Leading into the first of the next two DLC missions, G-Hound prepares to seize the Colony Laser.
Let’s Play Super Robot Wars V Part 167: Would You Trust These Men With a Colony Laser?
Leading into the first of the next two DLC missions, G-Hound prepares to seize the Colony Laser.
Rise of the Batmen is something of a launch for a new status quo for Detective Comics in the post Rebirth DCU. Someone is putting together a literal army of Batmen – a black-ops team with skills comparable to members of the Bat-Family, except they’re willing to use deadly force. So, Batman puts together his own team to stop them. Read more
I’m adding the “Rebirth” tag to the title of this comic to distinguish it from the initial post Flashpoint relaunch. of the Batman books. Tonally, the book is interesting, in terms of how the book openly embraces the concept of the Bat Family (by contrast with the last Batman graphic novel I reviewed), while also escalating the power level of superheroism in Gotham City.
We chat with Kamille about the aftermath of his fight, and we get some upgrades installed on the Ples’ mobile suits.
With Humanity’s fate in the stars on the line, we press the attack against Full Frontal. Read more
A whole bunch of sequels this issue, with Mortal Kombat II, Super Bomberman II, and Pocky and Rocky 2.
Just when you thought this fight was over with, Neo Zeon and Full Frontal show up, and we learn what their end-game is. Read more
We continue taking on G-Hound, and finally take on their two Boss mechs head-to-head.
As I mentioned in my overall review of the Golden Week arc, that was an arc that was begging to be animated, and sadly was not. It also thoroughly smashed the existing status quo with a literal and metaphorical nutcracker, with Nagi giving up her fortune and her house to save Hayate.
There comes a point in any manga where the status quo, as it exists, can no longer stand. Where if things stay as they are, the work will stagnate. In Battle Angel Alita, it is in the leadup to the Motorball arc. In Hayate the Combat Butler, that arc is the Golden Week arc.
We’re under attack by G-Hound, and some of their number have unfinished business with Kamille and Banagher. Read more
We get up to speed on what Inez Fressange has been up to since the end of Martian Successor Nadesico.
In this episode (with its light novel adaptation length title), I give some recommendations for tabletop RPGs based on various video games and anime from the last year.
Just blowing up the colony from the inside won’t be enough – it’s up to a desperate gamble by Banagher to save the world. Read more
We finish off the combined Embryo/Gamillan/Amalgam forces so we can stop the colony. Read more
Oriental Adventures was a sourcebook for AD&D 1st edition that sort of re-imagined and re-interpreted the game to fit a setting inspired by various stripes of Asian cinema, with varying degrees of success. However, two things that book did moderately well was to present a setting in microcosm that used the mechanics and the book’s non-weapon proficiency system. What it didn’t do well was to create classes and races that were conducive for adventuring, and it didn’t create a setting that a standard adventuring party could be inserted into.
When it comes to horror and documentaries, in the sense of horror films that are deliberately planned to be documentaries, you have two main stripes represented by two big names. On one hand, you have Legend of Boggy Creek, a historical reenactment heavy documentary about a Texarkana cryptid that effectively recounts a variety of local myths and legends in an uncritical manner. On the other hand, there’s Haxan, the film I’m covering today, which is not only a very early work in the documentary genre, it’s also a work that is also very critical of historical accounts of witchcraft.
We continue pushing the attack on Amalgam and Embryo’s forces. Read more
Londo Bell continues their counter-attack, but now with some old friends fighting on the side of the enemy. Read more
I’ve got a short story collection this month.
Londo Bell launches their counterattack against Neo Zeon and the Gamillan’s Colony Drop. Read more
We see the forces behind Ghuli – and they’re currently waiting on the sidelines to see how things pan out. Read more
Roger Corman is widely recognized as a producer who launched the careers of numerous writers, actors, and future directors. He’s also widely recognized as a producer who churned out numerous exploitation films of a wide variety of stripes almost like clockwork, on the cheap, and without much concern about the craft.
This leads to the problems with Humanoids from the Deep. Part of this film is a very well done horror creature feature, with incredibly suspensefully shot sequences, and is a film that is willing to straight up kill off a kid and several dogs very early in the film. It’s also a film where Roger Corman decided to fire the film’s original director, Barbara Peeters, because he wanted the film’s rape scenes to be more explicit – so he handed those sequences off to the second unit director, and the film is lesser because of this. Read more
With the release of Deadpool 2 this past year, a whole new range of audiences were introduced to Wade Wilson’s grumpy-Gus soldier from the future buddy, Nathan Christopher Askani Summers, aka Cable. Consequently, Marvel also put out a new Cable book, with a mid-volume shift in the numbering to line up with Cable Vol. 1’s numbering. However, what it was not was a buddy-book with Deadpool, Cable was at the fore of this story. So, the question is, what kind of story does the book tell?