We are slowly – but surely – trying to get caught up with where we are in Nintendo Power magazine.
Read moreNextGen #32 (August 1997)


We are slowly – but surely – trying to get caught up with where we are in Nintendo Power magazine.
Read moreNaoki Urasawa’s Master Keaton is fascinating to read alongside his later series Monster. If Monster is an HBO prestige television series, Master Keaton feels much more like a syndicated TV series. Both are mysteries, but Monster pushes forward on a tightly plotted course toward its conclusion. At the same time, Master Keaton is willing to tell a collection of more episodic stories, often moving back to a particular status quo at the end of each episode. That’s not bad, it’s just a different approach.
Read moreWe have a bunch of goons trying to hold us in place while we’re attacked from the side.
Read moreWe demonstrate that having the High Ground is not a win condition.
Read moreI updated my Switch to an OLED model, around Christmas, and I figure now’s a pretty good time to give my thoughts on the upgrade, having had an opportunity to drive it around for a while.
Read moreWe clear out the opposition (and they still don’t drop weapons).
Read moreWe end up between a bunch of Fusiliers & some monsters.
Read moreThis month, David, Tora and I are taking a look at the first season & film of Thunderbolt Fantasy for Lunar New Year.
Read moreNaoki Urasawa’s Monster was the series that got him on my radar when I learned (10 years ago) that Guillermo Del Toro was trying to get a live-action adaptation of the series made for HBO (which ultimately fell through). That was enough to get me to hunt down the manga and slowly, over time, read it through my local library system (impacted by books falling out of and then back into print). Well, at long last, I’ve finished reading it.
Read moreWe finish the Ice Temple’s one fortress map.
Read moreWe move on to the Ice temple.
Read moreIn the wake of Wizards of the Coast announcing that they are revoking OGL V1.0a, there have been a bunch of hot takes that the OGL does not matter and it and other licenses never mattered – so I get into a few of the legal cases that made the OGL important, and which makes current open gaming licenses important.
Read moreWe make a new weapon – which Denam isn’t a high enough level for.
Read moreWe finish dealing with the minions and take on the Guardian directly.
Read moreOn the one hand, Lupin Zero is a show that doesn’t “need” to exist. We’ve had several TV specials and the series A Woman Called Fujiko Mine has covered some of this in the past. Lupin Zero tries to put their own spin on it by making Jigen & Lupin either late-Middle Schoolers or early High Schoolers, in a series set contemporaneously with when the manga started running.
Read moreMobile Suit Gundam: Witch from Mercury is an excellent example of how to handle shifting the tone of a series incredibly well. The show opens with a prologue episode set several years before the main body of the series, establishing what the Gundams are, and what the Gundam (or GUND-ARM) technology that powers them is based on – before setting up why the Gundams are rare and restricted, and how the main character’s Gundam, in particular, is going to be special in the series to come.
Read moreIt’s time to take on the Lightning Guardian.
Read moreWe end up having to bust out some cheats due to how the “remove debuff” spell works.
Read moreA little bit late, I have a rundown of 8 of my favorite shows from 2022, with two per season.
Read moreWe have our most hazardous map when it comes to knockback.
Read moreWe have a u-shaped layout for this map.
Read moreChainsaw Man is a manga series that I’d have to admit that I held off on reading because I’d read some of the early art and thought it was edgelord crap. However, I kept hearing that no, it’s actually that good. So, when the anime adaptation aired, I decided that this was what I needed to take the plunge and give it a shot. It turns out it’s actually that good. There will be some spoilers for the first season.
Read moreSeason 1 of Spy X Family aired as a split cour show – that is, we got 12 episodes, then a break, then the other 12 episodes of this “Season” – so it’s time to get into how the back half of the show turned out.
Read moreWe deal with another uphill climb-themed map.
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