dire need of royal help because the family rock farm is going under! Pinkie Pie immediately suggests throwing a big rock concert to remind everyone how great rocks are, but her pony-Mennonite family are sick of her frivolous suggestions and tell her to get serious. So her friends try to plan a party without her while Pinkie Pie paints her room brown and tries to schedule business meetings. Eventually her family sees she is miserable and apologizes, and the Ponypalooza is a huge success, somehow making people order more gravel and bricks. Yay!

Igneous Rock: Pony Mennonite

Igneous Rock: Pony Mennonite

Analysis within MLP Canon and Fanon
By Steven
So let’s start with one thing; I have no idea what the Word of God is on the canonicity of this series, but I kind of want for it to be canon as written, and here is just one reason why: “Nine Inch Tails.” That’s not to mention a number of other ponified bands, but it does at least introduce something other than saccharine-sweet pop and quasi-country into canon (note: this was published in 2013, before the introduction of Countess Coloratura a.k.a. MLP Lady Gaga). For this book, though, apart from the fun little references like those, there’s really nothing noticeably out of canon. Pinkie is Pinkie, except when she’s Pinkamena, the Pie clan are basically American Gothic in pony form, the Mane 6 do their thing, and parties get thrown. It basically qualified as a standard slice of life episode without pushing any canon boundaries, save perhaps one; Igneous and Cloudy Quartz (Pinkie’s parents) have perfectly normal, if slightly stilted, speech patterns, despite the show’s canon (and a large slice of common fanon) depicting them as using archaic English forms (as of S05E20). All things considered, that gets a pass.

Pony Lady Gaga

Pony Lady Gaga

Patricia’s Favorites
Character: Pinkie Pie’s pet alligator, Gummy, who does nothing except blink occasionally
Part: All the bands that play at Ponypalooza: Coldhay, John Mare, The Whooves, and Neigh-Z
Thing I Learned: Sales of gravel are directly related to rock concert attendance

Steven’s Favorites
Character: Pinkie Pie, for equipping the Cutie Mark Crusaders with spring-loaded shoes. That’s something that would get you on a watchlist in any other nation.
Part: Ditto the bands. That was cute.
Thing I Learned: That either gems are dirt cheap or else Equestria is an economic powerhouse, allowing random citizens to upgrade their driveways with bling. Now I want an amethyst car park. Also that apparently major headliner bands will do a concert for free if you know them well enough?


The CMC mid-terror plot

I mean, let’s face it; they’re Ponyville’s resident terrorists

Library Book Sale Fallout: The Great Snape Debate

This book was probably the best thing anyone has ever found at a library book sale:

The "Unauthorized" Great Snape Debate

The “Unauthorized” Great Snape Debate

This book is amazing for so many reasons. The giant “BORDERS EXCLUSIVE!” sticker, the fact that if you flip it upside down, you get the counterpoint argument:

Children love this shit

Children love this shit

But most of all that this book was ONLY culturally relevant between July 2005 and July 2007, when Book 6 ended with (spoiler alert?) SNAPE KILLING DUMBLEDORE and Book 7 revealed HIS DRAMATIC BACKSTORY. In consequence, reading this time capsule in 2015 is hilarious. Also, I highlighted parts to remember for this blog post, so the next person to read this book is going to think a crazy person was the last to read this (they may be right).

Both The Case for Snape’s Innocence and The Case for Snape’s Guilt go through the same format:

Chapter 1: Proof from the book of Snape’s Innocence/Guilt
Chapter 2: Literary Devices employed that support either theory
Chapter 3: A Biography of Snape from each perspective
Chapter 4: Other roles Alan Rickman has played where he’s been a reluctant hero/villain
Chapter 5: Slytherin House Isn’t All Bad/Slytherin House Includes Only Hitlers

Even though (spoiler alert?) Book 7 would reveal that the “Snape’s Innocence” section was ultimately right in that Snape was following Dumbledore’s orders to kill him, “Snape’s Guilt” section made FAR better points in this book. I think because, even though Snape ended up being “good” (arguably), he was still a raging asshole. Reasons why we should trust Snape supposedly include:

“Snape teaches Harry exactly the things he needs to know in order to survive the dangers at hand or to make sense of confusing events” (3)

Which is only a little bit true if you assume Snape is responsible for the set Hogwarts potions curriculum.

The main justification this section uses is the same as the one in the book: that Dumbledore trusts him and Dumbledore is COMPLETELY trustworthy and has everyone’s best interests at heart.

Sometimes he [Dumbledore] is wrong. But from what we’ve seen of his unfailingly ethical and civil behavior…” (10)

Snape’s Guilt has my back on this, because even if you don’t use any evidence from Book 7, Dumbledore is still sketchy as hell.

“the “well-protected” Sorcerer’s Stone is blocked by a set of creatures and tasks that three mere first-year students are able to overcome all by themselves” (8)

“Dumbledore hires the inept egomaniac Gilderoy Lockhart for the Defense Against the Dark Arts position in Harry’s second year, while Harry and his friends see through his thin facade of talent after a single class… Lockhart, however, is not in league with Voldemort, making him an almost decent choice in comparison to some of the others” (7)

“Dumbledore is not exactly the best judge of character” (5)

Dude couldn’t even recognize that his boy Mad-Eye Moody was actually a Death Eater in disguise for ALL OF BOOK 4. And you’re all trusting him to not get you killed? Come on.

The Case for Snape’s Innocence also makes you try to think that Snape had ~hidden good guy reasons~ for all his shitty behavior:

“Snape had concerns–Lupin presented a danger to students, as he almost was to Snape himself… in his very first class, the memory of his own near-miss with death due to Lupin’s nature impossible to put aside, [he] assigned an essay on how to recognize werewolves so that, should Lupin become a danger, his students would be prepared” (52)

Yeah, that time he got Lupin fired he was just ~worried about the children~. Plus, even if he is an ass, The Case for Snape’s Innocence knows it’s not really his fault he’s like this. After all, everyone saw his underwear when he was 15!!!!

“The underpants, and the shame they represent, are at the root of everything” (37)

The Case for Snape’s Guilt calls bullshit on this too:

“In a display of bitterness and stunted emotional growth, Snape takes his revenge on James by picking on Harry… it’s tempting to view him as a victim, but Harry has had a pretty rotten childhood himself, yet still manages to rise above misery and self-pity” (35)

My favorite part from the Case for Snape’s Innocence section is either this:

“The beauty of the softly simmering cauldron with its shimmering fumes, the delicate power of liquids that creep through human veins, bewitching the mind, ensnaring the senses” (137). The only way this could have been a greater entrance was if Snape recited the speech while being lowered into the classroom on a harness like Tom Cruise in Mission Impossible.”

Because what the hell? Or citing Alan Rickman’s character in Love Actually as a “flawed hero” figure:

“Although thoughtless to the effect his wandering attention is having on his wife, Harry does resist the temptation Mia presents” (61)

Except, nope, Word of God confirms that was a full-on affair.

But besides trying to defend Snape’s questionable virtue, the ACTUAL best part about this book is how many Harry Potter fan theories about Book 7 it contains. Prevalent among them was that somehow Dumbledore wasn’t really dead:

“Some fans who believe Snape is innocent theorize that Snape and Dumbledore faked Dumbledore’s death… Rowling’s response was, “Dumbledore is definitely dead.” (She didn’t, however, say anything about whether he’s going to stay that way…)” (11)

And of course lots of people had predicted the Snape/Lily unrequited love before Book 7 confirmed it, but The Case for Snape’s Innocence doesn’t want to go too far into fan theory territory, just noting that mabye “Snape and Lily formed some kind of bond over their mutual talent for potion making” (12). The Case for Snape’s Guilt argues right back that, if Snape actually loved Lily, “Wouldn’t he avoid pointlessly harassing Lily’s only son, even if it is just for her sake?” (21). You’d think, but sometimes the assholery is too strong to resist.

Other amazing theories:

“Could there be a good-magic equivalent of the dark-magic Horcrux?” (81)

This was part of a possible explanation about how Dumbledore might not really be dead lol. And:

“Based on what we know about Lily’s mastery of ancient magic, it’s possible, even likely, that Lily’s ability to see “the beauty in others” was more than a figure of speech” (23)

A surprising amount of time was devoted to this theory which rests on a line from the movie version of Prisoner of Azkaban and an understanding that Lily dying for her son=protecting him from Voldemort was something she did with conscious knowledge about what would happen (debatable). The authors go on for at least a page about how Harry “having his mother’s eyes” probably means that he also has inherited this magical ability they’ve made up about “seeing into people’s hearts.” Nice try, 2006.

Previously: Library Book Sale

Disney Princes: Callously Ranked

I’ve already callously ranked Disney princesses and Disney villains, so it’s only right that I next callously rank Disney Princes, using the incredibly arbitrary Would I Date Them scale. As before, I’m using The Official List.

10. Prince Adam/The Beast

Points for fashion, though

Points for fashion, though

The Beast is the worst. Which sucks for Belle, who’s relatively high on my list of Disney princesses. His list of crimes includes kidnapping, verbal and physical abuse, and probably treating his servants like inanimate objects long before they were actually inanimate objects. I just can’t get behind the narrative of “stay with your abusive rage beast of a boyfriend. You can change him!”

9. John Smith

Where the hummingbird BFF is one of the more historically accurate parts of the movie

Where the hummingbird BFF is one of the more historically accurate parts of the movie

I’m trying to just judge based on the wildly inaccurate Disney movie and not what I know about history, but it’s hard not to read Pocahontas through a historical lens, when we know that John Smith’s arrival is just the first in a series of increasingly violent incursions that will bring certain death to Pocahontas’ people. So not really swoonworthy, no.

8. Prince Florian/Ferdinand

Minus points for fashion

Minus points for fashion

Prince Florian does fuck-all. He’s such a non-character that official sources can’t even agree on his actual name. The only thing he does in Snow White is kiss a dead girl.

7. Prince Philip

I find the horse more dateable, honestly

I find the horse more dateable, honestly

Prince Philip has similar issues to Prince Florian in that you can’t just go around macking on incapacitated girls it is not romantic. Unlike Prince Florian, this isn’t the only facet to his character. He fights a creepy-ass dragon, which is pretty cool.

6. Prince Charming

So your NAME is Charming?

So your NAME is Charming?

Prince Charming is the neutral point of Disney’s princes. He’s not really anything. Sure, he decides a girl is his OTL after meeting her once, but that’s about par in a Disney universe, and at least he doesn’t take advantage of unconscious girls. Low bar, here, obviously.

5. Aladdin

I can't decide if his hammer pants are plus or minus points

I can’t decide if his hammer pants are plus or minus points

I like Aladdin okay. He’s funny and crafty, and, despite a hard life on the streets, still has a unfailing moral compass. It’s weird that he dresses his pet monkey in a smaller version of his own outfit (definite psychosis there, right?), and he does a little too much lying to Princess Jasmine to earn a higher ranking.

4. Prince Eric

Eric is the hot surfer dude of Disney princes

Eric is the hot surfer dude of Disney princes

Okay, so some of this might be nostalgia, since The Little Mermaid was my favorite Disney movie for a long time, but Eric is pretty great. Here is why he is dateable: 1) Plays a musical instrument, 2) Helps the homeless by inviting them to stay indefinitely in his castle, 3) Will drive a ship into your enemies. The only reason he’s not higher is because he’d probably cheat on you and then blame hypnosis.

3. Eugene Fritzherbert/Flynn Rider

Laaaaaaadies

Laaaaaaadies

I did not like this movie, and I didn’t really care for Rapunzel, but Flynn Rider is unarguably one of the hottest Disney princes. Plus, he’s funny and clever and comes with a useful horse sidekick. I wouldn’t trust him, but I would date him, at least for a summer.

2. Prince Naveen

Any dude who can play a ukulele, right?

Any dude who can play a ukulele, right?

Prince Naveen KNOWS how to have fun. He would be a great date! Maybe the most fun date on this list! He learns a lot during The Princess and the Frog to not be a total selfish jerk, but I still think he’s too much of a man-baby for long-term BF material.

1. Li Shang

Let's get down to business

Let’s get down to business

Li Shang can get it. He’s dedicated, loyal, and isn’t threatened by strong women. A relationship with him would actually be a partnership, which means I would totally date him if I were able to keep up.

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