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James Kelly
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My favorite scene was when the ceiling dropped a bit and you just sat there... "It's all part of the test." Made me laugh out loud.
Eureka: Of Mites and Men
In every rehearsal, when Parrish stands up to triumphantly announce that he's completed his 100 cranes, I did it in my best* Homer Simpson voice, like when he tries to fake out Apu with the lottery scratcher: "WOOO HOOO! ONE HUNDRED CRANES, BABY!" This episode was more fun to film than I thought...
Congrats! Some gamers wait their entire lives to reach HERO status, and never make it... your's is well earned.
on video game reviews and the power and influence of marketing
I came across this post at No High Scores yesterday. It's about how mega publishers are starting to limit access to the media in terms of review copies, overall access, as well as in potential ad money. There are a lot of great things about working in the games industry. You know what the bes...
Speaking of review sources, did you catch the latest issue of PC Gamer? Apparently Blizzard has announced a new Hero class and a source says "I'm playing a Level 62 Wil Wheaton right now..." - I won't spoil the class' special ability - page 96, back of the magazine.
on video game reviews and the power and influence of marketing
I came across this post at No High Scores yesterday. It's about how mega publishers are starting to limit access to the media in terms of review copies, overall access, as well as in potential ad money. There are a lot of great things about working in the games industry. You know what the bes...
Your design reminded me of a discussion I had years ago with my D&D buddies... I was typically the DM and my graph paper designs always had natural walls, caves, etc. I remember looking at dungeon layouts my friends designed and all the corridors, rooms, and traps were always perfectly square, using a full square and never a partial. Your design reminds me how graph paper was used, often improperly, by both pro and amateur dungeon designers who just couldn't get away from the straight line mentality.
never forget your roots
While walking through Comicon three or four years ago, I stopped to look at one of those booths that's filled with a hundred different T-shirts. Somewhere among the various superhero crests and clever nerd phrases and obscure sci-fi homages, I saw a fairly simple design: an Atari joystick, sitti...
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Jun 28, 2010
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