While breaking into co-workers offices at sans Sarif Industries, I looked at an eBook lying on someone’s table. It was about Hugh Darrow (who’s been alluded to an awful lot, making me think he’s going to turn up at the end), who’s a pioneer in the field of human augmentation. In his fictional biography, what got him into the field in the first place was competing in Robot Wars! Sometimes my real life intersects with videogames in the oddest of ways (though I doubt he ever fought Killer Carrot).
Misc.
Hans Rosling’s Statistics Documentary
You might have seen Hans Rosling’s TED talks – he’s a global health professor with a keen interest in statistics and their visualisation. He recently did a documentary for the BBC which has made its way onto Youtube, and it’s excellent, so I thought I’d share it with you all.
gunnerkrigg court, norse mythology and fantasy novels
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I know I promised a Hellboy post, and I will get around to that. But right now, there are a couple of different things I want to talk about, the first being Gunnerkrigg Court. It’s a peculiar confection – a webcomic that’s been running for a while (though I just discovered it, and blitzed through the archives) about some children (two girls in particular) who attend a school, and there’s some stuff to do with magic and technology, and, in a manner redolent of Hellboy actually, it has an awful lot of foreshadowing, and, since it’s been going for about five years now, quite a bit of mythos, (though not in the same way as Scary Go Round). It also has some surprisingly funny bits – the joke in these two panels, for instance. But what I like best about it is the almost Gormenghast feel it evokes – the big empty (almost deserted) complex which the school occupies. To be honest, I’ve done a rather inadequate job of describing the comic itself. Let’s remedy that.
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mine all mine(craft)
Adam! Where have you been? What have you been doing? Why haven’t you posted in half a month? I hear literally no-one asking. Well, several things have been happening. Firstly, I’ve been working. Yes, working, both of the learning and money-earning variety. Homework and revision won’t do themselves. And going to open days. Thankfully, my fantastic employer, Bob of Ray Fosters Garden and Forest Machinery (your one-stop-shop for lawnmowers, chainsaws, hedgetrimmers etc. in Turners Hill) has been supremely indulgent while I take week after week off to go and look around universities. Best one so far is the University of Exeter, though the hill you have to walk up if you’re coming from the train station is steep.
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your humble fabulist
hm. It’s been a bit quiet around here lately, hasn’t it? Sorry about that, I’ve been busy what with being back at college and open days and work and suchlike. I dropped the one a day thing, despite saying I wouldn’t. I realised I was being propelled along primarily by force of habit, rather than any meaningful desire to carry on, and, coincidentally, I discovered that His Eminence, Our Imperious Leader Chris Schilling had also decided to stop. I felt like the time I spent in the evenings trying to think of something to write about then writing about would be better spent on college work. I was also a little burnt out, I think, and so giving myself a break for a few weeks was a good thing to do. This blog will stick around as my own, personal blog, but Scott and I are looking at relaunching hecklr soon, which should be interesting, if nothing else. The majority of my creative energies will be directed there, but I’ll try and remember to post it here as well. Thanks to everyone who’s read my nonsense for the three-quarters of the year that I managed, and good luck to the merry band who are continuing, lead by the new Imperious Leader, Pete Davison (not that one). I’m still here, however, and I remain your humble fabulist,
Adam Englebright
In unrelated news, this man’s reaction is fantastic.
Funniest thing I’ve seen all day.
Penny Arcade and offence

So, a lot of people have been getting rather shirty about a Penny Arcade strip which had a joke involving the word ‘rape’. Now. Before I begin I’ll say that anyone who’s been the victim of or affected by rape, has, of course, the right to say something about it. I can clearly see why they’re upset. But some of the complaints I’ve been hearing have been a little over the top. Let’s take a look at the strip, shall we? Bear in mind that Gabe and Tycho have already done this themselves, but I’m interested in writing about this.
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That idiot from Love Actually. No, the other one

Good grief. My mother is watching a documentary about an incredibly patient doctor trying to convince diabetic people that maybe they should stop eating and actually treat themselves on Channel 4 and during the advert break, the lastest in that bloody series of adverts starring the moron-with-the-pointless-subplot from Love Actually for BT came on. For goodness sake. Why this has been continuing for so long, goodness only knows. I can only assume a bunch of marketing gonks love it and keep it going out of their way to sustain it*.
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Bioshock: Infinite

I think that I’m alone in that I didn’t think that the first Bioshock was the best thing evarr and took the first person shooter to a whole new level blah blah. I thought it was ok – I liked Rapture – the city itself, with its art deco design, and the ambience of a once-thriving-and-vibrant-but-now-mostly-dead city. But everything else about it was tepid. The shooting was tedious, made interesting only by the plasmids, which (in my mind, at least) never realised their full potential, and the story, and ‘philosophical’ elements, such as they were, weren’t nearly as fantastic as people kept saying they were. Perhaps I played it through too late, the words ‘Atlas Is Fontaine’ ringing in my ears after another one of my friends had told me for the zillionth time. As for the philosophical elements, the consisted primarily of some reheated bullshit – Ayn Rand-style objectivism, to be precise, and … I’ll be honest, I have very little patience for Ayn ‘Any’ Rand. When I was 15, I tried to read Atlas Shrugged. I didn’t finish it, not because it was too challenging, or the ideas were too radical, but because it was really really boring. A bunch of people spending most of their time telling each other how great they thought lassaiz-faire capitalism was. If you think The Overton Window lays it on a bit thick, Atlas Shrugged is like wading through a bloody swamp. I’m not joking. All the characters seem to have conversations and inner monologues essentially about why Objectivism is great. At least Bioshock has the sense to show what would actually happen was this objectivist nonsense ever to actually come about (i.e. chaos, murder, and people in bunny masks trying to steal children). Sorry. Brief diversion there. In essence, I’m not rightly sure why games journos got themselves in such a lather about the game. I mean, it was good, but not that good. Bioshock Infinite on the other hand, looks pretty cool. I like the idea of a flying city as a setting, and the exploration of the themes of American exceptionalism could be jolly interesting. Sorry, was most of this my moaning about how little I like Ayn Rand and how much her books and objectivism in general wind me up? I suppose that’s to be expected. Anyway, the idea of superpowered plasmids, a new setting, giant robots with human hearts (from the trailer) and perhaps we’ll have some moral quandries more subtle and nuanced than DO YOU SAVE THE LITTLE GIRL OR KILL HER? It also looks like it might be sunny, what with it being up in the clouds, rather than the squalid dark hues of Rapture. I don’t know, perhaps I haven’t best articulated my problems with Bioshock, or why I hold such high hopes for Infinite. I have a feeling it has something to do with the steampunk-y city in the clouds. I’d also recommend you watch/read some interviews with Ken Levine. That man knows how to sell a game. That’s all for now, see you tomorrow!
mothzilla (or should that be mothra?)

A few things today. Firstly, I’m looking into buying a new mobile phone. My problem with my old one… well, I’ve run out of credit and don’t know where I’ve left the top-up card. I also want a phone on contract – part of my problem with the old one was that I used it next to never, for the simple reason that I didn’t want to waste my credit, or pay for more. I’m considering getting an HTC Wildfire, which my dad has. If anyone has any other suggestions, I’d be happy to hear them.
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