Oct. 15th, 2008

bluegargantua: (Default)
Hey,

In which Adjo confronts his own mortality...repeatedly. )

NOTES: Nothing makes you feel like a big man more than mowing down hordes of minions. Adjo could just wipe clumps of them off the map. But in numbers they can be a serious problem as Taras found out. Having magical implements and holy symbols that give you bonuses to hit and damage just like a magical sword helps a fighter is a really slick innovation that I’m looking forward to playing around with.

later
Tom
bluegargantua: (Default)
Hey,

In which Adjo confronts his own mortality...repeatedly. )

NOTES: Nothing makes you feel like a big man more than mowing down hordes of minions. Adjo could just wipe clumps of them off the map. But in numbers they can be a serious problem as Taras found out. Having magical implements and holy symbols that give you bonuses to hit and damage just like a magical sword helps a fighter is a really slick innovation that I’m looking forward to playing around with.

later
Tom
bluegargantua: (Default)
Hey,

So, there's this commercial on TV for a Star Wars Clone Trooper set. You get a Clone Trooper helmet and a rifle and the add has dozens of kids in the helmets running around with their rifles.

I've decided that this really bugs me. I know that in the prequels the clone troopers are sort of "good guys", but I don't know if I want kids being jazzed to be faceless super-soldiers. And in a larger sense I'm a bit saddened that grown-ups choose dressing up like storm troopers over Rebel troopers.

Are we always attracted to being one of the jack-booted minions of evil? It'll be interesting to see how fans react to the GI Joe movie. Will we see lots of blue-suited Cobra troopers or will people embrace the wide range of colorful Joes? Actually, if the movie stills are anything to go by, the Joes won't be as idiosyncratic as they were in the cartoons.

later
Tom

EDITED TO ADD: For the longest time. Possibly well after I saw the first three movies, I believed that Storm Troopers were just robots, not guys wearing armor. After all, they looked like robots and it seemed exactly what an evil empire would do. Luke and Han dressing up as troopers merely meant that they wore the exterior shells. These movies got a lot more violent once I realized there were people under there.
bluegargantua: (Default)
Hey,

So, there's this commercial on TV for a Star Wars Clone Trooper set. You get a Clone Trooper helmet and a rifle and the add has dozens of kids in the helmets running around with their rifles.

I've decided that this really bugs me. I know that in the prequels the clone troopers are sort of "good guys", but I don't know if I want kids being jazzed to be faceless super-soldiers. And in a larger sense I'm a bit saddened that grown-ups choose dressing up like storm troopers over Rebel troopers.

Are we always attracted to being one of the jack-booted minions of evil? It'll be interesting to see how fans react to the GI Joe movie. Will we see lots of blue-suited Cobra troopers or will people embrace the wide range of colorful Joes? Actually, if the movie stills are anything to go by, the Joes won't be as idiosyncratic as they were in the cartoons.

later
Tom

EDITED TO ADD: For the longest time. Possibly well after I saw the first three movies, I believed that Storm Troopers were just robots, not guys wearing armor. After all, they looked like robots and it seemed exactly what an evil empire would do. Luke and Han dressing up as troopers merely meant that they wore the exterior shells. These movies got a lot more violent once I realized there were people under there.

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