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Monday, September 26, 2011

19 September 11

halibut with ricotta gnocchi
Jeff and I went out to dinner with my parents. We attempted to go to Grub on Main St, thinking we wouldn't need a reservation — it being Monday and all — but we were sorely mistaken. Instead we went to Crave, a place I'd been to for enjoyable brunches but not for dinner. I had this delicious halibut with ricotta gnocchi, corn, and asparagus while we chatted about possibly going to Puerto Rico at Christmas.

18 September 11


I dyed my hair.

Vroom Vroom!



Love them or hate them, Prada's latest runway shoes definitely make a statement. "I like classic cars." 
That or "Look at my fancy ass Prada runway shoes. Neener neener neeeeeener!"  

Either way, they've grown on me since I started writing this post. First reaction? These are hideous! Especially the first pair. 
Yikes are we back in the 90's where I customized my flair legged Jnco jeans with flames going up the legs?? (true story) No thank you.
But now I'm seeing them as definite art pieces. They're pretty amazing (except the first one that I still hate) I love the brake lights on the back.  The chrome heels... the vintage car color palette. Great attention to detail. 


 Cute bag!

I love this one. It reminds me of my very first dream car. A vintage pink Chevy Bel Air...


What do YOU think?? Too crazy? Just crazy enough?
Do you like the idea of heels as art or do you prefer your art to hang on the wall?

I say it every season... Miuccia Prada is a genius. I am SO excited to see what she has in store for us with Miu Miu this season. She never disappoints.



XOX,

Game Review: Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine


This blog isn't known for featuring game reviews, but once we received the opportunity to do one for the Warhammer 40,000 game Space Marine, we just couldn't turn it down. Below, I present to you a WH40K focused review of the PC version by Jon Lotz of Man in Black Reviews, originally of The Nerd Station. If you're more interested in a shorter but still informative review, you may want to look at this review by Sith Jammies.

Like with Star Wars, Warhammer 40,000 has a very rich mythos, with numerous characters and factions all engaged in an unending cycle of war. Unlike with Star Wars however, few people even know Warhammer 40,000 exists, and that is because the 40k series primarily is in novel form. Warhammer 40,000 initially started its life as a tabletop war game and rose to prominence through that route. Eventually it became popular enough that Games Workshop, the company behind the game began producing books based upon the series and not long after, several video games were created to capitalize upon the series. Now we come to Warhammer 40,000 Space Marine, a game that embodies all that Warhammer 40,000 stands for so this game really does use the franchise well and is a very good jumping off point for non fans for the series.

Graphics

The graphics for Space Marine look quite good, all of the environments are detailed, and they really show off the sweeping architecture of the grim far future. The enemies are decently detailed although they do all look the same for the most part. The armor and weapons the characters use are also well detailed as well and the armor and weapons actually match the descriptions given in the Warhammer 40,000 novel series. The main issue graphically is the facial animations they do look unimpressive and the lip-syncing is sub par.

Gameplay

The game takes place from the third person perspective, however the Gameplay is anything but standard, instead of being a cover based shooter like the Gears of War series, combat in Space Marine is melee focused. The enemies in the early parts of the game use swarm tactics to try and kill you and you do not have enough bullets in your ranged weapons for them all, so more often than not you will need to use your melee weapon to smite your foes. Unlike with other games switching to your melee weapon feels natural, on the PC it’s the right mouse button. With the controls set up the way they are you can slice through a horde of foes, and then quickly start firing a ranged weapon at a distant target all without having to pause and switch inventory. You can carry up to four ranged weapons in addition to a melee weapon at one time, and the weapons all complement themselves well. In a rather unique move, Space Marine does not include regenerative health or health packs, instead you have to perform special finishing moves on stunned enemies in order to regain health and you can also regain health by using the Fury Mode. Fury Mode is a special mode that you can send your Space Marine into that regenerates health, and increases speed and damage. This is a good mode to use if a large number of foes are swarming you or you have to face a large number of miniboss level enemies.

Story

The story for Space Marine is really well written so fans of the series should love it as it does not break with canon, and actually parallels the popular Ultramrarines novel series by Graham McNeill. The developers really chose the best faction to play as since the Space Marines are genetically engineered super soldiers that are designed to give and take tremendous punishment. They are basically giant engines of destruction, in fact in the game when you sprint you get a loud thudding sound effect and the screen shakes. In the game you play as Captain Titus of the Ultramarines, you are being sent to a forge world that has come under attack by the alien orks, and you must help fight the invasion. You are joined by two companions, a veteran Sergeant and a relatively inexperienced youth. The companion AI is terrible, they have trouble killing one enemy between them and if you are getting attacked they will sometimes just stand there doing nothing at all, so how either one of them survived training is beyond me. The orks were a great choice for an enemy seeing as how they are basically video game enemies to start with. When the orks attack a planet they usually bring millions of troopers, so it makes sense that Captain Titus has to chop and shoot his way through hundreds of them. The plot also features moments of betrayal and deceit that are staples of the novel series. The voice acting is decent, however the voice actor for Titus himself gives a very low-key performance with all of his battle cries sounding fairly weak.

Multiplayer

Multi-player is fairly standard, there are the basic modes such as death-match and control point capture, and you can gain experience points to unlock new weapons and armor. Cooperative mode is based around fighting a large horde of enemies. Overall the multi-player is fairly well designed and is a good complement to the single player campaign.

Final Thoughts

Space Marine handles the franchise well and uses the elements that makes Warhammer 40,000 so popular, the PC version is a decent port, it controls fairly well, but it lacks a manual saving system and whenever you reach a checkpoint the game tells you not to turn off your system. Those are only minor complaints however as the game is really quite well made and a good deal of fun no matter what system you play it on. I do highly recommend it for Warhammer 40,000 fans and fans of action games in general.


If you'd like a little closer look into the gameplay of Space Marine, Hydriatus has this review to offer.

Sunday, September 25, 2011

17 September 11

gluten-free birthday cake
Sarah had her birthday party at the house. Basically we just ate a lot of food and drank a lot of wine and talked too loud and people smoking cigarettes outside saw our neighbours having an argument in which they were throwing dishes at each other.

16 September 11

pumpkin blossoms
There are a lot of pumpkin blossoms, but only one pumpkin and it doesn't seem to be ripening :(

Saturday, September 24, 2011

ambrosia & W1L 030: Write one leaf about your favorite font.

I haven't much to say except that I'm writing this now (which is not when this is going to get posted...) because I have acupuncture tomorrow, and I know this pain in my hands will recede for at least a day or two (until I'm back in the costume lab, sewing), so I can afford to type this out.


This is a long story about acupuncture, and it might be really boring, and I just reread it and the tenses are all over the place, so you can scroll to the outfit at the end if you like. I will not hold it against you, even if you have a nice body.


I just wanted to say that this is going to make me sound crazy, but acupuncture makes me cry.


The first time I went, it was in a fit of desperation because I have tendinitis (from making too many friendship bracelets for myself in one sitting, yes, lamest injury ever) and I couldn't take my anti-inflammatory medication anymore after it made me have heart palpitations. (Actually, do palpitations only refer to a fast heartbeat? Because I think mine slowed down to like a sleeping heart rate. At any rate (ohoho), it was some kind of arrhythmia that made me breathe too hard and feel drowsy.) I needed my tendinitis to heal because I was back in school and could barely do the programming homework for my Ruby class because typing hurt, and I had to eat takeout for every meal because cooking hurt, and I had to be really particular while taking notes in class because writing hurt, and possibly most annoying and least important of all, my hand-sewing was taking me forever because holding a needle hurt.


I mean, yes, my hands still hurt, but it's the difference between shooting pains up my wrists and being able to floss my teeth by myself.


So the first time I went to acupuncture, my acupuncturist decided to start with my right arm. He stuck two needles in my left ankle, and it felt like... he described it as an electric current, but to me it felt like my lower left leg was getting buzzed in the alcoholic sense. At that point I already had tears streaming down the sides of my face, but I assumed it was from the panic and horror of having tiny, almost-painless needles stuck into my body. (They really are almost painless. For the most part, they feel like quick, sharp pressure on the way in - not pain - and you can't feel them once they're in.)


Then he added two more needles, this time to my right ankle, and I started really crying, hard, like it was getting hard to breathe and my head was getting stuffy. He (and I, and my mother, and the receptionist who came in to see what the noise was about) assumed it was from panicking about needles, so he quickly did my right arm (a couple more needles, almost completely painless) and lit a flame or something to heat up the arm needles.


By this time, I was sobbing uncontrollably and choking for air, and I thought I was having an adverse reaction to acupuncture or something. I felt mentally clear but kind of confused about why I was crying so much because I didn't feel panicked. My feet and hands felt really weird, like they'd fallen asleep and all the blood was rushing back, and then my mom tells me that my hands tensed up in a sort of gun shape and went all rigid. I kept crying for like an hour and then fell asleep.


And my hands felt a hundred years old but also fully functional.


So I went back the week after, and this time I braced myself for the needles, thinking it was just the shock of having needles in me that caused my bizarre reaction last time (and knowing that I haven't panicked while getting any other needles stuck in me since before I could read). We only needed to work on my left arm this time, because that was where most of the tendon pain seemed to be coming from. (He applied (a lot of) pressure on different parts of my forearm to determine which parts were sore.) So the first needle went into my arm, and my eyes started watering, but I'm fine. I'm expecting it. Then the second needle, which actually hurts going in, but in a really deep, muscle-achey way that my skin doesn't register at all. Then a few more until there are five stuck in my arm, and then comes a little flame and that limbs-waking-up sensation. There are tears dripping all over my temples, but it's all good and the needles come out.


Then he tests my arm again with some pressure, and we discover one more area that's really sore, so he decides to do another little needle session on my left arm. First needle, I'm completely fine. Second needle, and holy shit, I feel like I'm in Tangled and Rapunzel just hit me over the head with a frying pan, except instead of I don't know, grease, this is like a frying pan of grief, because I don't just feel sad. I feel like someone died and I just found out, and I am bawling on the table and am somehow really relieved that I figured out what was happening.


Then just one more needle and some flames, and I'm done. The sobbing actually subsides while the needles are heating up, and I think I'm done. I like to think it was because of my excellent emotional control and the fact that I started counting powers of two and the Fibonacci sequence in my head in order to deactivate the emotional centers in my brain. Anyway, after the needles come out, my mom hands me some tissues to clean up my face and I feel this wave of incredible sadness about absolutely nothing that makes me cry uncontrollably, like a baby, all snot and ugly faces, and I'm pretty sure I was like wailing, which is embarrassing.


And then it went away. I decided to go to the bathroom because for some reason I always have to pee really badly afterward, despite having just cried out half my body weight in water, and as I was washing my hands, I just felt so fucking sad again and started bawling.


And then I was fine. And then as I was exiting the building with my mom, I started crying again, and then I was fine. Really happy, actually. My arms felt really tired and heavy, but nothing hurt when I moved my fingers, which was such a relief.


So that was my acupuncture experience and that's what I'm going in for tomorrow.


Also I had to write erotic literature for my Female Sexuality class, and I'm going to post it eventually. The requirements were that it had to involve safe sex ("eroticizing safe sex" was the topic) and be at least a page long. Mine is just creeping into seven pages, and I'm totally judging myself for that, but I think it's justified because I find emotionally charged things sexier, and I took five and a half pages for establishing the relationship.


Anyway here's an outfit that's kind of boring but which I really liked because this sweater is the sweater of gods:



This sweater is not made of ambrosia, but if Greek gods ever wore knitwear, it would definitely be togaic variations on this sweater. Togaic is not a word.




Sweater: thrifted. Longsleeve: Target. Skirt: secondhand, gift. Tights: generic. Boots: Steven by Steve Madden.

BY THE WAY, ENTER MY $100 SHOPBOP GIVEAWAY. You literally just need to leave a comment with your name and email, and it doesn't close until October 2nd. Also your odds are still not that bad because I haven't even hit 50 entries yet.


And to my anon Danielle who left one of those comments that make my whole week, yes, let's be friends! Send me an email, or pop by on tumblr! (Tumblr's a lot of fun!) Or Twitter!


And to all you lurkers who I am guessing exist, PLEASE SAY HI! Sometimes I feel like I'm shouting into the void (which I'm okay with, but it's more fun to hear other people's thoughts).



I write stuff after the jump.