Sunday, August 19, 2018

Life - The Rest of SeGE 2018


The second day of the 2018 Southeast Game Exchange concluded a few short hours ago. This time, I managed to make it at opening. There weren't as many people waiting outside to get in, but there was still a decent group of people. I saw a few random people that I remembered seeing the day before. Who knows, I might have run into them at my local video game store too.

The first panel was pretty nice - a guy came in and did two speedruns of Super Mario Bros. 3 for us: any% (no wrong warp), and plain ol' any%. The NWW run was basically what a lot of people had been doing for years - grabbing the two warp whistles and heading straight to World 8. The any% run proper was the cooler one. It features the same opening - grabbing the two whistles - but he then goes to World 7. Then there's some shenanigans with literally writing code in game, and he goes right to the credits. He even had some Pannenkoek-style diagrams to show what was going on under the hood.

Next, there was video game music trivia with some YouTubers, so naturally I had to go. The guy's channel is called NES Addict, so all the selections were from the console. There weren't very many "deep cuts," so I was able to recognize most of them, even if other people got their hands up first. The prizes were just silly McDonald's toys and their logo sticker - there was extra after, so I managed to snag a rare and desirable trophy.

The next next panel was "Reproduction vs Bootleg with BP Retro Power." I'd heard a lot of the stuff he talked about before - the difference was that he had examples of repro boards, among other things, to pass around. We even learned a few ways to tell fake stickers and/or boards from the real thing. It was cool.

After that, I stuck to the main floor for the rest of the day. One of the nice features was some free play consoles, so I tried out a little Cuphead co-op with a kid that was hanging around. We actually managed to get through a vegetable boss, but didn't get far with the next one. There was also Crazy Taxi and Spyro, among others.

My overall "haul" wasn't very big, but decent: an oversized Star Sapphire ring (because it was pink, you see), LEGO Batman 2: DC Super Heroes (PS Vita), Mega Man Legacy Collection (3DS), and Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon (3DS). I even managed to haggle the first and latter games down from $6 to $5, and $15 to $10, respectively. The nice thing about non-store vendors is that ability to try plying them towards the end of the day.

I'm upset at myself, though, because there was a Waluigi amiibo for a decent price, and by the time I got back to it, it was gone. I'm no collector, but that would have been a nice one for my collection (consisting of a retro Mario one.)

Overall, I had a great time at the Southeast Game Exchange, and the $15 two-day pass was definitely worth it. I look forward to next year, and maybe actually having a decent cosplay for once.

Maybe.

Saturday, August 18, 2018

Life - Southeast Game Exchange! Yay!


It's finally here! The Southeast Game Exchange started today (ending tomorrow). Thanks to some creative saving, trading in, and art commissioning, I'd managed to get a two-day pass in advance, as well as have some spending money. Part of me wishes it was just a LITTLE bit later so that I could have gotten my first paycheck, but it still worked out.

I must say, I think I liked the venue better than previously. It seemed like there was more room - although it was hard to tell when the corridors were full of people at the beginning. Also, I appreciate the reasonably priced concessions that were available. There were a lot of tables and video games to look at, as well as a few art tables. Part of me regrets not having a table this year, but it was nice to be free to walk around and attend the panels at my leisure.

Speaking of which, I went to two today: one by a voice actor and another by some cosplay ladies. Both were fairly entertaining and/or informative. I actually entered the cosplay contest in my green jacket, dress shirt, tie and glasses; it was probably too weak even for the 'novice' category. I'm definitely looking forward to the speedrunning panel tomorrow.

On the other hand, I did win an item; the door prize I won is an N64 game called Shadow Man. I've never heard of it, but it was nice to win something.

I regret being too intimidated to try playing the Mario Kart 8 Deluxe to try and beat the time best - it was one of the tournaments going on, and the only game there that I actually have any experience or skill in. Oh well! The time was pretty low anyway.

I never know what I want looking around a large collection of games like that; one thing'll remind me that I want a wired Xbox 360 controller, or an NES Mega Man will remind me that it'd be cool to find the Genesis collection one day. I think the key is to have a larger budget than I have right now, as well as a wish list and a pad of paper to write down if I want to compare prices. In fact, I can still do the latter.

Despite being terrible at them and not having my NES with me, I am enamored with the idea of getting an NES Mega Man game. Most of the ones I saw were around $30, which is almost all the money I have available. Maybe tomorrow I'll see something that I missed, or something that catches my eye more. We'll see.

I even got to see a college acquaintance!

It was a nice time.

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Image source: southeastgameexchange.com

Thursday, August 16, 2018

Computers - Owa Tase Lenu Biam

Just as with classical music, personal tastes go through phases or times of different emphasis. I find that personally, my YouTube watching habits shift every few years. In my later years of college and right after graduation, I watched a lot of Let's Plays and other video game videos. Then I shifted to cubing. And speedrunning. And somewhere in there, lots of cool video game covers. Metal versions of beloved chip tunes rock.

The latest addition to that smattering of topics is computer tech and news. In particular, the Canadian-based channel Linus Tech Tips. It's a bit of 'living vicariously through someone else' seeing some of their over-the-top, high-performance, high-price builds. So much technical language and part details get thrown around. Despite my ignorance of a lot of the things they talk about, I can still enjoy the videos and laugh at their shenanigans.

But that reminds me of how poor my computer knowledge has been (and still is, somewhat).

In high-school, I dared to teach a computer science class, despite my only experience being (1) time spent playing games, (2) maybe a little DOS and Windows 3.1 knowledge, and (3) currently enrolled (at that time) in the only college-level computer class I've taken.

Suffice to say, the class was mostly a disaster. I'd never attempted doing a class like that before, so the lesson plans were made fairly last-minute. And because I was also their contemporary, it was difficult for me to stay in charge of class, if at all. One thing I 'll grant myself was the hands-on that I did for the first class - bringing in an actual computer, and opening it up.

That is what really got me thinking about how little I knew or had done. I had a basic computer, so there was no talk of bigger, better power supplies. I hadn't done any serious gaming, so there wasn't any talk of different CPUs, GPUs, or overclocking. I didn't even know the name "PCIe" for the slots used to connect things to the motherboard until last year.

Watching the tech shows and putting together my desktop computer was a good learning experience. In addition to the usual adding of RAM, I finally got to install a graphics card into a computer, while being aware of what the thing does. I even ran a benchmark like a real techie!

Maybe I'll even get to overclock and/or liquid cool something one day!

Not any time soon though. It's too scary.