Today I bought Wii with Wii Sports and Marvel Ultimate Alliance. The controller is pretty impressive; with the separate joystick you’re not confined to the traditional “two hands in the middle” grip which gets painful after a while. I originally imagined holding the Wiimote with two hands horizontally, as in your left thumb on the directional pad, your right thumb on the 1 and 2 buttons but this is not how it was designed :-)
Wii Sports is slightly addictive due to the combination of unique gameplay and wanting to beat personal bests. Wii Boxing is especially fun.
Marvel Ultimate Alliance is pretty fun, if you like basic hack & slash. It was the most appealing game in the shop. There’s a whole stack of Marvel characters you can add to your 4-player team, so that keeps it fresh. I’ve only done 2 missions so far, and they’ve been pretty easy.
Next game to get will probably be Zelda Twilight Princess. I’m in the mood for an adventure I can really get into. And it has a huge Metacritic score. Super Paper Mario looks fun, too.
Grand National’s track “By the time I get home” was playing on Triple J yesterday and since then I’ve had a chance to sample some of their older music, which I have to say is really quite listenable. To give you some idea without wanting to sound like a tryhard critic, it’s sort of funky indie rock with occasional jazz elements. Last.fm has a list of similar artists which so far have all been pretty good, too. Check out some Grand National tracks at their Myspace page.
The sequel, as promised. So fun it should be illegal.
Sorry the quality looks like arse, YouTube uses arsey compression. And those clicking sounds if you’re wondering are my camera’s iris opening and closing. More pyromania here.
I haven’t done this since I started the blog, so here in descending order are the top ten Google searches sending people to Frost Nova as reported by Google Analytics:
You’ve probably heard the old claim that Macs are preferred by graphic designers and desktop publishers. It’s often dismissed as a fanboy statement being totally without merit, but I came across an article which could very well explain the reason behind this old myth. It would seem that Mac OS X renders fonts properly, staying true to the design of the typeface, whereas Windows manipulates them so they better fit the pixel grid, which apparently results in sharper text.
The difference became more obvious recently, when I installed Safari for Windows. I have always thought that Arial on Mac looked much smoother and rounder, and I found it easier to read. Observe the difference below. Top: Windows with ClearType; Bottom: Safari with medium font smoothing (default).
Now it may just be personal taste, but when I’m trawling through RSS feeds, I’d rather stare at the bottom rendering for hours. It might be a bit blurrier, but who ever said sharpness was the holy grail of on-screen reading? The Safari rendering is easier on the eyes (softer, if you will) and much faster to read. In comparison, the Windows rendering looks awkwardly spaced and horizontally condensed, with circular letters appearing oval-shaped.
The obvious consequence of all this is that on a Mac, the on-screen rendering of a document is a more accurate representation of the printed product. If there is any truth to the “Macs are better for publishing” myth, I suspect this is a major contributor.
Manifest is on this weekend, and while I’m not going per se, I’ll be there vicariously by watching my fill of hilarious and gripping anime titles this weekend to make up for it. I may even cosplay in my own loungeroom… Although lack of costume could be a problem. Does going as Neo from Animatrix count as cosplay?
Law of Inherent Combustibility: Everything explodes. Everything. Second Corollary: Large cities are the most explosive substances known to human science. — Laws of Anime #11
People Say