Holy crap on toast…

Posted on September 28th, 2007 in Politics, Intarweb, Gaming, Rants

Oh my gods

That’s……that’s John Howard…..Prime Minister of Australia…..holding….holding an XBOX 360 CONTROLLER?!

Buh…buh…buhh…*brain asplode*

Howard and Master Chief

So it seems like the “biggest entertainment launch ever” even infiltrated as far as Australian Federal Politics. What craziness. I only know about the existence of the Halo 3 launch because I’m a gamer that reads gaming news sites. My housemate had no clue about it and only had a vague idea that Master Chief was a character from a game since she reads a lot of webcomics that parody this kind of thing. I think that this “biggest entertainment launch EVAH!” claim may be a slight exaggeration.

For the record, we don’t own a 360, nor any version of Halo and probably never will. Chick gamer here. Bring on the RPGs, kthnxbai.

Having John Howard pose with a Microsoft franchise figure seems strangely fitting actually.

But more generally…he’s…holding a 360 controller…and CORRECTLY! And he seems to be smiling and enjoying himself gaming! GAMING! JOHN HOWARD GAMING!

Somebody hold me.

Found at Kotaku

[Day 8] Kamakura and Drunken Shenanigans

Early wake up to get on a train for Kamiooka, my old stomping ground. Arrived earlier than expected, curse my Type A-ness. Still, it was good to wander around Yokohama for the first time in a year. Aah, the More’s Building. How often I’ve emptied my wallet there. Check out the old arcade, nothing worth trying to win this morning. I totally own at the UFO catchers.

Anyway, onto Kamiooka. Oh gods, my old eikaiwa *shudder* Quick, look away! Don’t make eye contact! Yay! T & M! Reunion! Have an ice kohii at there place because even at 10.30am, the sweat is already running down my back in torrents. Damn tsuyu.

Hadn’t really looked at the Lonely Planet’s pages on Kamakura. It’s so close to Kamiooka, I’d been there before during the 10 months I lived here, but unfortunately my camera was stolen soon after and I wanted to get more photos again. T & M wanted to go along because apparently the hydrangeas are in bloom all over Kamakura at the moment. That’s….such a Japanese reason to go somewhere XD

But anyway, I basically thought that all there was to see was the Daibutsu, or Giant Buddha. It’s about 800 years old and quite spectacular. It used to be housed within a temple but a tsunami had washed away the building, leaving only the temple. It must’ve been a heck of a tsunami. Kamakura is on the shore but the Daibutsu is still about a kilometre away from the beach with big hills in the way.

I knew that there were more temples around Kamakura, but I didn’t think they were going to be that special. I had been to the main one at the top of the shopping street which was quite nice but….you know…..just another temple. T had some ideas about where to take me in Kamakura though and I was happy to let him lead. I just wanted to have photos of the Daibutsu and the rest was up to them.

First, to the most famous hydrangea temple in Kamakura, Hase-dera. Heh, they’d never mention that in the Lonely Planet. No, all that they say about this place is that “it has the largest wooden statue in Japan carved in 912″ - feh! How is that important compared to the hydrangeas?! There were hundreds of small statues of Jizo which were very cool. I took a couple of shots which I’m proud of. May submit one to Metropolis. It also has an impressive view over the bay.

It was CRAWLING with people all over Kamakura, but particularly in Hase-dera. M said that there had been a special on the television about Kamakura’s hydrangeas, and since it was a sunny Saturday, absolutely everyone in the Kanagawa and Tokyo region wanted to see them today *rolls eyes* So there was a 40 minute wait to go for a walk along this Hydrangea Path within the temple grounds. It wasn’t the ONLY place you could see them, mind you. They were growing out of cracks in the pavement! So we decided to skip it and move on the Daibutsu.

Daibutsu, photos photos photos - finally saw a squirrel! I seriously need to smuggle some into Australia. Okay, photos done, NEXT!

T said he wanted to take me to Zeniarai Benten, so off we went - got lost - got lost again - gave up an caught a bus to the station - had lunch - revived - then got proper directions - and finally we walked up this hill to find a great big tunnel bored into the rock with a torii gate outlining it.

This shrine has now been added to Chidade’s Awesome List™.

First cool part is the tunnel in the rock. When you walk out to the other side, there are many red torii gates to walk through, like Fushimi Inari in Kyoto, although not as beautiful. The shrine is in a tiny little gully that is almost completely closed off by hills all the way around. There are two ways to get in: the tunnel, and a back entrance if you climb the stairs over a smaller hill. So the surrounded and hidden feeling to the place is another cool factor.

Finally, you go into a cave carved into the side of the hill where a natural spring wells. And there……you wash your money. Zeni-arai means “coin washing” but these days people seem to wash paper notes. Out of greed? I don’t know but I washed 1000 yen. T & M told me to keep it in my wallet and never spend it, like a lucky charm to make me rich, but I’ve read other sources that say the idea is to spend money that has been washed in the springs and it will return two-fold. I think I’ll just keep it as a souvenir.

Such a unique tradition - washing your money in the spring to bring fortune. And the Lonely Planet never mentioned this! Zeniarai Benten is listed on their map but not described. Odd, given it’s uniqueness and apparently it’s the second-most visited shrine in Kamakura (awesome link found via Frangipani).

Anyway, Zeniarai Benten: now on my awesome list, along with Nijo-jo in Kyoto, Gyokusendo Cave in Okinawa, Zuigudo underneath Kiyomizu-dera in Kyoto, Takeshita-dori in Harajuku and all of Akihabara, heh. Hmm, maybe I should set up a page of these places.

The next place we visited was just a short walk away from Zeniarai Benten if you take the back route. It’s called the Sasuke Inari Shrine. Cool, because it does the multiple torii gates thing, has dozens of statues of foxes (because Inari is a god of foxes, among other things), has a cool name, but mainly because, despite being less than 50km from Tokyo, it really seems like you’ve founded a hidden little shrine in the middle of the forest, untouched and unvisited for years. Completely not the case, but the atmosphere is like that.

After that, we headed back to T & M’s for a much needed shower before off to the izakaya for a massive party. About 6 old students, 2 old friends and assorted were there. To summarise the night, I’m going to borrow Circus Girl’s blogging style again:

To the station! I need to pick up S and his mystery friend! You! It’s you! *glomp* I’ll be right back, I need to find S, T keeps me company, he never arrives, never answers my texts, eventually call him and find out he’s already at the izakaya, WTF? Well at least I can make a grand entrance now with all the other guests there, get cheered, take a bow “You bastard, you never emailed me”, debates on email, shut up and order a drink! I’ll have a sour, a sour what, uhhhhh, apple? Yes, Apple Sour, “Minna san! Omiyage desu!”, yaaaaay, boomerang makes me an accessory, canned kangaroo! No really! I think we should open it right now, muaahahahahaa they totally fell for it! Wow, M-chan’s English is awesome now! So is S’s! Heh, so the new gf is a Hong Kong expat too, eh? I detect a fetish. Beer! I don’t drink beer? BUT I’LL DRINK THIS BEER! Wheee, room is kind of spinning, I can haz foowd now pwease? TUNA!!! where’s the salmon? “It’s fish but it doesn’t taste like it”, “K, I’m probably drunk enough now”, mmm, cheezy, what, it’s over already? BUT WE JUST GOT HERE!! Okay, back for some drunken Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii! Buh-bye some people, I’ll see you in a month! Bottle shop stopover, beer beer beer, girly drink, H lives in that big building? Really? Can I see? Get taken up to the viewing platform, “YOKOHAMA I MISSED YOU!!”, wow don’t want to drop my camera down there O_o, okay, onto T & M’s place, photo slideshow time! Man, I should really do this on my Wii too, catching up, drinking coke and vodka, what a combo, getting pretty woozy now, how did I get so drunk so quickly? *glomps Canadian*, why is the Billy Banks exercise DVD playing? More gossip, YAY! A’s here! Omiyage! “Sorry, I’m a bit drunk”, catching up, ok, so this is how you play Rayman, I love that song, um, are you ok? Sleepy? “Where’s he going to sleep?” (With me!!!) “He should be on the floor in the hallway” (?!) “and A can share with you” (No, he can sleep with me, really!) “Ok, we’ll set up a futon in the lounge room” (Awwww) Brush teeth, “Oyasumi“, unconsciousness.

[Days 6 & 7] Blogging, Kat-Style

Kudos to Circus Girl. I’m going to steal your blogging style for a moment ;)

Thursday:
Wake up late, sticky, hate tsuyu, oh my gods I need to change hostels, pack bags, pack more bags, what the hell kind of packing is that? Chidade, you’re a Rover, for shame! Empty everything, pack again, actually learn room mates’ names, then leave, heh, backpack, laptop bag, two bags worth of shopping, HEEAAAAVVVEEEEEEEE! holy crap my fingers are dead, should I get a taxi? urk, taxi expensive, how do I get them to go to Gojo? “Gojo House onegaishimasu“, “Wakkanai“, stuff it, I’ll walk, half way there, totally regretting that, fingers now blue, brainwave! bag in bag and now one less bag! still weighs the same /swt, are we there yet? who are you talking to? you! no, you! ok, definitely need food, but baaaaaaaaaggggsss! hey it’s Gojo! omg I made it, stumble in, collapse, “hey”, “hey”, “how are you?”, *gasp* “‘k. I’d like to check in, please!”, “check in isn’t until 3pm”, $%&##!@#^ need shower! “Ok, but I’m leaving my bags here until then”, huunnnngggrrryyyyyy, crap! I left my breakfast in the fridge at K’s House! waaaaaaah, ok, walking back now /sob, so much easier without bags, must be losing weight with all this walking, back at K’s, salmon sushi onigiri breakfast, eat on the steps, numnumnum, so what am I going to do until 3pm? At least the late check-in forces me to do something, CRAP! camera is in bags at Gojo, feck it, I’m NOT walking back there again, what can I do today that doesn’t require camera? Head to Kyoto station to get inspiration, watch fashion show, should I write about this for 3yen? Get bus map, needs camera, needs a camera, needs camera, maybe I’ll just go shopping? Really want somewhere with an air conditioner, OOOOH! International Manga Museum! Sold, buy bus ticket, …..no bus route nearby, MORE WALKING?! This place better have an awesome air conditioner >.< need ramune icypole to survive the trip. gari gari kun is teh awesome, is this it? is this it? are we there yet? It looks like a school, it IS a school! “Konnichiwa!”, that’s like the first time I’ve heard that on this holiday, 500 yen, Great Wall Of Manga, this collection must be James’ wet dream, there’s not actually that much here, any English manga? Just give me some English manga, a seat and a vending machine in air conditioned goodness, wait, a figure exhibition? 500 yen, hahaha Fist of the North Star, wow! Who’s she? KAWAII! bingbingbing 2.40pm blog time. Feet achy. Nearly time to check in but want to revive feet first. English manga!! Read last volume of Battle Royale, so that’s how it ended, time to go back, bus back the long way round, “ok now you can check in”, make bed, collapse, wake up 11pm, combini dinner, collapse again.

Friday:
Wake up, unpack everything AGAIN! repack properly, now only have three bags, taxi to Kyoto Station because I’m not going to be walking again and in the rain, book shinkansen, bakery breakfast, get on Hikari, I think I’ve been in this seat before, Kyo-kun gets a workout, pillows playlist, so many gaijin, too much rain to see Mt Fuji, pass through Shin-Yokohama, TADAIMA!! Arrive at Tokyo, TADAIMA!!! Change train, change train, wow, K’s House Tokyo is really close to the station, check in, SHOWER, I feel human again, laundry, run back to train station and go to AKIHABARA!! TADAAAAIIIMMMAAAA!!!!! Nearly everything is closed though /sob Hang on, what happened to Aso Bit City?! Stress! Oh wait, there it is. Any Ragnarok? Ragnarok, Ragnarok, Ragna- damn, only volume 1 and 3…c’mon Akiba, don’t let me down! None of the shops have Volume 2 /sob but oooh, I found Gorgeous Mysterious Katana-Wielding Woman from the Manga Museum….and for cheaper too! Glad I didn’t buy her in Kyoto *yoink* shops closed, must go collect laundry, hooray for wireless internet in K’s House! Make plans with M & T for tomorrow, watch Naruto and BLEACH on YouTube, eek! 2am! Collapse.

Saturday in Kamakura and with old friends: much fun an alcohol - next.
Sunday in Harajuku: tale of heartbreak and love - after that.
Monday in Akiba and Nakano: victory and defeat - after that again.

Tomorrow I have a date with the Emperor. Hopefully I’ll actually post about everything eventually.

1am, time to collapse.

[Day 4] Gods bless free wireless internet…

Posted on June 19th, 2007 in Gaming, Music, Japan 2007, Travel, Travel in Japan, Food in Japan, Geekery, Japan

As awesome as K’s House is, I’ll always have a soft spot now for Gojo Guest House, since they provide free wireless internet. I’m only here for the night since K’s House is full. I’ll be back at K’s tomorrow (my luggage is still there) but I may come back to Gojo for one last night before I head to Tokyo. It’s cheaper than Tokyo - AND….it has wireless internet :D

Gojo is more traditional than K’s House. The dorm is a 12-mat room with sliding doors which sleeps 6 people on futons. I had hoped to avoid futons on this trip. Futon is Japanese for concrete >.< But it’s amazing what high speed wireless internet will do to your tolerance levels. Gojo is the same price as K’s House and it’s within walking distance of more attractions - notably Kiyomizu Temple and Gion. K’s House, on the other hand, is only really close to Sanjusangendo. On the plus side it’s walking distance to Kyoto Station. Gojo, unlike K’s, will serve you breakfast and dinner for an extra charge, but the centre of Kyoto is only about 30 minutes walk away so there seems little point.

So who wins out of K’s and Gojo? Well, I prefer modern to traditional, unless it’s going to be a high-end ryokan so for now K’s House is in the lead.

Today was spent in Osaka - specifically DenDen Town, which is basically Osaka’s answer to Akihabara. It’s smaller (only about 500m worth of street) and not as great as Akiba in the anime stakes, but I still managed to spend a fair chunk there.

<geek>

Phoenix Wright 2 for the DS (that can be played in either Japanese or English), a few figurines (Rurouni Kenshin and Sanji from One Piece) and a plastic fish.

Look, I was asked to bring random Japanese weirdness home as a present. I think a plastic fish from a capsule machine falls under that category don’t you?

Am having trouble trying to find volume 2 of the Ragnarok Online Trading Figures. Damn those things were limited edition! I can’t even find Volume 3. Plenty of Volume 1 still around though. Will there ever be a Volume 4, I wonder?

Also discovered second-hand CD shops, so now I’ll have plenty of new material for the radio show next semester. Cheap, too!

</geek>

Today I also got reacquainted with a great Japanese food chain today: Pepper Lunch! You get beef on a hot plate to cook yourself, usually with a side of vegetables and rice.Full meal including drink for under ¥1000. Awesome. There was one outside my eikaiwa back in Yokohama. Ah, the good old days.

Speaking of the good old days….I feel like I’m at home. It didn’t take long to get readjusted. Been away from Japan for just under a year and now that I’m back, I have to keep reminding myself that I’m just a tourist, and that all my possessions are in that backpack, not in an overpriced apartment in suburban Yokohama. You are a tourist here, Chidade. Don’t forget it. I know that you know about things like how to sort your rubbish for recycling but that doesn’t make you a local!

Man, I’ve missed this place.

Big party on Saturday night with old students and co-workers. Can’t wait. Very excited. It’s being hosted by T & M who are the coolest 40-year-olds I know. After all, they told me to bring my Wii remote from Australia with my Mii loaded so I can join in on the drunken Wii shenanigans after the izakaya, hehehehe.

Feet aching. Must wear better shoes tomorrow. Must figure out what the hell I’m going to do tomorrow too. Maybe I’ll relax and spend the day sorting out my new schedule and budget. Ooh, and I guess I’ll visit Pan no Mimi! Done.

‘K, oyasumi, then.

ticktickticktickticktick

Posted on March 1st, 2007 in Studies, Life, Rovers, Melbourne, Ragnarok Online

Wanna see something utterly terrifying? Have a look at this:

  Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
7:00AM              
7:30AM              
8:00AM              
8:30AM              
9:00AM              
9:30AM BIS lecture            
10:00AM            
10:30AM   BIS lecture Database
lecture
       
11:00AM          
11:30AM Acc’ting tute Comm. class        
12:00PM        
12:30PM .NET lab        
1:00PM      
1:30PM BIS tute    
2:00PM    
2:30PM .NET lecture        
3:00PM        
3:30PM   Comm. lab      
4:00PM        
4:30PM     Database lab    
5:00PM          
5:30PM          
6:00PM          
6:30PM            
7:00PM              
7:30PM     Acc’ting lecture        
8:00PM          
8:30PM          
9:00PM            
9:30PM            
10:00PM            
10:30PM            
11:00PM            
11:30PM              
12:00AM              

That, dear readers, is my timetable *cries*

I’m expected to study 12.5 hours per subject, per week this semester, including the actual class time.

Five subjects, each of them have been assigned a colour, which you can see when I have an actual class or lecture for the subject. The empty blocks that are a lighter version of the subject colour are the times where I sit and study it, either at home or at uni.

The empty blocks with darker versions of the subject colours are also study times, but while I’m commuting to uni. Those hours will probably be complete write-offs, because I tend to get distracted by the street art along the train tracks, or I can’t find a seat so I can’t pull out my huge textbooks. I’m hoping that the podcasts of lectures that the university records will be useful during the commute though, because if I can’t study while I’m on the train then I’ll have to use up the little free time I have left.

Red boxes are ongoing social/extra curricular engaements. The coloured bars at the top and bottom just represent things like sleeping, getting up and ready, etc.

The white boxes dotted throughout are meal times and extra commuting where I can’t study, eg: bike or car.

The two chunks of white space on Fridays and Saturdays are all the free time I have. Which would probably disappear if there’s an assignment due or exams coming up. Even in quiet times, it’ll probably be spent doing things like laundry and cleaning and catching up on sleep >.<

Can you hear that? It’s the sound of my social life, blogging time and Ragnarok levelling ability grinding to a halt.

Upgrade: Chidade 3.1

Posted on February 7th, 2007 in Gigs, Friends, Life, Studies, Books, Melbourne, Music, Anime, Ragnarok Online, Geekery, Gadgetry, Gaming, Rants

I’ve been accepted into university. I’ll be attending Swinburne University of Technology’s Hawthorn campus for another three years of I.T. training. I’m relieved in a way, because I’ve technically been on holiday for the last two years now and my brain has been dribbling out my ears. I need to have a regular schedule again. 4 hours of evening classes 5 days a week in an eikaiwa didn’t count. They were complete no-brainers.

So, I have two weeks left before orientation. Surrounded by 17 and 18 year olds who are going to go batshit insane over the free alcohol. Vodka lost it’s novelty for me a while ago. I wonder how I’ll cope surrounded by kids?

Anyway, I digress. What I was going to say is that I have 2 weeks left to get myself organised for school and my tight budget that begins February 19th. So, while this list is probably quite boring for you, dear readers, deal with it. What follows are the system requirements to be able to install the upgrade to Chidade: version 3.1.

  • Purchase replacement Razr V3x and mod it so that it has all necessary ringtones, images and the Final Fantasy victory fanfare as the SMS alert.
  • Install the calendar syncronisation program that’ll keep my Google Calendar and keitai in sync, via Outlook.
    Note: this will require installing Office 2003 at last.
  • Deauthorise the iTunes on Akiba and convert AAC files to MP3 then backup on PC.
  • Backup Akiba and reformat, see if you can get an English OS instead. Learn how to actually operate the tablet features since that’s why you bought the bloody thing.
  • Try and get Joomla installed and running for the Aug. website eventually so they don’t hassle you for free web design work during the semester, the tightwads.
  • See if you can get a good chunk of the planning done and some psuedo-coding for the fundraising website.
  • See if any of the textbooks you spent thousands of dollars on during the first degree can be recycled for this second one.
  • Upgrade the blog to Wordpress 2.1 Ella, which looks very spiffy.
  • Get Chidade to job level 50 and bloody job change into a Blacksmith already!

Two weeks should be enough to get all of the above done, except for the fact that this weekends seems to want to rip me apart with social engagements. Good grief. I don’t think I’ve ever been so over-booked.

  • St. Kilda Festival
  • The inaugural Discworld convention and gala dinner Nullus Anxietas - the first outside the UK. Yay! I finally get to do what everyone else already seems to have done - meet Terry Pratchett!
  • Snark’s 25th birthday and party
  • Madman’s free open-air cinema again on Saturday night. This time, it’s the awesome Read or Die
  • R’s Shindig and catching up with Mi
  • An old high school friend’s birthday party
  • K’s Singstar party

The Gala Dinner, K’s party and the school friend’s birthday party have already become victims. Most of this weekend is going to be taken up by Nullus Anxietas, I guess. Hopefully St. Kilda Fest and Madman get a look in. Ross Irwin and the Soul Special are playing at the festival.

Gah! Busy!

Radiohead you can DANCE to

Posted on December 18th, 2006 in Radio, Music, Ragnarok Online, Rants

Some background:

My sister is a closet emo goth with a Ragnarok Online account rather than a MySpace. Her taste in music goes along what I call the “wailing man” vein. For the last few years I’ve been subjected to the likes of Radiohead, Muse and Jeff Buckley being played through the bedroom wall, quite loudly at all hours. Sometimes, it’s the same song again and again and again.

Because of the wonders of physics, the Bedroom Wall Speaker wouldn’t actually let me enjoy the songs’ melodies, but would instead distort and muffle the music so that all I could hear was perhaps a dischord being banged out non-stop for 4 minutes, or the sound of someone moaning like a cat that hadn’t been killed when the car hit it.

In other words, I grew to hate it. My sister completely ruined any enjoyment I may have gotten out of this music. Now, Muse and Radiohead I could probably live without, but Jeff Buckley! JEFF BUCKLEY! That’s a crime against humanity. I can’t listen to any of that music now even if I had a state-of-the-art digital surround sound system to listen with!

Then, today, on Triple J, I heard a track by Mark Ronson. He covered Radiohead’s Just but did it in a funk style! Trumpets and sax where the guitars once where! It was Radiohead you could DANCE to!

I’m really liking the funk music that seems to be sneaking back into the music scene. In fact, I’m really liking just about all the music on JJJ at the moment. This Mark Ronson track has been around for about a year apparently. I’m really not up-to-date with new music, I admit. I’ve been tuning out of the emo bullshit that’s been overplayed on JJJ and tuning in to ABC News instead. But now that the ratings season is over, and the summer DJs are on, the music has magically improved. It seems that they’re more interested now in playing what they enjoy, not playing what they think would be good for them commercially.

Which means that songs over the day have included:

  • Mark Ronson’s cover of Just
  • Cornelius (yay! Japanese music is back on the radio!)
  • Arctic Monkeys
  • Jamie T
  • …and what appears to be some old school Sex Pistols

Yep. Am enjoying music muchly. I’ll actually be listening in to the J’s more often, I think. Especially since Jackson Jackson have now released their first single for radio airplay. Album is due out in March. I’m hanging out for some Flicker and the Spark action, personally.

Anyway. Time for me to put some headphones on and enjoy my music without disturbing anyone else.

EDIT: I take it all back. Dools just played original Radiohead and some emo bastard band back to back. AFI, I think? Yech. I’m changing to PBS.

Wii-kend

Posted on December 12th, 2006 in Nintendo Wii, PS3, Rovers, Gaming, Gadgetry, Geekery

wii-kend (noun)

A weekend devoted exclusively towards playing a Nintendo Wii.

Well…a weekend and a bit more.

I’ve been excited about the Nintendo Wii ever since I heard about the controller over a year ago. And even though I pledged never to call the Wii the Wii again, I’ve kinda been “Wiiiiiiiii”-ing a lot ever since last Wednesday night when the midnight launch was on.

Chadstone! Fashion Capital of Australia! And apparently, the biggest official launch site in Melbourne, which seems strange, as I would have expected a shop in the city to have big official festivities. Meanwhile in Sydney, at the same time, a single gamer waited alone in Bondi Junction, surely the New South Welsh equivalent of Chadstone, whilst the big launch party happened somewhere else in Sydney’s CBD…

Well, at least Matt managed to get first in line.

Anyway!

We arrived at 8.30pm since the doors to the shop were going to open at 9pm to hand out tickets. There was already a small crowd of people, including a family at the front of the line that came complete with camping chairs. Their young son was still in his school uniform, so the theory went that they picked him up from school and came straight over to line up. Apparently they had even ordered pizzas for delivery to their seats.

By 9pm, the queue was outside the doors and into the carpark.

By 9.20, the doors were finally opened and I managed to get number 29 in line.

My adopted onee-san came along with me, although I’m really not sure why. She’s not a gamer or a geek in any way. In fact, she freaks out at the idea of going into Akihabara, where she says “it stinks like otaku“. She also came along to the Melbourne eGames Expo a few weeks back. All this it seems, to take photos of Australian otaku and show them to her friends back home. The friends all seem to be amazed by the fact that there are Australian gamers and geeks. I think she regretted going to both eGames and the midnight launch of the Wii. She seemed really bored. But what could I do? I warned her plenty of times about how boring it would be for her.

Luckily, once I received my ticket and paid for everything, we were allowed to wander around. Outside the shop they had a few consoles set up to play on, but I figured I better get onee-san out of there for a break and we went to grab coffee and cake.

Mmmm, death by chocolate. And a much needed hit of caffeine. The cake arrived in a slightly unexpected way though. Maybe they were trying to tell me something at 11pm.

Some time-killing phone calls to Bondi Junction, where Matt and I were basically trying to out-geek each other, and I decide it’s time to head back to the action at 11.30pm.

There was quite a long line now. It seems that the first 100 people received blue tickets (which included me) and everyone after that had purple tickets. The queue was going to the doors even after I had picked up the console and went home. I wonder if they managed to serve everyone?

Music was booming and there were a few competitions going. A Wii Tennis tournament was well underway. Someone had dressed up as Princess Peach, complete with a papier mache turtle missile. There were plenty of fake moustaches around. A huge Link statue - which apparently they were going to give away to the best cosplayer, but since there was only one, they decided to give it to that first-in-line family. Someone will be rich from eBay now.

People were lining up for collection at last. We were handed party poppers, hehe. Then, the countdown! I was promptly hit in the back by an exploding popper. It fucking hurt. But no matter! Because I’m about to get my Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!

All up, I ordered the console which came with Wii Sports, the Wii Play pack that has an extra controller (known as Hajimete no Wii in Japan), The Legend of Zelda: Twighlight Princess (of course! The shop had about 5 times more copies of Zelda than any other game for sale on the night) and Rayman: Raving Rabbids which I knew I would buy after seeing the comical series of teaser trailers. Here was a game that brought back memories of Sam and Max, The Neverhood and other nonsensical PC games. I had high hopes for this game.

Finally picked up my goodies and got out of there at about 1am. 29th in line and I still couldn’t get my stuff for about 40 minutes! The staff were apparently on 18 hour shifts or something ridiculous. And apparently not getting paid any more for it! Stupid industrial relations laws! *shakes fists*

Anyway.

Two things I am unhappy about with the Wii - it is region locked. Utter stupidity. The Nintendo DS was region free and sold like hotcakes. While I was in Japan, there was a point where the DS had actually sold out - I’m sure this was in part due to people importing because of the larger colour choices and games. Surely Nintendo could’ve used the same approach for the Wii? Region Free = Awesome.

Second bitch: The price of games! AUD$110 is recommended retail price! What?! Are you insane?! JBHiFi, however was selling them for AUD$79 so I managed to get a price match. Honestly though, what bastardry. $110?! Unbelievable. With the console and the games, I paid AUD$740. That put a dent in my account, but not as much as the PS3 will next year, I’m sure.

Anyway, I’ve now had about 5 days to play around with it. It also seems to have the Rovers’ stamp of approval. Especially Rayman, which was as ridiculous and humorous as was expected. In fact, I played so much that I had sore arms and shoulders for days! Note to any potential Wii owners: stretch before you play. It’s really a workout.

Haven’t really had a chance to get into Zelda yet, but I will this week.

One great thing about this console is that it’s great for parties. I’ve already taken it to two and people had heaps of fun with it. Even the non-gamers, which is exactly what Nintendo were aiming for in the design on this console.

Mission Accomplished, Miyamoto-san.

Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!

Watashi wa sakana desu.

Posted on December 3rd, 2006 in Nihongo, Studies, Friends, Rovers, Geekery, Gaming, Japan

Today was the Japanese Language Proficiency Test, or JLPT, which is held around the world every year on the first Sunday in December. It was my first ever go at this exam, after studying Japanese in Year 6, a semester in my final year of university and after spending 10 months in Japan itself. Needless to say, I attempted the lowest level. Needless to say, I’ll fail miserably.

I didn’t study as much as I’d have liked since my adopted onee-san is currently in Australia and living with me until she gets her own digs. This means I’ve been spending a lot of time with her and travelling a bit. She’s helped me study a bit but memorising kanji is something that’d I’d have to do myself.

Ah well, I’m not too fussed. I didn’t need to pass this exam. I won’t be working in Japan anytime soon. I basically just did it for myself, because I’d like to watch, read and play Japanese media without the aid of subtitles one day. At any rate, I used today to get the jist of how the exam works so I can try for Level 3 next time.

I learnt one thing though - even if I had studied everything that I had planned to study, then I still would’ve had trouble today. It’s very fast paced - 40 questions in 25 minutes - and of course everything is written in Japanese. The main thing I’ll need to practice is reading hiragana and katakana quickly.

Anyway, now that my so-called studies of Japanese can be relaxed a bit, my next goal is finally clocking Final Fantasy VII. I can’t see the obsession with Sephiroth, personally. Vincent is clearly the better bishie. In human form, anyway.

One last thing tonight: Thoughts go out to Duane’s family. Duane was a former Rover who died tragically today. He’ll be missed in Scouting circles. Rest in peace.

Woohoo! I beat Tetris!

Posted on July 5th, 2006 in Street Art, Melbourne, Gaming

Awesomeness on the streets of my home town:

Image from Wooster Collective

A Tetris game made out of milk crates hanging off a freeway wall. Creative and simple street art.

Pity I’m not there to see it. I bet it’s been taken down now. I wonder which freeway it was? Looks vaguely like the Eastern freeway but there really isn’t much to base that on.

Wooster Collective, via Joystiq.

Next Page »