shivver: (Time Crash)
Despite the fact that both my husband and I love tabletop games, we actually own surprisingly few of them. Part of it is that we prefer cooperative games, rather than playing against each other, and the majority of games are competitive. The other part is that we've been historically reluctant to spend money on physical games, though I'm not really sure why.

We coincidentally bought a number of games in the two days before the COVID lockdown. We went up to Seattle with a couple of friends because we'd rented an Air BnB with them to attend Emerald City Comic Con but the owner refused to reimburse us when the con got canceled, so we figured we might as well use the apartment we'd paid for. While we were there, we visited Mox Boardinghouse (a game store) multiple times and bought a pile of games, and we found them to be a boon during the next few months of being cooped up in the house.

Much more recently, we finally got our own copy of Marvel Zombies, which we've played at a friend's house, and we've been loving that.

A few weeks ago, we went up to Portland on an ill-fated quest to buy a Squishable I really want (turns out that Squishables closed that store, even though it's still listed on their website and in Google), and so we took the opportunity to visit the Portland Mox Boardinghouse. We bought four games: Kinfire Delve, Timeline Twist, Tesseract, and Buffer Time.

Now, I'm not going to talk too much about Kinfire Delve because we spent some amount of time in the store searching it on our phones and reading reviews and discussions before buying it -- exactly the opposite of the "impulse-buying" I noted in the title here. But I will say that it is a good game. The players each play a character with specific abilities and together, they have to investigate and solve anomalies in the forest, then defeat the big baddie that's causing them. It takes a lot of strategy and cooperation, which is exactly what we enjoy. The next time we go up to Mox, we'll be buying the other versions of Kinfire.

But, the other three, we bought them for various reasons, without much research:

* Timeline Twist: It's a cooperative variant on the original Timeline game, which was competitive. (Everyone gets cards with events on them, and on your turn, you guess where your card fits in the timeline on the table; if you're wrong, you have to draw more cards. The player that runs out of cards first wins.) We thought, hey, we like Timeline, so playing it cooperatively would be awesome!

* Buffer Time: This game is based on Star Trek: Lower Decks, which we love. So, we got the game.

* Tesseract: The main item in this game is a cube made randomly out of 64 dice, set on a spinning platform. Seriously -- go look at the images in the Amazon listing. How could I *not* buy this?

And now we've played them all.

Timeline Twist )

Buffer Time )

Segue: Good Omens )

Tesseract )

The bottom line is two terrible games and one amazing game. Luckily, the expensive one was the amazing game; I would have hated to throw out the $60 game. But, that should teach us to not buy games on a whim.
shivver: (Time Crash)
It seems that the teaser trailer for DW Series 15 (yeah, I cleave stubbornly to the old numbering system) came out, and no, the title of the post has nothing to do with that. I haven't watched the trailer and I don't plan to, because I really don't like spoilers. I love going into new content with no information and no expectations. I like the surprise. It's so hard for shows to surprise us with anything nowadays, because everyone seems to want trailers that show us what's coming up, and of course there are people who try to steal the secrets directly, so that they can post them.

Ah well, I'm just a curmudgeon. Much like cleaving to the old numbering system.

Anyway, the disappointment is about a game that I've been playing for something like 18 years now. It's a tiny game called PackRat, in which you collect sets of cards. It's slightly more complicated than that, but the details aren't important. It started off as a Facebook game, but it moved off Facebook and is now on its own website and on mobile.

The sets of cards are related by topic, so like there's a set called Caterpillar Spring, which is all about caterpillars, and a set called Sock Monkeys, and a set called Cinematic Necklaces, etc. After so many years, there's over 1000 sets... That's a lot of cards.

Each card has a name and art, and the art quality does vary but we have a few favorite artists. One of the artists is named C. A. Ronquillo, who is a graphic designer but does art for this game as a side job. He's definitely on the geeky side, and if there's a geeky set, he's probably the one who did it. He's done a number of DW cards - I think there are at least two TARDISes (one of which is named "Borrowed Time Machine", so he knows the show well), and in a Valentine's Day set called Supercouples, one of the couples was Rory and Amy.

Just recently, they announced a new set called Rides, and the teaser for it said something to the effect of "There are all kinds of fictional vehicles... including magic phone booths." Oh, come on, that's gotta be a TARDIS, right? I mean, yes, it could be Bill & Ted, but it's more likely to be a TARDIS.

Well, the set has come out. First, it's not done by C. A. Ronquillo -- it's done by one of the art studios the game contracts to do art for them. Second, it's an animal set, where any characters depicted are animals, which could be fine but in general I'm not fond of. And third, the top card in the set is called "Dr. Goose and Phone Booth", and it is exactly that: a goose coming out of a red British phone booth.

Seriously.

We figure that they sent the list of cards to the art studio, and the art studio made exactly what was on the tin: they looked up what a British phone booth looks like and drew that. And I guess no one quality-checked them.

Ah well.

I've always meant to post here the PackRat cards that have been DW-related. Maybe I'll get to it some day, but it won't have this card in it.
shivver: (Bus floor Midnight)
It's been a difficult past couple of days for us, though you'll probably read this post and laugh and say it's ridiculous.

Read more... )
shivver: (azicrow)
It's been a while since I've had any time to relax, but this weekend was just wonderful. Evidence: I haven't been on any social media since Wednesday. I didn't even check email.

Read more... )
shivver: (capmjolnir)
My university posted on their Facebook page a call for collegiate varsity e-sports. They're looking for players, of course, but also coaches, analysts, marketers, and video editors, and mentioned competing with other schools in League of Legends, Overwatch, and DotA.

Video games are finally getting some recognition! Even after years (decades?) of professional gamers and tournaments, video games are still considered child's play, skill-less diversions for couch potatoes. It'll be decades (far longer than my life, anyway) before people accept video games on any level, and they'll probably never consider them on the level of any sport (even golf, which barely qualifies as a sport as far as I'm concerned), but the concept is growing.

It's also nice to see more progress being on the front of promoting more cerebral sports at colleges. When I was in grad school, I was a member of the school's trivia team - you know, College Bowl and all that - and boy, we had the hardest time getting taken seriously. We used to go to tournaments at other schools (and win, by the way; we were very good), but every time, it was a battle to get funding. We paid for a lot of it out of our own pockets because, well, it's not football now, is it? It's nice to know that the schools are supporting more than just physical sports.
shivver: (Much Ado)
I just received my copy of Doctor Who Fluxx in the mail!

Read more... )

In other news, I'm almost finished with my next story.

Read more... )

No!no!wrimo

Nov. 3rd, 2016 09:46 am
shivver: (Five in Ten's TARDIS)
I've decided to be honest with myself and not attempt NaNoWriMo this year.

Read more... )
shivver: (DT absolute radio)
Are you excited for the new Pokémon games, Pokémon Sun and Pokémon Moon, coming out next month? We are! My husband especially. He just cannot wait! He was talking about it today with a coworker, and this is what he said.

"It's a brutal world. Your Pokémon love beating each other up. Supposedly, fighting until you faint increases your bond between you and your master somehow? And you have to catch Pokemon just before they "faint" (air quotes). Because apparently, you can't just pick up unconscious Pokemon and stuff them into Pokéballs. And the world they created! You know, there are no other animals in the Pokemon world. They're all Pokémon. So, yummy steak? You're eating a Pokémon.

"Every game is the same. You're a kid living with your mother, and when you're ten years old, you're handed a murder animal and leave home to go out and beat up other people's animals. You step into the tall grass and BOOM! You're attacked by a violent beast. You meet a pair of little twin girls, with bows in their hair and they have their cute little animals, and you beat them into the ground. Then, in Pokémon Silver, you can ask for a rematch. So you go back to the twin girls and you beat them up again and take their twelve dollars."

Woohoo! Looking forward to all that wonderful pre-adolescent murder and mayhem!

No, really, I am. I love the Pokémon games. I just try not to think too hard about them.
shivver: (Time Crash)
Just got back from a trip seeing some friends for the first time in years!

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shivver: (Much Ado)
Being rather unmotivated recently and wanting to just lose myself in something mindless, I've been playing an iPad game called Fairway Solitaire. It's tri-peaks style card game with a golf theme, the idea being that you're trying to leave as few cards on the table as possible (just as in golf, you're trying to get the ball in the hole with as few strokes as possible.

The levels are set up as golf courses, and in general, they have silly names, usually puns, such as "O'Kaye Bayou", "Saul T. Shores", and "Watchya Steppe". I usually don't pay much attention to them - I just go to the next one and start playing.

Yesterday, as I started the next course, I saw that it was named "Noble Rose Run". I thought, "Hey, that's pretty. You know, if this was a DW reference, that's a great way to hit both Rose and Donna," and then continued playing and forgot about it.

This morning, I played a few more courses and moved to the next one, and it was named "Tennant Highlands"!! So, apparently, the first one was a DW reference! I checked back, and the courses between them were "Melody River" and "Woodtorch Royal". There aren't any other pop culture references in the game that I can find, so apparently someone on the game team is a DW fan and got to name some courses. That was just cool to find!

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