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Podcast: CCRC34: Dungeons & Dragons S1E5

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CCRC34

Tonight your hosts, Hugh of HughJODonnell.com, Rich the Time Traveler, Opopanax, and Jurd, wonder just who’s running this game anyhow

Click HERE to listen to the commentary

And HERE to watch along on Youtube!

Chrononaut Cinema Reviews is presented by http://skinner.fm and http://hughjodonnell.com, and is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.

Thanks for listening to this podcast! If you enjoyed it, please share it! You can also support Hugh on Patreon!

 

Podcast: Nostalgia Pilots Episode 11

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Welcome to Nostalgia Pilots! This week, Hugh, Jurd, and Jason watch Gundam Wing Episode 11: “The Whereabouts of Happiness!”

Click HERE to listen!

In this episode: Lady Une sashays into the most unlikely of assassination attempts, Zechs demonstrates his keen understanding of plot, and Qatre and Duo chill in a quiet desert town. Plus: Relena gives dubious fashion advice, and everybody in this party is an old creep.

If you’re in the US, you can watch along on Crunchyroll!

Next week, Wu-Fei is great at boats!

Hugh Likes Comics: Top Comics of 2017

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It certainly has been a year of comics. As with a lot of media this year, the conversation in comics has felt dominated by the twin specters of Politics and Scandal. But while the Overton Window gets pulled around by various groups, I’ve come to understand better what I love about the medium. I love comics that take risks. I love comics that reinvent old concepts and characters in exciting and surprising ways. And I love comics that are unafraid of the great melding of genres and tropes that the medium allows. Originally, this was only going to be a Top Five list. But some jerk on the internet opened their mouths about how ‘there weren’t ten good comics this year,’ and now I’m angry. This is what you get for looking at social media. And here are my TEN favorite comics from 2017:

The Backstagers
Written by James Tynion IV
Drawn by Rian Sygh
Published by Boom!

Backstagers

A wonderful comic of age comic about the stage crew at an all-boys high school, and the magical, dangerous world behind the stage. As a nerdy kid in black who ran a spotlight in his time, this really connected with me. It’s Resonant, touching, and adorably cute.

Black Bolt
Written by Saladin Ahmed
Drawn by Christian Ward
Published by Marvel Comics.

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Black Bolt was never a character I felt much about in comics. As the king of the Inhumans, he always felt like a political part of the universe rather than an interesting character. But by striping him down to his lowest point and throwing him in space prison, Ahmed and Ward have lit a spark under him, and put him in one of the most visually striking comics of the year.

Dark Knights: Metal
Written by Scott Snyder
Drawn by Greg Capullo
Published by DC Comics

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This is another comic that dredges up the weird bits of superhero continuity and welds them together into something strange, exciting, and delightful by turns. By truly embracing METAL, as in heavy metal aesthetics, the grim nightmare batman antagonists are given an energy and sense of album-cover awesomeness that these comics tend to eschew in attempt to lend their darkness unnecessary gravitas. Plus, this is a series where Batman tries to time travel with an evil baby, so it’s got that going for it.

Helena Crash
Written by Fabian Rangel Jr
Drawn by Warwick Johnson Cadwell
Published by IDW

Helena Crash

An all-ages heist adventure in a dystopian future where coffee is illegal. This comic is a non-stop action story with all the energy and inventive art stylings of the margins of a middleschool composition notebook. Helena’s adventures are silly, fun, and frantic. The best kind of escapism.

Kim & Kim: Love is a Battlefield

Written by Magdalene Visaggio
Drawn by Eva Cabrera
Published by Black Mask

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I slept on the first volume of Kim and Kim, and boy was I missing out! This comic is a constant delight of genre mishmash. Following the titular Interdimentional bounty hunters as they chase the big score and deal with their bad decisions with a combination of hitting people with guitars, amateur necromancy, and the occasional giant robot before hitting the club to do it all over again. Fun isn’t just for kids anymore.

Made Men
Written by Paul Tobin
Drawn by Arjuna Susini
Published by Oni Press

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Another genre mashup, Made Men takes a gritty noir revenge story and injects a whole bunch of Universal Horror. When a swat team gets taken down in a surprise hit, the last surviving member, Jutte Frankenstein, returns to the family manor in Europe to literally get them back together and get revenge. It’s a really great twist on both concepts.

Mister Miracle
Written by Tom King
Drawn by Mitch Gerards
Published by DC Comics

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This intense, unrelenting, and unflinching look at depression and mental health is heavy but beautiful. It’s also the best take on the fourth world stories since Kirby. It’s not always easy, but it is absolutely brilliant.

Swordquest
Written by Chad Bowers and Chris Sims
Drawn by Ghostwriter X
Published by Dynamite

swordquest

The creative team of Down Set Fight reunites for a tie-in comic for an unfinished Atari game. But this canny story finds the magic in things we loved as children, even if we see their flaws as adults. This is a story about unfinished business, facing regret, and learning that it’s never too late for an adventure.

The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl
Written by Ryan North
Drawn by Erica Henderson
Published by Marvel Comics

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This year Squirrel Girl flew to the Savage Land to save an endangered biome with computer science and ended up fight a T-rex version of Ultron. I feel like I should just put ‘nuf said and end here, but Squirrel Girl has been a consistently charming, fun, and witty comic that if you aren’t reading it, I don’t know what to tell you.

The Unstoppable Wasp
Written by Jeremy Whitley
Drawn by Elsa Charretier
Published by Marvel Comics

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Much like Black Bolt, Unstoppable Wasp brings a fresh take on an older Marvel hero that I never much cared for. But giving the suit to bubbly survivor and girl genius Nadia is a masterstroke. It is unfortunate that Marvel didn’t give this book more of a push, because it is a fantastic comic about Science, Friendship, and escaping abuse.

 

2017 Roundup

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Hello readers!
We’re finally finished with2017! And of course, it has been a tumultuous year. As is my yearly tradition, I’m looking back at what I accomplished this year, and for all the pain, setbacks, and anxiety, I did pretty well.
On the day job front, I started a new job in January, and changed positions in May. I also started Court Reporting school, and have been doing well, although practice doesn’t leave me quite as much time as I would like.
Even so, I managed to produce a real-live physical book this year, which I hand-sold at a big group table at Balticon. I also managed to produce a few short stories and flash pieces that I’m quite proud of, and that you can check out over on my Patreon.
In terms of podcasting work, this was the year that I finally shut the doors on The Way of the Buffalo podcast. With everything else on my plate, I had to choose something to give up in order to keep my sanity, and I found I wasn’t getting any joy from it. I’m still really proud of the podcast, and learned a lot doing it. Maybe when I have more free time something new will come out with the same name, but that is well ahead of things.
This year I did start producing Nostalgia Pilots, a Gundam Wing rewatch podcast I’m doing with some friends, and that has been much more fun. I’ve had the plan for a show like this sitting in my head for a long while, and I am glad to finally have it off the ground. We’re all fitting it in around other projects and busy schedules, but I’m happy with the twelve episodes we released in 2017, and there is much more to come.
The other bit of exciting audio news is that we launched a version of The Dark Wife Audiobook on Audible! It has been doing quite well, and is even included in their new Romance Package service.
As for the final stats for the Page of Awesome, here’s how things broke down:
2017:
Podcasts: 45/50
Short Fiction Submissions: 46/50
Blog Posts: 101/100
Patreon Posts: 79/75
Wattpad Posts: 119/200
Self-Published ebooks: 1/5
I missed my marks for podcasts and short fiction, but came very close, with a big push of productivity in the fall. I did better with Patreon and Blog posts, but fell short on Wattpad. Wattpad has been making me stretch to create covers for my posts there, so I hope to do better this year.
I have some exciting plans for 2018, including more ebooks and launching a new mailing list. I hope you stick with me, and I am as ever grateful for your support.
On a snowy first night of 2018,
Hugh J. O’Donnell

Podcast CCRC33: Rugrats Chanukah

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Tonight your hosts, Hugh of HughJODonnell.com, Rich the Time Traveler, Opopanax, and Jurd, take in one of the few classic Hanukkah TV specials.

Click HERE to listen

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And HERE to watch along!

Chrononaut Cinema Reviews is presented by http://skinner.fm and http://hughjodonnell.com, and is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.

Podcast: CCRC32-Dungeons & Dragons S1E4

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Tonight your hosts, Hugh, Rich the Time Traveler, Opopanax, and Jurd, enter the Valley of the Unicorns.

Click HERE to listen!

And HERE to watch along on Youtube!

Chrononaut Cinema Reviews is presented by http://skinner.fm and http://hughjodonnell.com, and is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.

This podcast was originally released on December 14, 2017.

Podcast: Nostalgia Pilots 10: Lady Une’s Murder Superbowl

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Welcome to Nostalgia Pilots! In this episode, Hugh, Jason and Jurd discuss Gundam Wing Episode Ten: “Heero, Distracted by Defeat!”
Click HERE to listen!
In which Treize and Zechs finally get some time alone together, Lady Une has a murder-boner for the whole world, and Duo suplexes a train.
Plus, Doctor J still leads with the claw, and Trowa doesn’t have a phone, but if you must call him, ring the circus.
Oh, and Heero blew himself up, but I’m sure he’s fine.
Want to watch along with the Nostalgia Pilots? You can watch Gundam Wing episodes for free online via Crunchy Roll!

Hugh Likes Video Games: Arc The Lad

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Arc The Lad
Published by Working Designs
Played on PS Vita

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The Skinny: An early PS1-era Tactical RPG, this quick and easy game is a far cry from later entries, but a good introduction to the sub-genre for new players.

Arc The Lad is something of a Playstation oddity. An early release for the Playstation in Japan, it never saw release in the United States until 2002 as a part of the Arc The Lad Collection. This is a shame, because it is at least trying something innovative, but games like Final Fantasy Tactics had already surpassed it when it was released in the west.
The game follows eponymous hero Arc and his allies as they searches for a, well an ark containing the power to either cause or prevent the end of the world. It’s all fairly stock fantasy RPG stuff, but it hits all the bases well. Being from the early days of the PS1, it uses 16-bit sprites with a few shiny polygonal effects thrown in here and there. Aside from a few short FMV transitions, Arc The Lad feels like it could have been a Super Nintendo release.
The combat is all turn-based strategy with a three-quarters overhead perspective. Character speed determines order, and each character levels up individually. This works out mostly well, but by the end of the game, my faster characters were many levels ahead of the slower ones. The overall campaign is short, but there are little side-quests to do in each town that pad out the length, including a huge multi-floor dungeon that has to be completed in one go. These aspects don’t feel particularly groundbreaking, but they’re handled well enough.
What I find most interesting about the game might be its biggest flaw. This is a short game, taking only about ten hours to complete everything. It also ends on a cliffhanger. The ancient evil returns, and Arc is powered up to face it, but we’re left with our heroes splitting up and preparing rather than getting that final dungeon. Now that the series is finished, that break feels more like the first part of a fantasy trilogy than a complete game, but I imagine the disappointment of getting merely a chapter rather than a full game. It feels like an interesting design choice today, though, and the cheaper price for the game on the Playstation store takes away the sting a bit.
Arc The Lad is an interesting little corner of video game history. It is available digitally for PS3 and PS Vita from the Playstation store. If you’re a hardcore collector and have $150 to spare, you could also hunt down the original PS1 collection.

Thanks for reading this review! If you enjoyed it, please share it! You can also support me on Patreon if you don’t mind paying an extra fee!

Podcast: CCR40: The Phantom of the Opera (1925)

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The Chrononauts descend to the catacombs beneath the Paris Opera house and go horseback riding with Erik in this silent horror classic.

Click HERE to listen to the podcast!

and HERE to watch the movie on Youtube!

Chrononaut Cinema Reviews is presented by http://skinner.fm and http://hughjodonnell.com, and is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.

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Fiction: The Halloween Gig

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“What the p’nong is this?” I said, slamming the plastic crate onto polished a synthsteel table. Amy, the bartender, turned around from where she was hanging some kind of banner.
“It’s your costume for tonight, sweetie.” She went back to the hanging, a pattern of orange circles, white ovals, and black crescents, each with a crude printed face. The shapes vibrated gently in station gravity.
“Costume for what?” I picked up the box with my lower arms and riffled through it with my upper ones. It was a length of cheap black plasticloth. I examined it for a minute before figuring out it was a sort of cloak, with holes for my head and all six appendages. The sleeves were all tattered and trailing, and the hood was so deep my head wouldn’t even be visible. It seemed a terrible choice for a musician.
“It’s Halloween, silly!” She didn’t even turn this time. “You agreed to play holidays.”
“Proper holidays,” I said, grimacing. “The Eclipse Festival, Harmonics Night, Harvest of Poetry.” I knew I was being petulant, but I made an attempt. Humans expected it from their musicians.
“It’s a big party night on Earth, we’re expecting a lot of traffic, so wear the costume.” That was when I noticed her face paint. It was a vivid shade of green. She was wearing an impractical black gown instead of her usual ship suit. A pointed black hat rested on the bar.
“Then why haven’t you cleaned properly?” I asked, taking in the room for the first time. The counters and corners were covered with wispy strands of white plant fiber. The stage was dusty, and the edifice of a ruin had been left there.
“Those are decorations, Ch’Brun.”
“They’re unsettling.”
“I was going for spooky.”
“Just what kind of holiday is this?” I asked. My elders thought I was crazy to run off to human space chasing gigs. Sometimes I agreed with them.
“For some humans, it’s a day of remembrance for the dead, but for others it’s a day for dressing up, eating candy, and getting scared.”
“Wait, your civilization frightens itself for fun?” I wasn’t surprised. Humanity seemed to have a collective fetish for destructive behavior. But since I was already working in an establishment that served weak poison as a recreational activity, this didn’t seem out of character for the species. “That’s so human. Give me a few standard hours to research and I’ll see what I can do.”
A few hours later, I took the stage. It was dark, it was grimy, and the house was full, just as she said. There were humans in all kinds of costumes, mostly mythological archetypes like Amy’s witch and a variety of living corpses. Humans have a ton of hangups about death, I guess. There were also costumes based on characters from popular entertainment programs, historical figures, and even elaborate jokes. It was all very weird, but it made a kind of sense. The humans came from a world with only one sun, which meant they had as much darkness as light. They lived in a world that developed scientific understanding of the universe relatively late, and was delayed by a few notable collapses of civilization. They had a talent for stories. So they found ways to laugh at the darkness. They practiced scaring themselves so they wouldn’t be afraid.
I fluttered my robe dramatically as I sat down on the fake step and pulled out my instrument. It was a fretted, stringed instrument similar to human ones, but it had multiple resonating chambers and was meant to be played with all six hands. Amy nick-named it the Ultra-Cello, and it kind of stuck, although my music teacher back home would probably have fits if they heard. In deference to the holiday, I had placed a representation of a human skull over the pegbox.
I flourished my arms, waiting for silence, then began to perform an ancient traditional hymn I discovered in my afternoon’s research. I sang out, a voice shouting against the darkness. The crowd cheered in recognition and glee, and sang along with religious enthusiasm.
“I was working in the lab late one night…”

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Cover photo by Derek Hatfield, used under a Creative Commons, Attribution license.

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