Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Election Day 2024

 


Let's not do this again.

Who the fuck thought we'd be back here again, eh? I had a sneaking suspicion back in 2020 when the Biden blowout didn't quite materialize. Ol' Donnie Shitbritches has an iron grip around the throat of the GOP, despite having stubby, tiny baby hands. Republicans are all too eager to embrace a future of 10 percent tarrifs (which we'll have to pay--that's how tariffs work!) and institutional destruction. You guys like Elon Musk? You know, the richest motherfucker on the planet, who is mainly famous for fucking up Twitter (reducing their value by 80 percent) and having the brains of a teenage edgelord? Trump wants to put that guy in charge of gutting the government. Lest you think that a good thing, Elon promises "temporary hardship" for Americans if Trump gets reelected. That's the world's richest man saying he's going to fuck up the economy to the detriment of most Americans. This is the sort of headline that should influence the average voter, but if you're on the Trump train still, after he tried to overthrow the government, mishandled the Covid pandemic, and became a convicted felon and sex offender, well then hell, brother, what more can I say? Did you know that he wants to put former NFL player Hershel Walker, who has beans for brains, in charge of missile defense? What about the fact that he wants to shoot his most prominent critics? You could roll the dice and pull a random crackhead off the street, and he would likely have a stronger moral fiber than Donald Trump. A whopping 24 figures who worked in the first Trump administration, including his Vice President, Attorney General, and Secretary of Defense (Mike Pence, Bill Barr, and James Mattis) refuse to endorse him, because they have first-hand experience with his total incompetence. These are hardcore Republican bigwigs, not just low-level aids. The biggest danger of a second Trump presidency is that all the adults have left the room, having been unceremoniously kicked out of the party. White supremacists like Stephen Miller and Steve Bannon will run the show, along with billionaires like Musk.

Aren't you tired of hearing about this horrible man? Do you not regret his specter hanging over all of our lives? Donald Trump should've been known mainly for his cameo in Home Alone 2, or maybe his Wrestlemania appearance. He should've been laughed at for his stupid toupee, or his crass boorishness. Trump the buffoon, Trump the failed businessman, Trump the laughing stock of the eighties. Trump the President of the United States? What sort of nightmare is this? They modeled Biff from Back to the Future off this motherfucker. Surely this isn't the asshole who destroys our democracy?

Fuck this asshole. Come on, America. Let's send him back to the filthy gutter of D-list celebrity from whence he came. That, or prison.  

Monday, November 4, 2024

Video Game Review: Ion Fury

 

The Build Engine has never looked so good.

Ion Fury is a 2019 first person shooter developed by Voidpoint and published by 3d Realms, the latter of which I wasn't aware was still around. 3D Realms was known mainly for Duke Nukem 3D, one of the classic shooters of the 90s, and a game that I somehow have never played. Ion Fury is a spiritual successor, as far as I can tell. There's a ton of interactivity in the levels, from destructible fire extinguishers that blow chunks out of the walks, to being able to consume fast food lying around or throw a dart stuck on a board at enemies. Of course, a computer from the 90's would never be able to run this game, with its updated engine. There are huge open spaces and an incredible amount of environmental detail that far eclipses anything from the past era of 2.5D shooters. Ion Fury really is a gorgeous-looking game, and its aesthetic is ruined techno-dystopia and urban decay, similar to Robocop. You play as Shelly "Bombshell" Harrison, a wisecracking warrior mowing down cybernetic monsters while trying to apprehend Dr. Jadus Heskel, who resembles Dr. Kleiner from Half-Life. Ion Fury has many references to shooters of yore; its levels are riddled with air ducts like in Deus Ex, while its shotgun-wielding transhumanist enemy looks almost exactly like a Combine soldier. The guns themselves feel excellent--the penetrator, a shotgun/grenade launcher, absolutely annihilates enemies, transforming them into squishy gibs. The loverboy, Shelly's revolver, has a handy auto-aim secondary fire that's always satisfying to use. A pair of uzi machine guns that fire incendiary rounds are also a mainstay, along with a crossbow that really needs a scope. Bowling balls, little rolling grenades, are great fun for taking out large groups of enemies. A chaingun that never has enough ammo, and another throwable explosive called the clusterpuck finishes the arsenal. Although very solid, Ion Fury really misses a couple unique weapons, like Unreal's razorjack or Half-Life's snarks. Enemy variety is also poor. You'll be destroying the same three basic transhumanist enemies for most of the runtime, along with little cyborg spiders that really suck to hit, due to the Build Engine's difficulties with perspective and aiming. There are also some other enemies that the game adds during its runtime to mix things up, but you'll always be battling the aforementioned foes, which gets a little dull. The level design is usually pretty good, with the exception of a mid-game slump that has you wandering around underground. Figuring out where to go can be a challenge, and requires you to get into that retro-shooter mindset. Hunting down keys and remembering where locked doors are is essential. Also don't forget that your electro-baton, your basic melee weapon, can restart generators, which is required for progression. 

 

Difficulty is a complex balance in shooters. On one hand, you don't want a game free of challenge. On the other, you don't want to be frequently banging your head against the wall as you struggle to progress. Most of the time, you have enough ammo and health on regular difficulty in Ion Fury. But there are periods where you're down to a smidge of health and you can't find any ammo for your shotgun. Scrounging the levels for secrets is almost required, and while there are a lot of them, I definitely was frustrated on occasion. I originally purchased Ion Fury a couple years ago and bounced off of it. I'm glad I gave it another shot, but I would only recommend it to boomer shooter fans, which are, after all, its main audience. If you haven't played through an old shooter like say, Dark Forces Remastered, in a while, then you may find yourself stumped by the level design and difficulty. But there is a lot to appreciate here, from the complex level design to the gorgeous dystopian aesthetic to the solid old school shooting. So check out Ion Fury if you are a boomer shooter fan only.

One other note: Shelly has constant one-liners that fucking drive me crazy. "Oh my god, the quarterback is toast!" "Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto!" "Dodge this!" You'll hear these about a million times, and I know the fun is supposed to be tongue in cheek, but man, this ain't no Bulletstorm or even Atomic "choke on this and die, you fat turd!" Heart.









 

Friday, November 1, 2024

Bad Poetry: Regret

 

Regret

is drinking

a third

of a bottle

of Four Roses

bourbon

and then playing

video games

for a few hours

into the evening

and then having

your eight-year old

wake you up

with an electronic

pop-it toy

before 6:30

in the morning,

and later having

to clean up

dog poop

in the house

because

the goddamn dog

didn’t poop outside,

so you take it

out through the abandoned

streets of downtown Aurora

sprinting in the cold

marveling at the lack

of people

of the quiet

the silence

and stillness

of dark morn.

What did I say

about regret?

I’ve already forgotten it

and I’m ready

to do it again.


Monday, October 28, 2024

New Music: Bad Circuitry

 

A riff-based funky rocker with me doing my best David Byrne impersonation. Another oldie that's sat on the back burner for ages. One day I will record every song I've ever written to my satisfaction.

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Meet the Deplorables, The Next Generation


Pete "Pillow" Davidson, 35 years old, employed at a odor-eater distributor where he sometimes makes urinal cakes disappear into his armpits.

Current whereabouts: Staring at 45 second videos on his phone while he sits on the front porch of his trailer eating an entire bag of oatmeal creme pies.

Why he's voting for Trump: IMMIGRATION! They're coming over the boarder like zombies of death! I get tired of seein' em at the Mexican restaurant. Though I suppose they oughta have Mexicans at a Mexican restaurant. I just wanna see less of them. Also, Trump won't make me pay my child support, which I haven't been paying. When the hardworking, rural people of this country rise up, all them richies in DC and NEW YORK CITY will have to pay. WE MAKE YOUR FOOD. I MAKE YOUR URINAL CAKES. Kinda hard to pee in a toilet without a urinal cake, ain't it? FUCKING LIBTARDS WILL GET WHATS COMMING TO THEM!


Billy Richards, 49 years old, owner of a HVAC business that's constantly telling customers that their system is on the brink of irrevocable, catastrophic collapse.

Current whereabouts: Sitting at home on his couch, tweaking his Tinder profile while his wife toils in the kitchen.

Why he's voting for Trump: Look man, eggs shouldn't cost ten dollars at the grocery store. Gas shouldn't be five dollars a gallon. And frankly, I don't give a shit what happens to Ukraine. Where's that at? Fucking Asia? Americans care about meat and potatoes issues, like how many black people are allowed on the street after dusk. You think I want my daughter to get an abortion? If she gets knocked up, she's out on the street, I don't give a fuck. Tilly, where the hell's my dinner at? Jesus fucking Christ, she's getting fat. TILLY! WHERE THE FUCK IS MY DINNER?


Remy Nottingham, 28 years old, youth minster at a church where they use props like Bugs Bunny.

Current whereabouts: On his computer, spreading misinformation that he thinks is true.

Why he's voting for Trump: I don't care if Trump is racist. No one does, except for liberals. I want someone to bring back Christian values by eliminating no-fault divorce and forcing the Bible into schools. The Bible says that a woman is the property of a man, and Ray Charles says that a woman's place is in the home. Nobody knows that better than Trump. By the way, I'm well aware of the man's faults. So he likes a steak well done. Is that a crime? The Bible says "judge not, that ye be not judged." Take a look a yourselves, liberals. Abortion is a crime!

 

Glenda Delano, 25 years old, housewife and Youtuber.

Current whereabouts: Gloating on video about how her traditional role as a homekeeper makes her more money than her husband earns (which isn't true).

Why she's voting for Trump: Traditional gender roles! We want to turn back the clock to when women were women and men were men! Is it feasible for only one working parent to support a family in America? Who cares! That's how it should be! All these transgender sex change operations are destroying the family fabric of this country! Did you know Kamala has never born a child? How many children has our glorious leader sired with his fertile seed? More than you can imagine! If you've never been pregnant, you're not a woman. Trump will hurt the people who I don't like. Is there any other reason to vote for someone?

Monday, October 21, 2024

Video Game Review: Space Marine 2

 

I was fairly certain that Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 would end up being a 6 or 7 out of 10 after playing the single player campaign, but after several hours spent in its Operations multiplayer mode, I'm giving it higher marks. This is a game designed around cooperative play, and although the AI isn't terrible, you really need another human player to make it interesting. For the campaign, you play as Titus, an Ultramarine serving penance for the events of the first game, which I didn't play. Titus is called out of obscurity to help fight against a Tyrannid invasion, and the plot soon centers around a Mcguffin that Chaos forces are bent on acquiring. The only semi-interesting beat is Titus's distrust of his squadmates, who also view him with suspicion, but they all come-around in the spirit of manly fascism. Space Marine 2's bulky boys don't have any criticisms of their imperial techno-hell; they're all too-ready to sacrifice themselves for the Imperium. There's none of the underlining criticism of totalitarianism that powered Gears of War--this is a straight up power fantasy about giant space marines squashing xenomophs and demons. And that's fine, really. I don't need a whole lot in a video game story. But something a little stronger thematically might have saved Space Marine 2's campaign from being as boring as it is.

Operations mode is a cooperative gametype where you play with two other players and accomplish objectives parallel to Titus's squad from the single player. This basically boils down to holding a point for a while while a timer ticks, although there are several boss fights that require player coordination. The Tyrannids are nasty aliens that'll swarm you, while Chaos forces have turned Space Marines as well as demonic hordes to deal with. You'll have a decent collection of bolt rifles and melee weapons to wield. The multiplayer is class-based, and the two classes I've spent time with are the Vanguard, which has a grapple hook as their special ability, allowing you to grapple onto enemies and pull yourself toward them, and the Assault marine, who specializes in melee combat utilizing jetpack-powered ground pounds. The shooting feels similar to Gears of War, whereas the melee combat is more hack and slash. Enemies can be countered, which results in either an execution or a temporarily stunned alien, lined up for an auto-aimed pistol shot. Heavier enemies like Tyrannid warriors and Chaos Space Marines will have to be countered to be killed swiftly, and the game quickly becomes complicated, with your character struggling to manage the horde while dueling with bigger threats. Average difficulty was appropriately challenging with my low-level characters. You can be revived three times before you have to wait for a respawn. You gain experience with every game, allowing to your unlock more perks for your character, as well as armor customization. It's a pretty entertaining multiplayer game, and although I don't think it'll have as much legs as Helldivers 2, developers Saber Interactive have already released a new Operations mission, bringing the total number of multiplayer maps up to seven. There's also a player-versus-player mode that I haven't tried. The single player campaign took me about ten hours to beat on Hard difficulty.

If you're looking for a good hack and slash horde shooter, you can't go wrong with Space Marine 2. Just don't expect a compelling single-player experience. One other note: this is a pretty demanding game. With settings maxed out and DLSS set to dynamic with my frame rate target being 60, Space Marine 2 keeps right around the 60 to 70 mark, with maybe a few drops into the high 50s at 1440p. I'm not sure if there's a lot of scalability, since it seems to be CPU-bound. I played at 4k a couple times and had about the same frame rate, so depending on your CPU, you probably won't get ultra-high frame times unless you're sporting a top end processor.

Screenshots:













 





Monday, October 14, 2024

Bad Poetry: Election


 

Election

Why the fuck

Do we have to go through

This shit again?

America once again has a choice

That shouldn’t be a choice at all.

On one side

With have stupidity,

Venality,

Conspiracy,

And sloth.

On the other,

We have someone

Who can speak in complete sentences

And who is promising

To continue democracy.

For nearly a decade,

I have wasted

Mental energy

Contemplating how someone

Could vote for a two-bit grifter

Who wears make up

And speaks in a vernacular

That you’d have to be an idiot

To understand.

Why is it close?

Are we as dumb

As we appear to be?

I fucking hope not.

Please, come November,

Let us have a small redemption

And vanquish the sins

Of a country.


Thursday, October 10, 2024

Writer's Block: Mercy, the Waiter, and the Rabbit

 

I've written close to 8,000 words in my novel about a washed up rock star named Mercy Maddock. My method is to write at least 250 words every morning. I remember reading something where Stephen King said that if you can't sit down and write at least five pages, you'll never be a writer. Steve, I ain't got time for that! This little excerpt is about the devil that Mercy frequently hallucinates.

...

It’s 2009, and Mercy Maddock sits outside in a courtyard at the Fig Leaf, an upscale restaurant in downtown Chicago. A half a bottle of Maker’s Mark stands in the middle of the table, its bronze contents shimmering in the midday sun. He’s wearing sunglasses, and a cigarette dangles from the edge of his mouth, his cowbody hat tilted downward, as though he’s taking a siesta. The woman across from him looks like Debbie Harris in a red dress, but she’s not. Mercy mumbles something suddenly, some incantation, perhaps a half-remembered lyric, his lips parting just enough for the cigarette to fall down his barely buttoned dress shirt. Motherfucker he screams, in a voice heavy with ruin. The outburst jolts the woman awake, and her doll-like face contorts into pure contempt. You’ve fallen asleep she says while Mercy halfheartedly pats himself down, trying in vain to remove the burning cigarette. Why am I even here? He finally manages to find the cigarette, but his sunglasses have fallen to the table and his eyes, which are bloodshot and heavily bagged, are visible. He stares at the woman in confusion. What was her name? Debra? Mebra? Is Mebra even a name?

Where in the hell is the waiter?” she complains. “I need a margarita.”

What is French for waiter? Garcon? Serveur?

“Waiter-man!” he bellows, head thrown back.

The waiter is a man with a thin mustache and sallow completion. Rather than an air of servility, he conjures a mood of everlasting sullenness, as though every request compromises the integrity of his soul. He gives the couple a look of utter loathing, then asks whether he can do anything for them.

“Margarita,” says the woman, barely looking at him.

“I need an aspirin, a pot of coffee, and sure, a margarita,” says Mercy.

Sir, aspirin is not on the menu,” says the waiter.

“The other stuff, then,” replies Mercy.

The waiter does not move immediately; instead, he gives them one more long stare before slowly turning around.

“What the fuck is that guy’s problem?” asks Mercy.

“Who cares,” says the woman. “As long as he brings us our drinks.”

Neither of them notices, but the waiter pauses and turns his right ear. He lives alone in a crummy apartment littered with half-consumed cans of diet coke. His bedroom is covered in stamps, and the whole place inexplicably smells of neoprene. No one besides himself has ever entered his apartment in the past five years, and this fact bores a holes so deep into his soul that he has fallen into said crevice, and it is unlikely he will ever be able to climb his way out. He prepares the margaritas himself, going light on the tequila, almost entirely omitting the triple sec, and overdoing the lime juice with a bottle of nearly rancid liquid. The olives that he selects are slimy things the color of rotting turtle flesh.

“Your drinks,” he says, moments later.

The margaritas resemble defiled offerings. Mercy, even in his highly-inebriated state, recognizes this.

“Mate, what the fuck is this?”

Mercy picks up a glass and twirls its contents, sloshing margarita all over the table. He takes a sniff and wrinkles his nose.

“My teetotaler mum could do a better job than whatever the fuck this is.”

The waiter replies with a reptilian stare. Mercy doesn’t look at him. He thrusts the glass in his direction.

“Take it back, garcon. Bring us something drinkable, for chrissakes.”

“Let’s just leave,” says the woman.

“No!”

Mercy slams his hand down on the table, spilling the other margarita.

“It’ll take fifteen to twenty minutes at least to go somewhere else and get a proper drink, and I’m not leaving until the man brings us something we can imbibe without immediately vomiting. I have given him a personal quest. This is now his life’s work. The question is: can he do it? I don’t know, honestly. I have my sincerest doubts. I’ll tell you what. I’ll give you a Benjamin Franklin if you bring me a drinkable margarita. It doesn’t even have to be good. Just drinkable. Do you think you can do that, mate?”

The waiter’s eyes have a sort of heat behind them, a smoldering fire that threatens to erupt from his sockets. He turns without a word and leaves. His customers are, from the viewpoint of a sad little man, everything that’s wrong with the world. They are the embodiment of the forces that depress him, that prevent his having meaningful human contact. They are evil, vile, morally deficient. The woman is a whore; the man a Lothario. The values of his youth are gone and replaced by vulgarity and consumerism. He doesn’t recognize the modern world, and he has no way of interpreting it. He will present them with poison, and they will drink it with great vigor, and then he will take their money and light it on fire before them, a futile gesture, perhaps, but one that he must do in order to feel like he is a force and not an interloper.

In the kitchen he grabs as many bottles as he can find. Some of them are full of alcohol; others are full of cleaning supplies. He pours it all together in a big bowl along with a generous quantity of the triple sec that he had originally omitted. The various liquids mix like water and motor oil—there is an iridescent sheen to the thick skin sitting on top—but he pours the concoction into a cocktail shaker and gives it a merry shake. In the margarita glasses it festers like a poison. They can choke on this and die he thinks.

When he returns, the margaritas are presented with a little flourish, as though the cocktails are the result of honest labor and expertise rather than a misguided attempt to demean two insufferable customers. The woman doesn’t even look at it—she has enough sense not to even engage the waiter at this point. Mercy’s sunglasses are back on his face but resting just on the tip of his nose, and his eyes roll upward to stare at the waiter with extreme skepticism.

The thing about waiters, mate, is that they’re not supposed to get offended. You suffer a little abuse, and in exchange you get a nice tip. Do I look like the type to stiff you? Have I ever stiffed a waiter?”

“I don’t care,” says the woman.

“It was more a rhetorical question,” says Mercy. “I’m gonna be honest with you, mate. This doesn’t look like a drink. It looks like a glass of bullshit. So that makes this the second glass of bullshit you’ve served me today. What am I to do, eh? I’ve made a solemn vow to not leave this establishment until I get a proper drink, but you don’t want to play along. Who is at fault here? Have you not violated the sacred code of the waiter? There is no honest desire to serve the customer. The customer is an object of contempt and ridicule. That’s fine, mate—go back and joke with the boys at my expense—but serve me with a smile on your face, or at least an expression of professional neutrality. You aren’t playing the game, mate, and while as a rock star I respect that, as a customer I am incensed. So what is the proper reaction?

What is the proper reaction to a life of endless petty humiliation? The waiter says nothing. He has nothing to say.

Mercy is about to get up and kick the table over in an act of adolescent rebellion—adolescent in spirit if not actuality for a man pushing thirty—when he sees him cavorting down the courtyard. Six feet tall, with ears dangling, his cheap fur costume a mottled shade of pink. He smiles as he approaches, revealing large brown teeth stained from years of cigarette smoke. It’s the eyes that really get Mercy—they’re the brightest blue he’s ever seen, and all the mirth they hold has a meanness to it, as though he can only laugh at you, you stupid motherfucker. The man in the bunny suit stands right behind the waiter and leans his head on his left shoulder and grits his teeth. Suddenly a rancid carrot appears, dangling in between those grimy chompers, and Mercy feels his libido draining away along with all of his zest for life. He hasn’t seen this bastard since the Summer Fest ‘02 when the crowd parted like the Red Sea and the pink rabbit waltzed toward the stage, resulting in his forgetting of the lyrics and subsequent stage fright. Mercy doesn’t know what he is—a demon, Satan, a harbinger of doom—but the fact that he has appeared now to perch on the shoulder of this rebellious waiter can only mean that disaster is coming, and he won’t be able to stop it.

Fuckin’ blimey,” whispers Mercy. “I see it. Do you see it?”

“Just get us the check, please,” says the woman.

Mercy grabs his large cellular phone and pulls his arm backward. He feels that throwing the phone at the bunny would be like pelting a lion with a pebble, but he has always been a believer in action over impotency, and he feels strongly that demons must be cast out rather than fled from, lest they realize that they have the upper hand.

Do it,” says the rabbit. “You’ve always been a pussy shit fuck. I know singers with more talent at the local bordello. Your mother’s got the highest pitched voice I’ve ever heard.”

The rabbit has a five o’clock shadow that appears impenetrable. There are cigarette burn marks on his pink suit.

Meanwhile, the waiter has realized that this situation has gone amiss. There is fear now in Mercy’s eyes, an emotion that seems inappropriate, and he’s holding a cellular phone like a bludgeon. He takes a step back, but there’s something behind him, some heavy, dark force, and it pushes him forward, causing him to stumble into the table, upsetting the margaritas and spilling their contents all over the dress of the woman. Mercy screams—a yell of primal horror—and all of a sudden the waiter sees stars dancing in the sky as he lies prostrate on the concrete, blood trickling from his forehead. Why is he here? Why do we do the things that we do? Is there any sense in it all? He finds no answers as he loses consciousness.

Sunday, October 6, 2024

New Music: Time

 

I've had the chord progression for Time for ages. E to F#minor; C#minor to G#minor; G#m to Gm to F# minor; then A to B to resolve on the E for the verse.For the chorus, I'm moving a second inversion triad (the E major figure on guitar) from G to F# to A to E while the top E and B strings drone on. To finish the progression, I walk the G figure down chromatically to an F/G before resolving. Not super complex, but maybe a little more sophisticated than your typical rock song. As for the time signature, I believe it is in 11/8, or 5.5/4. It's a Bo Diddly beat, or something like it, but to program it into a drum machine, I had to utilize 22 bars, which would break down to 11/8. For the arrangement, I leaned into the clean tones of my stratocaster, which is just the perfect rhythm guitar, especially when set to the neck and middle pickup. The bass line is a little busy, but with guitar and bass panned to the right and left channels, they compliment each other nicely. This was a fun song to work on, and I think it sounds pretty sick.

Saturday, September 28, 2024

Writer's Block: The Resurrection

 

The book is about a rock band, not Jesus, heh.

I started a new project, a book called The Resurrection about a middle-aged rock star trying to get his group back together. It's going pretty well as far as my projects go. The challenge is always trying to find enough time and motivation to write. Here's a little preview of the very first chapter (a sermon, really).

...

Sermon Numero Uno

I’m gonna let you in on a little secret, luv: every rock ‘n’ rolla sells out.

The Stones. Sold out. DC-wee-see. Sold out big time. The Stripes. You hear their music in car commercials.

But what the great ones have, luv, is a certain factor. A coolness. A winking eye that says “I’m above it all, friend. I might’ve shat in the corner and got a lump of coke stuck in me left nostril, but I’m a cynical sage for a cynical era. You can trust me. I’m cooler-than-thou.”

They say it, and their powers of persuasion are so immense, that you believe it.

I’ve always been of the opinion that a lie isn’t a falsehood if you really believe in its truth. What did the space wizard say? “It’s true, from a certain point of view.”

But you can’t sell out if you never had anything to sell.

Nobody epitomizes this fact better than the Back. You know the Back. The Paddle Pop Lion wrote about how he likes the trousers of his lady friend around his feet. He doesn’t want to go to San Quentin because it would probably be an unpleasant experience for all parties involved. You know that scene at the end of Blues Brothers where the band is playing “You Ain’t Nothing But a Hound Dog” for all the prisoners? Can you imagine a bunch of lifers listening to the Back? Imagine that you had the misfortune to be born on the wrong side of the tracks, and maybe you had to rob a liquor store because you were all out of boxed wine, and the goddamn flunkie behind the counter wouldn’t take your Euros even though the exchange rate was favorable, so you had to give him a slap or two as befits his station, and all of the sudden the place is surrounded by bobbies, and because you’re drunk you grossly misjudge the situation, and unzip your pants to prove to the entire crowd that yes, you are packing, and so you end up in prison for much longer than you should be, and after months of rubbing shoulders with hardened criminals you are rounded up in the atrium, only to learn that your live entertainment is the fucking Back of all bands? Can you fucking imagine?

It’s not that the Back are especially bad compared to other post-grunge groups. They took the sludgy Seattle sound and pulled a Black Album and shined it up. And I’m not jealous of their success. I’ve done alright for myself, but I’ve not sold 60 million albums. You can’t begrudge them their success.

It’s just they never had it, luv. They never had Jagger’s swing. You never believed that they were on the Highway to Hell. None of them ever studied taxidermy and inserted little notes inside upholstery. Far as I know, the Paddle Pop Lion never dated a transsexual or suffered electroshock therapy for his sexual proclivities.

It was like they were spawned in a Clear Channel laboratory, with their shiny, gelled hair and designer faded jeans. They all looked like put-together frat lads, the sort that you might not initially object to being your daughter’s boyfriend, provided that he prove himself. Sure, he played guitar, but he had nice shoes and no visible tattoos, and he sold cellphones for a major wireless carrier.

There ain’t any danger in that, is there, luv? If the music is perfectly compressed and all the guitars come in on time, and every three minutes somewhere in America someone is hearing the song about the trousers around the feet, then you’re not part of the counterculture, are you now, Mr. Paddle Pop Lion? If you’re the very subject of “In Bloom,” can you be a rock ‘n’ rolla? You’ve mastered the stylistic underpinnings but you’re totally lost on the internal subtleties. It doesn’t matter, though, does it? It didn’t matter for Jovi. For Joel. Or for that bald guy who won American Idol and went by his last name like he was fucking Prince or Cher or something. Not a fan of that guy, luv. We can do better.

So here I am. My band has fallen apart. My personal life is the kind of questionable morass that befuddled biographers while enticing them like the siren’s song. My cultural relevancy has decreased exponentially, to the point where your average lad or lass doesn’t know my name. “Mercy Maddock? Who’s that? Did he have a crime program in the eighties?”

But life is about come backs. Jesus Christ came back from the dead, and now I’m in charge of the Resurrection. I’m on a mission from God, but without all that what-would-Jesus-do crap. I know what Jesus would do. He would get the band back together, and then he would fucking party.

We’re gonna find it because we had it and once had, it can never be truly lost.

Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Video Game Review: Black Myth: Wukong

 

Black Myth:Wukong is this year's Jedi Survivor. It's a souls-lite with stunning graphics and compelling exploration that'll challenge you without making you beat your controller against your desk like a pathetic man-baby (not that I've ever done such a thing). You play as the reincarnation of a monkey deity referred to as Wukong the Destined One, who is set on reclaiming his former powers while taking out his anger on yaoguai with his dexterous staff skills as well as magical powers. Supposedly based on Journey to the West, an epic Chinese novel, the story isn't so much a linear tale as a collection of folk fables. At the end of every chapter, you'll be treated to an artful film sequence that has some relation to the monsters you'll meet. My favorite featured a kitsune (a fox yaoguai) who is rescued by a man from a trap. The man has a dream that the fox turns into a beautiful woman who he then marries. Years later he comes home to her transformed, feasting on their children. When he wakes, the man skins the fox to prevent the dream from becoming reality. You'll later stumble upon her pelt, and you can grant her revenge.

Black Myth:Wukong has gameplay that will be familiar to Souls fans. You have a light attack and a heavy attack, and you build up Focus by dodging and hitting enemies. Holding down the heavy attack button charges a heavy attack, which spends Focus points. A heavy attack can stagger enemies, and special moves, triggered by hitting the heavy attack button at the end of a light attack combo, can chew up enemy health. Realizing when to use your Focus points can be the difference in a boss fight, along with your spells. Immobilize is one of the first you get, and it freezes enemies for a few seconds, allowing you to get some damage in or use your healing gourd. Cloud Step makes you invisible while leaving a decoy, so you can sneak behind the enemy and attack. Transformation spells let you transform into certain bosses, complete with a new health bar. Pluck of Many spawns a few copies of yourself to keep foes busy. Potions and various gourds with drinks and soaks allow you to customize your temporary buffs. There is a lot of complexity here, but it's simple enough to be understandable. Also of note are your three staff stances. There's a heavy stance, which launches a typical heavy attack, a pillar stance which lets you sit high above on your staff before swinging it downward, and a thrust stance, which treats your staff like a spear. I prefer the first two, but different play styles will gravitate to different stances.

As far as difficulty is concerned, Black Myth: Wukong is a hard game, but on the easier side of the Souls-like spectrum. Think Jedi Survivor on the harder difficulty modes rather than say, Lies of P, which I couldn't complete. The spells, potions, and stances give you a lot of options, and you can always grind levels if you want in order to upgrade your gear, although I only had to resort to that method for the Whiteclad Noble, the first true skill test. If you've played Elden Ring and made it most of the way through, you'll not have too much trouble. If you're expecting something like God of War, you might be in for a rude awakening. One notable difference between Wukong and other Souls-likes is that you don't lose experience points (Will) by dying.

Graphically, Wukong is one of the best-looking titles of this generation, along with Cyberpunk and Alan Wake 2. Utilizing Unreal Engine 5, Wukong features dazzling environments of jungle, snow, and rocky desert. I'm currently making my way through chapter 4 (Wukong has 6 chapters), and the underground spider-filled caverns are startlingly realistic. Only a few low-resolution textures and some overly-shimmering shadows mar the experience. Performance-wise, my Ryzen 7 5800x had no problems, for the game isn't at all CPU-bound like some other more recent titles. My 12 gig RTX 3080 was more than capable of higher settings at 1440p with DLSS Quality upscaling enabled, with frame rates usually in the 60 or 70s, with only a few drops. Unfortunately, there are Unreal Engine transitionary stutters, along with a few shader compilation stutters that the initial compile didn't catch. It's not Jedi Survivor bad, but it's noticeable, especially in Chapter 3. As for ray-tracing, it's only usable on top of the line GPUs and CPUs, so don't bother unless you're rocking a 4090 and a 7800x3d.

All in all, Black Myth:Wukong is a thrilling action RPG with great graphics, gameplay, and exploration. Definitely check it out. I've already put more than 30 hours into it, so it's a fairly long game. Screenshots below:











 

















Election Day 2024

  Let's not do this again. Who the fuck thought we'd be back here again, eh? I had a sneaking suspicion back in 2020 when the Biden ...