We now have to get through the handful of undead guards.
Read moreLet’s Play Tactics Ogre PSP: Ep. 239 – Undead Sentries I


It’s not October without a review of an Amicus film, and this year I’ve got another Amicus Anthology here – the one with the title that grabbed my attention the most – The House That Dripped Blood. Unfortunately, it’s also probably the most disappointing I’ve seen to date.
Read moreFor the Spooky Season, I decided to do something a little different from my usual string of horror films – having picked up the Vampire Hunter D audiobooks from Audible, and since I have a commute again, I decided to get started listening to those on my way to work – and having finished re-reading the first one, it would be appropriate to give my thoughts.
Read moreWe take on the mercenary who had been left in command of these undead.
Read moreWe move out of the lower area of the map, and start fighting the main enemy force.
Read moreWe have our second horror review for the month, with the 1960 film Jigoku.
Read moreWe not only face the undead, but also a new environmental hazard – toxic mold with a poison effect.
Read moreWe face another Necroprentice, who this time has raised the Dragon defenders of a razed village.
Read moreAnd now we move fully into the horror films with an ‘80s supernatural horror slasher film – Slaughterhouse Rock, with a bunch of college students being terrorized by a supernatural terror. Also, it’s scored by Mark Mothersbaugh and Devo, so it’s gotta be good – right? Right?
Read moreMoving belatedly into horror content for the month of October we have Call of the Night, the last of the anime series from the Summer 2022 season that I watched. Okay, frankly it’s not exactly horror – at least not until the back half of the series, but I would describe it as being somewhat horror adjacent. By which I mean, there are vampires.
Read moreWe finish taking down this patrol, leaving us to wonder about the “artifacts” they mentioned at the start of the fight.
Read moreOnce more, we get stuck in, with the Rune Fencers and Valkyries turning out to be rather squishy.
Read moreCome to Kumoricon 2022, Nov 11-13th: https://www.kumoricon.org/
Read moreWe encounter a group that hasn’t gotten the “We Didn’t do a Genocide” memo, and end up having to fight them.
Read moreWe clear the way, and do some fiddling with our main party members’ equipment loadout to use some items we picked up earlier.
Read moreThere are not a lot of anime series explicitly based off of tabletop RPGs – Record of Grancrest War, Record of Lodoss War, Rune Soldier Louie, and Night Wizard are some of the few that come directly to mind. None of those – I should mention, are particularly based heavily on Western tabletop RPGs (aside from Lodoss starting as a D&D campaign, before moving through Tunnels & Trolls and eventually becoming a Sword World campaign). So, it is impressive to see Cyberpunk: Edgerunners to be perhaps one of the first anime series to wear the western TRPG connection right on its sleeve. Yes, the show is tied in to CD Projekt Red’s video game – but right from the jump the series credits leads off with “Based on a world created by Mike Pondsmith” – showing how much of its influences it wears on its neon sleeve tattoo. Thankfully, Studio Trigger, who animated this, also does right by its source material far more Cyberpunk 2077 did from the jump.
Read moreLycoris Recoil is something of a modern retooling of a genre that we haven’t seen in a while – the Girls With Guns anime series. In particular, Lycoris Recoil in this case has a mix of “Cute Girls Doing Cute Things” as a recurring B-plot, with the conspiracy thriller elements covering the series A-plots, with action informed now not by the John Woo films of years past, but the modern John Wick films. All of this works tremendously well.
Read moreCistina demonstrates the power of the Dragoon class, as we join to battle with the monsters.
Read moreWe start to open the path to the tomb, and end up fighting a whole bunch of Dragons on the way.
Read moreIt’s time for the first of my two horror film reviews for this year, with a look at the 1959 version of Ghost of Yotsuya.
Read moreWe get these critters out of our way, and move on.
Read moreWe have another random encounter on our way to a side-quest.
Read moreEngage Kiss is one of the lighter fanservice series from the Summer 2022 season – there were much (*ahem*) harder shows (like Slave Harem in the Labyrinth of Another World – which was borderline smut – and also leaned into some of the grosser elements of the isekai genre) – but Engage Kiss was more palatable about it. Even more, A-1 Pictures paired some of that fan-service with some gorgeously animated fight scenes, making for a series that, while flawed, was really enjoyable to watch. Some spoilers below the cut
Read moreLies Sleeping, the seventh book in the Rivers of London series, left a lot of open questions about the world of the setting while it wrapped a bunch of the threads around the Faceless Man. Probably the biggest one was around the Sons of Weyland – a group of practitioners who were also powerful magical craftspeople – having made various battle staves, along with the magical wards in and around The Folly. On top of that – The October Man also built up some more groundwork for various magical practitioners and organizations outside of England. Well, Amongst Our Weapons decides to pick up both those threads and runs with them. There will be some minor spoilers below the cut.
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