dorchadas: (Sawa-chan headbanging)
2025-04-16 02:42 pm

Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon: The Super Live

Last night, [instagram.com profile] sashagee and I went to a Sailor Moon musical.

I know very little about Sailor Moon and have no emotional attachment to it--I haven't seen a single episode of the original series, though I have seen Crystal, and I was not one of the people who grew up watching and bonded with it as a young child. [instagram.com profile] sashagee is, though, so as soon as she heard that there was going to be a musical performance she asked if I wanted to go with her, and I said yes.

Our original plan was for me to come home, us to eat dinner, and then head down there and get to the doors around 7 p.m. I heard from multiple people that the merch line was insane and sold out extremely quickly, though, so mid-afternoon we changed our plans. She came down and met me after work, in her cutest red dress with her hair in odangos, and we went to Brightwok Kitchen, which was dairy-free, gluten-free, mostly egg-free, and thus while not technically heḥshered I at least felt comfortable eating there during Pesaḥ (my original thought was some other Asian restaurant but soy sauce has wheat in it so that was a no-go). We got some delicious rice bowls, checked to see if the tea store was still there (it was not), and then walked to the Chicago Theatre to stand in line. The line wasn't too long and we lucked out by all the existing VIP people moving through their line, so the back part of the main line where we were was routed through the VIP line instead. We immediately went through the merch line, got through in only a few minutes, and [instagram.com profile] sashagee bought a branded lightstick (lit up in multiple colors and said セーラームーン on it) and a poster, and since we still had almost an hour and a half before the musical began, we bought popcorn and sat up on a bench on the balcony hallway and waited. We saw [facebook.com profile] MomoManLove very briefly, talked with [facebook.com profile] pearl.nongluk and [facebook.com profile] bradford.bensontaylor about their struggles with the merch line, and saw [facebook.com profile] gracielizabeth and [facebook.com profile] pezroan waiting in the merch line which now extended all way down the downstairs hall and up seven(!) flights of stairs. They eventually got down to the front and came back, only to inform us that we were extremely lucky because the branded lightsticks had sold out and only generic Kpop-style ones were left. [facebook.com profile] gracielizabeth had gotten VIP tickets so she was seated in the front with the bigwigs, whereas we were up on the balcony, and as the timer ticked down we took our seats.

The musical was fun! Which is to say, I had a nice time, but I was not one of the people screaming when Usagi did her first costume change and said the famous 月に代わって、お仕置きよ! (tsuki ni kawatte, oshioki yo, "In the name of the moon, I will punish you!") The first half was a condensed version of the Dark Kingdom arc, which I've heard all of these musicals do, but it makes sense--being the first arc, there's no backstory you have to assume the audience knows, and it's the most theatrically-dramatic part with the love across lifetimes and the forces of the Dark Kingdom, here depicted as pre-War-style with neon and big band music. The sailor senshi fought song guys, Tuxedo Mask threw roses--all special effects were done on a giant screen behind the stage, where the supertitles were also displayed---they went up and down platforms and had fight scenes, and saved the world. If you're familiar all with Sailor Moon you know what happens. If you're not familiar with Sailor Moon, you would probably be in for a rough time because a bunch of stuff was cut out and I would have had very little idea what was happening if I hadn't already seen Sailor Moon Crystal. As it was, I kept thinking, "Wait, doesn't the villain have shitennō? Where are they?" (they were entirely cut)

The second half was a series of idol concert-style musical numbers. Most of them were reprises from the show, and the whole time I kept thinking, what about the theme song? There was a brief wordless version at near the beginning but everyone knows it and they haven't done it yet.

Well, of course they were saving it for the finale )

We left and met up with people out in the lobby, but everyone decided not to go out to anywhere afterwards. Instead, we all just went home. On the way back, [instagram.com profile] sashagee kept saying how amazing it was and how much she loved it and how glad she was she managed to get one of the coveted branded lightsticks. She gave it 10/10. I wouldn't go that far for the aforementioned reasons that I have no deep connection with Sailor Moon, but it was still a bunch of fun. Be prepared for the idol show, though, and make sure you know the plot. Otherwise you'll be lost.
dorchadas: (Cowboy Bebop Spike Gun Bang)
2024-10-16 12:39 pm

The Real Folk Blues Live

Classic example of Man Suffers Through 30 Minutes of Jazz Before Realizing He Just Likes Cowboy Bebop.

(That's a lie, I like Bohren & der Club of Gore too)

Last night was the Cowboy Bebop Big Band concert at the Athenaeum! I heard about it thanks to the anime club and immediately went out and bought tickets up on the balcony (at [instagram.com profile] sashagee's request) and my parents came and picked up Laila after her gymnastics class so we could go. When I got home she wasn't feeling well and had apparently been napping for four hours until right before I got home, but she had gotten ready in going-out clothes and after I sat down and drank a glass of water, we called a Lyft and went to Farm Bar.

Food pictures )

We finished with twenty minutes left and a five-minute walk before our show, thanks to Farm Bar actually implementing interesting functionality into their QR code menu instead of just uploading an annoying-to-navigate PDF of the menu and calling it a day. The menu lets you thumbs-up, thumbs-down, or heart items and you can even leave reviews on them. Relevant to the topic, you can always pay through the website, and that's what we did so we weren't stuck there like when I've been to the Gage in the past before going to the symphony and had to wait half an hour or longer for the check.

We walked over the Athenaeum, took our seats, and then waited twenty minutes for the show to start, around fifteen minutes past the start time. That's jazz, I guess. But it was worth the wait:
2024-10-15 - Bebop Big Band

I was initially worried when they started with actual audio from the screen, since I was used to Distant Worlds where they just played silent video to accompany the music, but they did it for a reason--they had a progression to the video through the main story of Cowboy Bebop and played the songs to accompany them. They started with "Tank!" of course, did character introductions for each member of the Bebop's crew, like "Bad Dog No Biscuits" for Ein and "Too Good Too Bad" for Jet Black, and then songs for some of the crew's escapades. Through it, some people came out and did some of the songs--the host sang "Call Me Call Me", Wendee Lee (original voice actress for Faye Valentine) came out on stage to sing "Don't Bother None", and one of the saxophone players sang "The Real Folk Blues", though sadly they did not have a full chorus to sing "Green Bird" so they just played it on the screen. They ended with "What Planet is This?" as the encore and then we left. It had much more flow to it than Distant Worlds or Symphony of the Goddesses, where they just kind of play some of the greatest his songs in whatever order the program designer thinks they need to be played.

Shout out to the lead saxophonist for doing most of "Space Lion" as a solo with computer-added reverb. Emoji happy flower

At intermission I was actually sad that we were up on the balcony, because while we had a great view of everyone, there were some interactions between the host and members of the band (particularly the drummer on the left) that we couldn't see. We had a good view of the screen, but if I wanted to watch Cowboy Bebop I could just watch it--I can't get the interaction at home. What we did see was fun, though, and I'd recommend the show if they come to your city. I'm not sure how long they've been around, though they said this was the first time they'd ever been in Chicago. Hopefully we can see them again, maybe with a better location.
dorchadas: (Maedhros anime)
2024-06-11 02:01 pm

How do you say "anime" in Sindarin?

Apparently they got a Japanese director to make a movie called Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim:
The new story is set nearly 200 years before Bilbo Baggins comes into contact with the ring of power, and centers on the House of Helm Hammerhand, the King of Rohan (voiced by Brian Cox), with a focus on his daughter, the strong willed Princess Héra (voiced by Gaia Wise). In the clip, a dispute erupts during a council meeting, leaving Wulf, a ruthless Dunlending lord, seeking vengeance. Miranda Otto reprises her “Lord of the Rings” role as Éowyn, this time as the movie’s narrator.
Director Kenji Kamiyana also did Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex and Eden of the East so we know that can he can do a good job. Going to have to keep paying attention to this.
dorchadas: (Enter the Samurai)
2024-05-19 02:19 pm

ACEN 2024

It's been five years since I made one of these posts, since ACEN 2019, and boy has a lot happened since then. COVID cancelled ACEN 2020 and ACEN 2021, and by the time ACEN 2022 happened I had a family and couldn't just run off for a weekend and leave a nearly-invalid [instagram.com profile] sashagee at home with Laila, so I went just for Saturday night to see people and then came back home. I did the same in 2023, but now [instagram.com profile] sashagee is feeling well enough that she could attend the entire con, so back last year I bought her a badge too, and we got a hotel room sorted out, and she got excited about doing a family cosplay. Well, I'm not going to bury the lede--we did:

2024-05-17 - Family Ponyo Cosplay


And now, here's the rest of what happened at the con:

Thursday )

Friday )

Saturday )

Sunday )

It's been five years since I last went to a full con but the experience was still the same! Always being on your feet, seeing old friends, traveling from place to place to place and collapsing into bed at the end of the day. It was different this year since we had Laila with us, and we kept telling people how she would run through the skybridge shouting "DRAMA-MA-MA-MA! DRAMA-MA-MA-MA!" but she was only there for half a day of the real con, and a good thing too. We took her through the dealer's hall on Friday morning and she was getting overstimulated already--if she had been there on Saturday she would have had real problems, but instead she was having tons of fun with Papa and Nana while we were wandering around the con.

[instagram.com profile] sashagee had a great time is already planning how to have an even better con next year, starting with bringing sneakers. [instagram.com profile] sashagee and [personal profile] dorchadas con-goer arc has begun!
dorchadas: (JCDenton)
2024-02-01 11:29 pm

Happy the Laughing Man Incident Day

From Twitter:

Which reads:
What is today? The "Laughing Man Incident" occurred on February 1, 2024. An event in kōkaku kidōtai ("Mobile Armored Riot Police") STAND ALONE COMPLEX. On 2024/2/1, someone hacked the cyberbrain of and then kidnapped Earnest Serano, head of Serano Corporation. After demanding an enormous ransom, they would vanish. While the police had no leads, two days later on February 3rd, the incident really changed gears.
One of the best anime ever made.



You still sometimes hear fans use the phrase "Stand Alone Complex" to refer to a real thing--copycat incidents based on internet rumors of things that never actually happened. Essentially, a mass movement with no actual inciting incident, just that belief that there had been one.

Maybe I should show this to [instagram.com profile] sashagee.
dorchadas: (Enter the Samurai)
2024-01-21 05:32 pm

Anime Chicago Winter Sampler

It's been over three years since I last got to go to one of these! But, since Laila is out in the suburbs on a grandparents' weekend and [instagram.com profile] sashagee was using the whole day to just relax and chill out, I spent a bunch of time on Discord watching the first episode of ten shows and, honestly, mostly snarking on them. There were more duds than hits this time.

List of shows behind the cut )

The shows were categorized by another person in the group as follows:
  1. Inuyasha At Home (Sengoku Youko)

  2. Steins;Geass: You’re Probably Wondering How I Got Swept Up In The War (7th Time Loop: The Villainess Enjoys a Carefree Life Married to Her Worst Enemy!)

  3. Let’s Throw Some Cyberpunk Archetypes at the Wall and See What “Sticks” (Metallic Rouge)

  4. This Is My Meal, I Call It Dungeon Dinner 🎵Dungeon Dinner🎵 (Delicious in Dungeon)

  5. Honda-San’s D&D Wet Dream (The Unwanted Undead Adventurer)

  6. She’s Just Another Language To Him (A Sign of Affection)

  7. Witches Get Stitches (The Witch and the Beast)

  8. This Is Not What God Intended (The Foolish Angel Dances with the Devil)

  9. Introducing A Non-Gamer to Dark Souls (Solo Leveling)

  10. Aladdin 4: Oh, You’re Approaching Me? (Bucchigiri?!)
dorchadas: (Pile of Dice)
2023-05-05 03:17 pm

Been into Mystara lately

I've been doing some RPG tinkering lately--slightly modifying True20, which hits my sweet spot between complexity and ease-of-use--and when trying to find a good setting to run with it, I've been looking at my old Rules Cyclopedia and the twenty years of fan work up on the Vaults of Pandius and I'm realizing that Mystara has the combination of interesting fantasy and totally crazy sci fi nonsense that I love in RPGs while also avoiding a lot of the problems that people have with standard D&D settings. For example:

A long list )

It honestly all sounds like the kind of fantasy that would be the background of an isekai anime series, which makes since because anime fantasy is based on 80s D&D through computer games like Wizardry and Japanese TTRPGs like Sword World. Low magic, humanocentric fantasy is out, kitchen sink fantasy is in. A town street with wolf people hawking wears, a group of elven tourists, a wizard doing magic tricks for money...and honestly, you could even have some guy from Japan who was magically transported there after being hit by a truck. It'd all fit.

This seems to be keeping my attention for longer than usual. What I really need is to be running an actual game so I can devote my creative energy toward that.
dorchadas: (Enter the Samurai)
2020-10-24 07:14 pm

Anime Chicago Fall Sampler

As always, here's the shows we watched and my impressions of them. I've ranked them in the order of me being likely to watch and more of them.

アニメ )
dorchadas: (Azumanga Daioh Chiyo-chan cooking)
2020-08-02 07:22 pm

The Forbidden Breakfast and window repair

I've written before about Shoujo Kageki ⭐️ Revue Starlight, back when I first saw it at an Anime Chicago sampler two years ago and when I went to a panel with the designers and director at ACEN 2019, but one thing I haven't mentioned before is banana miso soup. Daiba Nana (punning on Dai-Banana, "Huge banana") makes it in one of the episodes, and it turns out it was weirdly popular on the Japanese blogging site Ameblo around the time that Shoujo Kageki ⭐️ Revue Starlight was being made. I've wanted to make it for a while, but usually I didn't have any bananas, or I didn't want to try it. But today was the day! I found a recipe on cookpad (the title is, "Is it dangerous to eat lol? Banana miso soup lololololol"), made it over [instagram.com profile] sashagee's objections, and tried it.

Banana nice. Bananice! )

I also had to perform a bit of home repair today. When I went out to the Middle Eastern Grocery Store to pick up more hummus and pita, rain blew in and [instagram.com profile] sashagee had to close the windows. Two of the windows in my home are on sliding levers and one detached from the lever, so when I got back I removed the blinds, unscrewed the holders for the blinds, detached the screen, and then put the lever back into place. After celebratory handpies, I put it all back together and then we sat down just as a stormburst blew in, so I got it in the nick of time. Those windows open outward toward the west, and all storms in Chicago come from the west, so there would have been a lot of water on the floor if I hadn't fixed it in time. And thanks to [instagram.com profile] sashagee for trying to do it herself and figuring out how the blinds attach to the wall.

Now, to play more Chrono Trigger and beat Magus.
dorchadas: (Enter the Samurai)
2020-07-20 02:05 pm

Anime Chicago Summer Sampler

Last Saturday, online. As usually, ordered in my likelihood of watching more. Or at this point, I should say "perceived likelihood," because there are definitely some shows I rated as number one in previous samplers that I've never even touched. Anyway:

アニメ )
dorchadas: (Maedhros A King Is He)
2020-07-08 07:23 pm

“Maedhros laughed saying: 'A king is he that can hold his own or else his title is vain.' "

Good and bad news right away. The good news is that I refinanced my home today, dropping the interest rate from 3.75% to 2.875%. I've only owned it for less than a year, so this will save me something like $40,000 over the lifetime of the loan! The actual process was just as annoying as it was last time, with everything seeming to take place at the last second and with Guaranteed Rate having to send a person over to my home to sign the documents, but it all worked out in the end, even with the surprise $688 dollar extra charge that we had to track down the reason for. The reason is interest. Interest accumulates really fast on a six-figure sum.

The bad news is that adult Jew camp was cancelled thanks to the climbing rates of plague. I was expecting this--honestly, I'm surprised it hadn't happened sooner--and I was almost definitely going to cancel myself if they hadn't cancelled it for me, since while most of the events were taking place outdoors, lodging was inside in cabins. Maybe I'll go next year!

I'm thinking about the indoor/outdoor thing lately as I read that Chicago's beaches won't open soon, which is hilarious in line of how many people I've seen at the beach every time I've gone. Last Saturday, I went to the lakefront with [instagram.com profile] britshlez and [twitter.com profile] arsduo, to the path that was destroyed by the winter storms and still hasn't been repaired, which has formed little tide pools by the border of the swollen lake, because in the sun and the sea wind and the heat, the danger from the plague is reduced to almost nothing. But apparently for the mayor, opening indoor bars is okay but opening the lakefront isn't? She talks about making decisions based on the science right up until beach-goers don't provide extra tax revenue, and that means that plague-ridden indoor dining comes back. We've been doing very well in Illinois so far, but I'm looking forward to the rising numbers now that people are crammed into spaces with recirculating air together. Emoji Uncertain ~ face All those articles about coronavirus spread with photos of beaches are eye-catching, and editors probably want an excuse to run women in bikinis, but the real photos should be lines to get into bars.

Go to the beach, not to a bar.

[instagram.com profile] sashagee is coming tonight for her weekend (Thursday and Friday)! Last week I took Thursday off and had Friday off due to Independence Day, but this week I'll be working. She's planning on bringing her PS4 and playing FFXV, so I'll finally see how Noctis and the bros' roadtrip ("bro-dtrip"?) goes!

Farmer's Market dinner )

[twitter.com profile] neilworms has been doing a series of Anime Deep Dives on Discord, and last night I watched 走れメロス / Run, Melos!, a film based on the book of the same name, about the tyrant of Syracuse and two friends, one of whom is accused of treason and sentenced to death and the other of which takes his place in order to allow the first to attend his sister's wedding. In the Anime Chicago Spring Sampler, we watched an anime called 文豪とアルケミスト / Bungo and Alchemist that heavily referenced Run, Melos!, so [twitter.com profile] neilworms put it on the schedule. It was...hmm. I thought it was a fine story, but nothing special. On the other hand, unlike most Japanese children, I haven't read the book it was based on, so there's no nostalgia there. I'm glad I watched it, but I wouldn't seek it out again.

Book club just finished, so now it's off to prep for when [instagram.com profile] sashagee gets here!
dorchadas: (Maedhros A King Is He (No Text))
2020-05-25 07:38 pm

The music is great. I'll...leave it at that

Some .Hack//SIGN came up on Spotify for me, and having never engaged with that series before beyond hearing Obsession, the OP, in an AMV somewhere and getting my hands on it. Hearing the other songs, I was caught by surprise by how much I liked it. Once I took a closer look, I realized that it's because the composer is Kajiura Yuki, the same person who composed the music of Sword Art Online, aka the only good part of Sword Art Online. Come at me.

I finished Dororo today, over a year after I started watching it and after dropping it for eleven months. I was really excited when I saw the first episode, but the series started meandering a bit as it went on, and it really failed to stick the landing. I can't blame them too much--it's an adaptation of a Tezuka Osamu original that was also never really finished, so they had to make an ending up, but I can blame them enough to not like it.

The soundtrack is amazing, though, so I went and bought it. I'm sensing a theme here.

Sunday was an Anime Chicago discussion circle about Princess Mononoke, so I rewatched it for the first time in years, and in Japanese this time. It used to be one of my favorite movies and my favorite Ghibli movie, though that position has now been taken by Spirited Away, and it's really hard for me to shed the perspective now that since Ashitaka is Emishi, one of the indigenous groups of Japan that were conquered and assimilated by the Yamato in Japanese pre-history, Princess Mononoke is the equivalent of a Native American coming into white civilization to tell them that the spirits are angry. I said that right at the beginning and it threw a couple people for a loop, but that doesn't detract from how good the movie is. It's still fantastic for its nuanced perspective of conflict, of how both Lady Eboshi and San have understandable reasons for their goals, their ends are just mutually incompatible. I described it as two ends of reform ideology: Lady Eboshi--who I previously never noticed is dressed directly as a samurai, including the traditional 丁髷 chonmage hairstyle--thinks that the real problem is the people running the system, and if she were charge, everything would work, which is why she's trying to set herself up as an impromptu daimyō. On the other hand, San thinks the entire human world is corrupt and innately dangerous to the forest, and only by destroying it completely will the (nushi, "spirits") be safe. Which I guess makes Ashitaka the centrist, so no wonder nothing works out--he tries to offer a middle path that just results in Tarara and the forest both being destroyed. emoji V smile

[twitter.com profile] neilworms mentioned that the concept for the film changed drastically over its development as Ashitaka took on more and more prominence, to the point where they were considering changing the name to The Legend of Ashitaka. I wonder what the earlier version would have been like, and how San would have been featured if she were really the character who got the most screentime? I kind of want to see that movie now.

In non-anime news, the weather in Chicago has gotten better over Memorial Day Weekend (barring the massive thunder-and-lightning stormburst on Saturday), and while I haven't been to any barbecues, I did spend time outside. Sunday, [instagram.com profile] britshlez and I sat out on blankets in Ravenswood, in a green park-like strip of grass near the train tracks, and drank cocktails we had each made at home and brought with us. Today, [facebook.com profile] koppel invited me (and a couple other people) to the grassy expanse west of Lake Shore Drive, since the actual lakefront is still closed, so I went there any sat down in the shade and talked with people until the need to use the bathroom and eat dinner drove us all to get up and go our separate ways. I should probably buy a beach blanket if I'm going to be sitting outdoors with people as often as I expect I will this summer--a bath towel is fine, but it's hard to lie down on and annoying to transport. I'm just glad that I already have a bunch of mason jars I can use to transport cocktails and water, since my poor water bottle was abandoned at the office when it closed a day earlier than I expected.

Now that I've beaten the Link's Awakening Remake, [facebook.com profile] aaron.hosek has been hounding me to play Trails in the Sky the 3rd--I'm the one who got him hooked on the Trails games, so I have no one to blame but myself--and I've finally run out of excuses, so I'm off to do that!
dorchadas: (Cowboy Bebop Spike Gun Bang)
2020-05-01 07:12 pm

You're gonna carry that weight

Earlier today, [instagram.com profile] thosesocks sent me this video, and now I'm sharing it with all of you because it's incredible.


This comes not too long after The Seatbelts got back together (virtually) to play Tank! again, and I never thought I'd be blessed by both of those performances in a single week.

Are you living in the real world?
dorchadas: (Enter the Samurai)
2020-04-25 09:33 pm

Anime Chicago Spring Sampler

You might wonder how we managed to have a sampler when we're all stuck in germ jail, and the answer is that we did it on Discord. [facebook.com profile] gmarchan shared his screen and we all watched and commented. It was lovely.

Ordered in my likelihood of watching any more of them:

アニメ )

I'm really glad it all worked out! And I've been looking for something to watch rather than just play Stellaris all day (which is a lot of what I've been doing lately), so I'm glad that I have some candidates now. It was a lovely way to spend my afternoon.
dorchadas: (Pile of Dice)
2020-04-12 04:17 pm

Every day's the same when you're in quarantimes

My phone calendar is full of "coronavirus shelter-in-place" and "work from home" events. I've gone on a couple walks outside because of the nicer weather, wearing a mask and constantly ducking out into the street to avoid people walking their dogs. But today's the end of that for a few days, at least--it's going to be colder starting tomorrow, though the rain will stop. I'm kind of sad about that, to be honest, since the storms rolling in is part of Chicago spring that I really love. I went between rainshowers yesterday and the earth smelled of petrichor, and then I got back with my ice cream and my salmon just as it started to rain again, took the alleyway and found my necklace that had fallen off as I was walking to the grocery store, and had some flourless choco cake with ice cream. I've been sitting in my sun nook as the storms roll in from the west, drinking tea by candlelight with the rain pounding at my windows and the thunder crashing overhead. At those moments, I don't mind being stuck inside so much.

A few days ago, a friend posted a D&D 5e adventure someone wrote for Pesach that also acts as a Haggadah because it tells the story. Heroes breaking into an ancient pyramid to retrieve at least four sacred cups, a group of evil rabbit-people as the enemies (based on all those medieval manuscripts with rabbits killing people), matzah golems named "Gebrochts," the Four Children as an animal people miniboss fight, Hebrew palindrome riddles, a cameo by Serach bat Asher (the only woman mentioned in Moses's census lists)...it's great.

Why is this night different from all other nights? On all other nights, not even half of our D&D group can meet, but on this night, our D&D group can meet. Emoji Dragon Warrior march

My Japanese tutor texted me today and said that she was almost done with her personal project and suggesting that we meet up for FaceTime lessons. It'll be good to get more Japanese practice in again.

Speaking of Japanese, I've been watching more anime now that I'm stuck inside all the time, and while I was previously watching 3月のライオン / March Comes in Like a Lion, I was looking for something much lighter and fluffier to help distract me from all the terrors of the Plague Year. I remembered people talking about この素晴らしい世界に祝福を! / KonoSuba! a while ago and after I looked up a quick summary, I watched a few episodes and let me tell you, I played World of Warcraft for six years, I have met all of these people. In Vanilla WoW terms:
  • Kazuma: The Combat Rogue who never bothered training stealth.

  • Aqua: The Holy Priest who opens every battle by casting Smite.

  • Megumin: The PoM/Pyro Mage doing PVE.

  • Darkness: The split-talent Prot/Ret Paladin who never, ever dies while leveling but can't do anything in a party.
It actually made me really want to break out some kind of grid-based dungeon-crawler even though they haven't yet gone into a single dungeon (and would probably fail miserably if they tried to). Though honestly, the only thing that can really match that same feeling are either MMORPGs, which I no longer want to find the time to play; or tabletop RPGs, which I really should get a group back together.

As I described it multiple times to other people, I always run my worlds as 100% serious because the players will bring all the comedy the game needs.

I'm not feeling particularly well, and while I don't think it's coronavirus because I don't have any respiratory symptoms or, I think, a fever, my pounding headache and general tiredness are still making it hard to get anything accomplished. I'm glad I did a ton of cooking yesterday, because today and for the next few days, it'll be leftovers for every meal. Right now, it's back to grinding in the Sky Castle in Final Fantasy I as preparation for beating the game and probably more watching KonoSuba! later. I'm currently listening to livestreamed recording of Chicago Symphony Orchestra performing Beethoven's Ninth, so I even have my ominous chanting in the background as I fight WarMech!
dorchadas: (Maedhros A King Is He (No Text))
2020-03-04 11:16 am

Samurai stir-fry

[instagram.com profile] thosesocks invited me over to watch more Samurai Champloo last night. We remain bad at actually watching it--in two hours we watched one episode, and I think we spent more time talking about how Japan and Germany dealt with the legacy of World War II than we did watching anime--but I noticed something in the intro of episode 8 (the one with the guy who wants to be "Big" and has his own beatboxing posse). In the Japanese, "Champloo" is spelled チャンプルー chanpurū, which is the name of a signature Okinawan stir-fry dish! It's extremely tasty, especially with bitter melon, and in Okinawan it literally means "a bunch of things all mixed together." Like, say, hip-hop and jidaigeki drama. Finally after years, that name makes sense.

She also introduced me to Japanese Doctor Who, and even though I'd never seen any Doctor Who, I recognized a bunch of tokusatsu tropes. She asked me what that was, and when I explained, she found a pilot episode for an unaired show called Jaguarman, which was definitely everything I could have hoped for in an introduction to tokusatsu YouTube clip.

[instagram.com profile] thosesocks wants to have a party now where we watch tokusatsu and drink alcohol from across Asia, which sounds fantastic to me. Maybe after Pesach.

On Monday I went to the Princess Bride popup bar in Lincoln Square with [twitter.com profile] lisekatevans, [facebook.com profile] afschifler, [instagram.com profile] britshlez and her boyfriend. Going on a Monday meant that there was almost no one else there, other than a Dread Pirate Roberts mannequin in the booth next to us that I kept seeing out of the corner of my eye and assuming someone was eavesdropping on us, but they were still out of all the drinks I tried to order and I had to get substitutions. After a long period consulting the menu (PDF warning), I went with the Humperdinck (instead of Twue Wuv) and the Miracle Pill (instead of I Don't Even Exercise). They were both good, and I'd gladly go again. When [twitter.com profile] pinandstutter went, he tried the Twue Wuv and said it was great, and I really want to try it. It was the first thing I ordered only to hear that they were out of it.

Table discussion was mostly about our high school lives and how different our experiences were. [facebook.com profile] afschifler described mine as a John Hughes movie, which is honestly fair. Hey, what can I say? Band kids. Emoji ~ Cat smile

Monday was also the AMA's annual meeting, which was full of good news and one boring presentation. Some guy came up on stage to talk about innovation and big ideas and coming up with a grand plan and so on, but all I could think of as he talked about self-driving cars and Google's quest for self-driving cars is the way that they don't work in rain or snow, which he didn't mention at all. Sure, the videos of Waymo's self-driving taxi service in Phoenix, Arizona, were very impressive, but the whole time I was watching I was thinking, "That would never work here." I do expect there to be a self-driving taxi service in Chicago within my lifetime--assuming we don't all die in World War III before then--but B"H I still have many decades of life left, so "within my lifetime" is a long time.

Also, at one point he had misspelled impact on a slide, so of course I immediately thought:
He protecc
He attacc
But most importantly
His plans have impacc
Someone save me from fatal meme poisoning. Emoji Smiling sweatdrop

My life hasn't been disrupted by coronavirus yet, but I think it's only a matter of time. With all the event cancellations out there, something I want to go to will be cancelled. I'm just glad that I eventually decided not to go to Japan to catch hanami this spring because a lot of the places I would have wanted to go to would probably have been closed, to say nothing of the possibility of a quarantine either on the way there or back. I have friends who already cancelled a trip to Thailand just to avoid that possibly, and I think they were right to do so. I have friends still going to Japan--hopefully it works out for them!

Tonight is the last "Universal Truths, Jewish Roots" class, and I'm curious to see what the subject will be. It wasn't listed on the syllabus, and the rabbi never got to mention it at the end of last class, so...mystery class!
dorchadas: (Warcraft Temple of the Moon)
2020-01-13 01:07 pm

Highlights from the last week

I'm just going to cover a few things here:

Contains moments of life )

I'm incredibly tired today due to screwing up the laundry timing last night and not being able to put all the blankets back on the bed until 11:30 p.m., and even having done that I woke up during the night due to being too cold and needing to pull more blankets on. And then I woke up before my alarm, so while I wasn't completely exhausted, I still feel like there's a wall of cotton between the world and me. The last night I had to myself was the Sunday before last, so I'm looking forward to just doing nothing and going to bed earlier tonight.

Well, nothing other than chores, anyway. Let me tell you, it's garbage that you dust and things are clean and then more dust is there next time you look. Who made that legal? Emoji shaking fist
dorchadas: (Judaism Nes Gadol Haya Sham)
2019-12-30 07:15 pm

Chanukah Chappenings

I refuse to spell it "Xanuqa" even though that was the second-most-popular spelling at my party.

Eight crazy nights )

Tonight I'm going over to [facebook.com profile] koppel's place to watch Zardoz, which I introduced to him at the quiet hangout I went to on the 25th, and which fired him up to get people together to watch it. It seems like a great way to usher out the old decade, with a bunch of ridiculous 70s imagery to purge all the venomous nonsense from the last year. And there was so much venom, but I feel like all the candle-lighting I've done lately has helped.

The year and the decade are almost gone. Let them go.
"Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky,
The flying cloud, the frosty light;
The year is dying in the night;
Ring out, wild bells, and let him die."
- Alfred Tennyson, Ring Out, Wild Bells
dorchadas: (Crystalis Tower Fall)
2019-12-19 01:34 pm

Welcome to flags, the AMV

This is the song I found while I was cleaning yesterday and have listened to at least thirty times today:


The thing is, there's a set of lyrics that go:
From the old world's demise
See our empire rise
But which I cannot help but hear as
From the old world's demise
See our vampire eyes
And it's reminding me of the Flight of the Phoenix game that [personal profile] schoolpsychnerd ran based on a setting I came up with where the main premise was that after a thousand years of rule by the vampiric Nobility, the humans rose up in a rebellion called the Dawn War and threw down the vampires. And because of a millennium of literally bloodsucking, inhuman aristocratic rule, the very concept of birthright and bloodline granting privileges was irrevocably corrupted such that all the nations built after the rebellion were democracies. Accusing someone of aristocratic leanings was tantamount to accusing them of being a vampire-Dominated sleeper agent.

We were very careful in-game to always remember that the word "Noble" itself meant "vampire."

The whole thing was a great counterpoint to the usual chosen one/born-to-power hero narratives in a lot of fantasy. I've always wanted to go back to that setting but haven't had the chance, and now I'm really busy. But maybe someday.
dorchadas: (Judaism Nes Gadol Haya Sham)
2019-12-16 12:08 pm

L'chaim, and death to our enemies!

Lots of religion in this accounting of my life, and for once, it's not just Judaism!

Omurice and Chanukah Stories and Singing )

One more week of work and then I have two weeks off for the New Year! I'm really looking forward to having a long vacation. Maybe I'll even play a video game--it is time for me to finally get to Quest for Glory IV: Shadows of Darkness.