Posts tagged Xbox 360
Your Favorite Video Game SUCKS! (according to some guy on YouTube)
Aug 4th
So remember the video we took of Joey Snackpants meeting Peter Cullen – the voice of Optimus Prime? (If not, click here.)
WELL, it seems someone is pissed at us for… well, I can’t be sure. I want to assume this is another “bot-tard” (a nickname someone fed me in a conversation) from all the BotCon/BotFAIL/Beast Wars Sucks/ShortPacked/AllSpark drama, but I can’t be sure. Here’s the comment:
Festress has made a comment on Joey Snackpants meets Peter Cullen, the voice of Optimus Pr- er… I mean Eeyore.:
lol Can’t wait to make fun of you at Gen Con. From one critic to another you can’t go around saying stuff of one form of entertainment suck when you have a huge list of games on your Xbox live account that suck balls. and really your mocking the guy who did the voice of Optimus Prime. Wow just wow. Yeah I get it that it’s lame he did the voice of Eeyore but he probably made more money doing that than you have in your life. Get ready for a list of games that do SUCK!!!!
Painful grammar aside, it could be that he is pissed at the fact that we gave Peter an Eeyore photo to sign – or (like I stated early) just another one of those Interweb kids from the OMGDRAMAZ of last month.
I took a look at my recent game play history just in case…
And to save the poor chap some trouble – Aside from being able to play Stan Bush’s The Touch, I kind of think Guitar Hero World Tour kind of sucks, too. See you at Gen Con!
The LiveJournal Project: March 2003
May 13th
When blogging first became popular on the Internet in the early 2000s the world wide web was still a bit rough around the edges. Options for building a blog were limited and in fandom circles (especially anime and cosplay) LiveJournal was THE place to start posting your thoughts, opinions and general nonsense.
There are hundreds of thousands (millions, even?) more people using the Internet then there were just five years ago. The world is full of users going gaga over Facebook right now and many of them (and by them, I mean “you”) are going through the growing curve that some of us already lived through seven or more years ago. For example:
- Facebook users now deal with who is and isn’t listed as a Friend. (This episode of South Park serves as proof. You should watch it if you haven’t yet.) Well, back in the before time, the actions of users was a source of constant drama on LJ (which is how we all referred to LiveJournal.) Wars were fought and words were typed in harsh half-assed grammar when someone took you off their Friends List or when you removed someone from yours. Seriously. You folks on Facebook have NO idea. You’d think the world was ending with how melodramatic it got at times. Think Degrassi Junior High but with fanboys acting like the overly emotional teenage girls… but with more drama. It was bad and yet oh, so fun.
- In the past year, Facebook added the ability to set the level of protection of who could and could not read your posts and updates. LiveJournal already had that. Custom lists were a great way to make Friends Only posts for groups of friends: locals, fan clubs, family, etc. So you see, the “new” technology is really kind of old.
- We posted the same “look at what I found on the Internet” crap on LiveJournal that everyone does today on Facebook: goofy pictures, photos from trips, etc. The main difference was we had to actually write code to get some of the things to show up in our posts. The other difference was that we (thankfully) didn’t have “Farmville.”
I started blogging in March of 2003 because my friends were asking me to and the posting of life updates was becoming the de facto form of quick communication. Smart phones weren’t a major thing yet, so the main way to “socially network” was to post something on your LJ and wait for responses (that you’d get email notifications of) throughout the day. My posts were regularly public and when I got on my soap box about something… damn. My friends and I quickly became amazed at how many people seemed to give a shit about my opinion.
Thus, “Tom Croom” the (in)famous convention personality was born. There’s even an Urban Dictionary entry about it. (I keep thinking that I should buy a mug with the definition on it.)
Fast forward to a couple of years ago: I jumped from LiveJournal over to Blogger (aka Blogspot) for a while after I bought the domain TomCroom.com. It was different than I was used to after the years on LJ. I had no list of readers that I could see in the form of a friends list; just an RSS feed that I hoped folks were reading.
After some advances in technology, I made the switch to WordPress about a year or so ago. I began by importing my Blogger posts and then going on as if nothing happened. A couple of months back, though, I realized that it made sense to have all of my silly Internet blogging history in one place. I discovered that WordPress could, in fact, import from LiveJournal.
SO – I have imported my entire LiveJournal which, for the record, took a LONG time. Since many of the posts were “friends only” and not for public consumption, I have password protected them. I am, though, going back to the beginning and will (from time to time) read a month’s worth of entries to tag and unlock them. It’s not going to happen overnight, but I’m sure there’s some funny stuff hiding out there worth a chuckle including the oft sought “Buffy the Vampire Slayer took its plot from Knight Rider” post.
Nothing that exciting yet, but here are the March 2003 posts:
- Wow… I feel so “part of the crowd” now!
(NOTE: I’ll add fun notes as I go to some of these posts. This is my very first blog post and it’s extremely unspectacular to the point of bordering on embarrassing. It’s fun to notice, though, that out of the four replies, two of the LJs are deleted and the other two haven’t been updated in over a year.) - Entry Number Two…
(NOTE: I mention adding pictures. Since bandwidth was still expensive back then, you were limited to three small avatar pictures to represent you on posts and replies. Today, I use Gravatar when I universally post on the Internet.) - .hack: INFECTION
(NOTE: These early ones are fun! I make mention of my PS2 and Xbox. For the record, the “rule” still applies to my PS3 and Xbox 360 even though I just use Gamefly. LOL)
CONCLUDED #1: Bioshock 2
May 10th
So there are a few stories I’ve mentioned on my blog which have concluded recently (but) I’ve been too busy to share. This week, though, I am intent on passing along these quirky little tidbits if it kills me. The fact that I went to bed last night at some ridiculous hour could very well contribute to my expiring while typing… so don’t think that last comment was a joke. Hence the segue into my first story (which is actually a very VERY recent conclusion to something):
Joey Snackpants turned me on to Gamefly earlier this year – and I’m happy to report that they are well worth the cash. I have zipped through a number of games recently including Uncharted 2: Among Thieves on the PS3 and Bioshock 2 for the XBox 360. Had I bought just those two games and solved them, I would have dropped somewhere to the tune of about $120. That’s more than 60% of what I pay for my annual Gamefly membership. In short: GREAT WAY TO SAY MONEY.
So why am I taking the time to write about Bioshock 2 and not Uncharted 2? Well, Uncharted 2 was a great game and I had a blast playing it. It was very pretty in hi-def on the 56 inch TV and my wife enjoyed watching it being played (because, as all the reviews have said, it feels like you are watching a movie.) It is a game truly worthy of your time if you have a PS3. Bioshock 2, though, has some very strong ties to a book I read this year: Atlas Shrugged.
Let’s get something out of the way: I never played the first Bioshock. I had it queued to ship before Bioshock 2, but Gamefly sent part two first so I just ran with it. I took the time to read the story online so that I could figure out what was going on, and it seems (much like Uncharted 2) like a very “cinematic” story.
I had heard about the links to Atlas Shrugged, but some of it was MUCH closer that I was expecting. Andrew Ryan is a failed John Galt – and the tour of his museum rings eerily identical to the famed radio speech that John makes in the book. There are other smaller nods, too, including the splicers constantly referring to the “dog eat dog” mentality, a business act that (in the book) sets up the proverbial beginning of the end to the machine of the world.
Recent world events prompted me to read Atlas Shrugged. If popular media is now also looking towards the book for source material, it makes you wonder how close our society is really getting to the “fictional” world that Ayn Rand shared back in the lated fifties.
(Insert creepy “something to think about” music here.)
My grandmother…
Feb 22nd
This past weekend, I made the drive down to Miami, Florida to do some work for the upcoming Florida Supercon convention. For those of you that know me well, my schedule is a nonstop run from my day job to running my hobby/business to working any one of a dozen creative projects. On rare occasions, though, the timing of things works out to my benefit and I am blessed with some time to see people I wish I could see more often.
One of those individuals in my grandmother.
She lives in a retirement community in South Florida and I was able to stop in and see her last Saturday. You wouldn’t believe it from the photo, but she’s 87 years old – but to me she looks the same as I remember her twenty years ago. It was wonderful to see her again.
That said – my 2 PM in Miami ran to until MUCH later than originally planned and I wound up getting home at around 4 AM the next morning. Sunday was spent sleeping, eating, playing a little bit of XBox 360 and then more sleep. This week is going to be pretty busy – so don’t expect much out of me except for the random “tweet”.
March, though, should be a month of more zaniness and announcements. Stay tuned.
So I spent the past 48 hours…
Jan 3rd
Slacking.
I tend to be “on” all the time. Always “on” a project on “on” the job with something I am working on “on” my mind. Due to my workaholic nature, though, it is very hard to turn things off when I want to. The past two days were a stint at being rebellious… I did little more than play video games and watch TV.
The Good? I had fun with my wife. She and I played Resident Evil 5 co-op mode. This was a blast since (for Christmas) we go a second Xbox 360. Now we can play in the living room (56 inch 1080p DLP) and the bedroom (42 inch 1080p LCD) against each other while playing video games. In games where Shannon tends to get upset (i.e. anything that is not a puzzle game) she tends to hit the person playing next to her and yell a lot. My bruise-free arm rejoiced in the separate room gaming.
We also played The Beatles: Rock Band – which was fun for me and REALLY fun for her. She’s a true Beatles fan through an though. I like the band and the music, but I was never really into The Beatles. By the end of the night, though, my voice was shot from singing songs I didn’t know they had sung.
The Bad? I came home Thursday night with one of my infamous lists that I tend to write of things to get done over the weekend. I have, as of this morning, completed 2 of the 17 things I wrote out. That means that I have today/tonight to get the rest done.
I got up at 8:00 AM this morning, took a shower, got dressed, let the dog out, and spent a couple of hours working on one of my consulting gigs. Shannon (who could sleep through an earthquake) is still napping off a night of sixties music and drumming mayhem.
And so it goes.
Thought Of The Day, January 1, 2010…
Jan 1st
I really wish I could get XBox to play music while I play Resident Evil 5 online against people. Nothing says pop culture like the “Glee” soundtrack while blasting the ever living shit out of zombies.
Just sayin’




