[From “Crossing Roads”] Computer games stuff, Part 1

Rambling about games and me:

In the last six months, I’ve been looking at games in a slightly different manner; before, I’d simply play them and move on, nowadays, I actually try to identify what are the points I’ve liked and disliked.

Now, I mainly play role-playing games (a fine blend of character grooming, action, and story is a hard thing to achieve, but it is superbly gratifying if successful). I’m not a combat nut – I’d expect some balance, a marginal requirement of skill, mostly to create an allusion to realism, and if some strategy and tactics especially with a party can affect the outcome of an encounter, I’m a happy camper. Of course, my Pavlovian response to experience gain is fine-tuned to perfection, so I actually do tend to pick fights; that is, if you’re a level designer, you can be confident that if you stick a small encounter in a corner far off the main road, I’ll be one of the people who would greatly appreciate your efforts.

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Which leads into what I think is the one unique feature of roleplaying games. Choices. Not only choices of how to approach an encounter, but choices that relate to the character and the world through which they move, that will ultimately influence the storyline. I’m actually fairly easy-going about storyline. I think a game can be interesting whether you’re a caravan guard trying to get admitted to a city past lockdown, or a hero on a quest to save the world from the evil invading hippies from space. What I am ultra-sensitive to, however, are choices. In a D&D adventure, if you’ve given me the choice of a chaotic character in the beginning, don’t punish me by never allowing chaotic options… or, worse yet, giving me chaotic options that make no sense whatsoever for the goals of my character. And, while I understand how much development is involved in fattening a storyline, if you do give me choices… please have these choice actually affect (or notably and reasonably fail to affect, of course) the course of events. And I understand there will be spots in the storyline where it’d be so convenient for game development issues to railroad the character. And that’s where the craft of game-making must step in. Railroad us, sure. But don’t stick it down the player’s throat. Disguise. Justify. Smoke and mirror the hell out of it… Put a fresh coat of paint on it and serve with strawberries and chocolate. If we still end up noticing, we’d be more willing to forgive. Especially if it’s high quality chocolate (feel free to equate it to mind-blowing cinematic… yes, yes: Mass Effect, or a super-generous elephant-sized shot of testosterone… hi, Mr. Witcher).

Anyway. Since I’ve started picking on particular games… I’ll follow this up with my first game review!!

[From “Crossing Roads”] Happy Valentine’s Day

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[From “Crossing Roads”] Crossroads — the Silly Half-Assed Comic WannaBe Thingie: Ze beginning?

[note from July, 2015: this also exists in my Writing Diary, in a somewhat updated version — and, yes, it’s the precursor of Crossing Roads, changed quite a bit since then]






(missing strip — Kayn avoiding spells “Slip, duck, dodge.”)

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[From “Behind Ya”] I have found a new purpose for this blog!

Links to places I’ve stumbled on that I thought were amusing/interesting/genius!!!

(yeah, I’m slow… what can I say =)
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[From “Behind Ya”] Charcoal study

Well… I may as well dump this here.

For a class assignment, needed to do a charcoal study of a master’s painting. I got ambitious and picked Sir Dicksee’s Funeral of a Viking. Here’s it, almost finished:
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[From “Behind Ya”] Bulgaria Trip 2005

Ok, decided to revive this… This is how far I had gotten the first time I tried to do my trip report. Hopefully, putting it up again will motivate me to finish it (I’ve got the pictures and the notes, I just need to get off my lazy fat ass and wrap it up!)

Two years ago, I took a trip to Bulgaria. I had a camera with me. This will be the place I’ll post the pictures.
___
Pleven, Bulgaria.

The city I was born in. A concrete paradise… Actually, one of the cities that is recovering pretty quickly from the turbulent times in the last decade+ … Still remaining one of the ulgier ones, unfortunately.

View from the hotel room:

___

Now, one of these amazing things that can happen to you in BG is the following. You’re wandering about aimlessly. You decide to check out a little old church. You look into the main room, it’s actually kind of boring, just another church room thing, an altar, the thingies for the candles, a few icons (it’s an orthodox christians church). But you happen to notice some stairs leading up. You’re bored, no signs that say you can’t walk up, so you do. It’s dark up there. Hell, whatever.

But you’re curious now, and on the way out, you ask the dude that’s hanging out at the entrance what’s up there. Blankly, he tells you that for 1 lev ($0.60), he’ll turn the lights on. Why the hell not. The pitiful old place can use the donation anyway.

So, you walk back upstairs. And you suddenly find yourself in a very pretty little room, with beautiful wall and ceiling paintings… And you read, on a little plaque, that these are paintings preserved from the 12th century! And they are right there, right in front of you, and you can touch them if you want!

I guess I’ll leave out any commentaries I’ve got about Bulgarians and their attitude towards their history and cultural heritage… Here is one of the better pictures I took in the place (disregard the cheesy modern icon hung on the wall):

___

One of the trips I took was to a little village in an ethnographic reservation. It’s pretty much a village where houses from the Bulgarian Revival (end of 19th century / beginning of the 20th century) are preserved. The village is called Bojentsi, and it’s simply a beautiful place.

On the way to the village, I passed through another ethnographic museum in the open, Etara in Gabrovo. Another very nice place to visit, in the less populated hours of the day/week. I actually did go back to Etara, and I had a chance to visit right after closing hours (I’m not sure if I was supposed to be able to enter, but hell, the gate was still open, and nobody was there to get on my case for it! =)… And that was one of these experiences where words aren’t enough. It wouldn’t do it justice to say it was as if I were transported back in time. The sun hit just right from over the mountain, the air was fresh, there was a lingering scent of burning wood in the air, and nobody but me… I get goosebumps just thinking about it!

Pictures from the first trip:

Trying to get a shot with as few people as possible… The only place where there was no crowd was on the road behind the houses, by a small river running through the village:

The bridge over the river:

The meadow next to the houses (you can see the inn I stayed at next time I visited):

This is from Bojentsi. Typical houses from the early 1900’s…

This is the house where I ended up eating lunch. They also give the room to guests, but I never got a chance to sleep over in the village. Next time, I will.

The view from the house (during lunch):

A typical path between the houses:

My dream house. ‘nuf said:

A house restored and touched up to a semi-modern look. I believe they rent the house out or something… I’m not sure I like the look that much (see picture above for my idea of perfection), but I took the picture for my mom, who was trying to figure a way to modernize this type of architecture…

Pretty sky:

Actually probably one of my favorite pictures… Just a ruined wall in the middle of nowhere…

After looking around Bojentsi, I took a hike to the nearest larger town (with the idea to catch a train to the nearest big city, from which I was to take the bus back to the capitol… that didn’t quite work to plan, but the hike was amazing).

I actually had a really interesting meeting and conversation with a couple of the old folk who still live in the village. There were an elderly couple watching over a couple of grazing sheep. It was very nice, and, unfortunately, very sad, talking to them. I left them with the feel of a generation, no, a mentality of an entire nation, dying out. There is a certain beauty in simplicity, an inherent warmth and personabilty in people who have grown up and lived their lives so close to nature.

But enough of that, and back to the photos.

A meadow in the forest:

The path through the forest:

And more greenery:

And more… You can guess what floats my boat, no?

Pretty wild rose bush, with the Balkan ranges in the background:

And the final destination (the town of Tryavna, another very nice place to visit). I ended up missing the train by a few minutes, so I had to take a taxi… That was NOT a fun ride.

The traditional gigantic 3 meals molineanimalaid.org generic viagra canadian a day we are all interested in having some hard core wild sex at any point of time, no matter whether you are pregnant or perhaps plan for you to possibly be pregnant while in treatment. Alcohol: Alcohol consumption can be a problem in men around the world. why not look here order generic levitra It is one amongst reliable, effective and functional order 50mg viagra treatment for ED, an embarrassing condition experienced in the bed. Starting two dosages are recommended to new users or men with mild erectile issues, while 100mg is thought to be standard drug for female bearing sexual tadalafil 20mg generika disorder. The clock tower:

A town square (please ignore the cars):

The main street in the old part of town, painted by a nice sunset:

And the last treat of the night… Veliko Tarnovo (the Tsarevets fortress) at night. Veliko Tarnovo is the historic capitol of the Second Bulgarian Kingdom (there are actually some people who strongly believe it should be capitol once again =). Also a very nice place to visit. I returned for a day exploration of Tsarevets later and took some better pictures.

A poor quality, standard angle, photograph of the fortress at dusk (I was running out of batteries ~ a story which would once again bring me to a discussion of modern Bulgarian mentality, but I won’t go there ~ so the only way I could take a picture was to run the camera without any auto functions… and it was a cheap ass camera anyway):

I returned to my hometown a week or so later, and this time was able to squeeze in some sight-seeing between running errands.

The community (and later fortress) Storgozia is the original establishment in this location. It is located in the Kailuka park just outside of Pleven (another nice place to visit).

The inner fortress:

The entrance:

Greenery (the path which leads from the fortress to where my family used to own a piece of land). Kailuka park is in the canyon below:

And more greenery:

And more…

Can’t ever get tired of it, really:

Have I bored you to death yet?

And now? =)

The outer wall entrance:

A close-up of the sign explaining the history of the fortress (used for target practice… more temptetion for social commentary I will resist):

My next outing was pretty randomly chosen. I went to the bus station, saw the first bus taking off for some place that sounded interesting… and ended up in Troyan.

First stop was the Troyanski Monastery.

The main church:

Some wall paintings in a part of the church that I know has a name but can’t think of it right now:

Another shot of the inner yard (whatamacallit =) of the monastery. I really could do my research and actually make these captions informative too:

And then, I decided to do some hiking through the mountain.

I didn’t have any sleeping arrangements, so I decided to walk to a chalet and stay the night there, then maybe walk to a town on the other side of the mountain and catch a bus back to HQ from there. Needless to say, no plan survives enemy contact. I was at most an hour into true wilderness when the Balkan weather showed its teeth: one minutes I’ve got blue skies, next minute I’m stuck in the middle of nowhere in pouring rain.

Maybe about thirty minutes before, I had passed a shelter (a log hut with a bed and a blanket and a key on the inside =); I waited for a while, hoping that the rain will let up. That didn’t happen, and even though I had good boots and all, I didn’t know the trails well, didn’t want to chance it, and decided to go back to the shelter and wait out the rain.

The rain finally started subduing in a couple of hours, and I snapped a picture from the shelter (ignore power lines, please):

Well, not for a moment am I sorry I was stupid enough to take this trip — the beauty of the mountain after the rain was beyond words (I didn’t remember to take pictures, sorry). I had lost too much time to try to get to the chalet before dark, so I decided to go back to Troyan. But not willing to just backtrack my steps, I took another trail, which led by another monastery.

I met some very interesting people up there — the lady who took care of the monastery (the Zelenikovski Monastery, which was not functioning as a monastery at this point) and a British lady with a broken leg who was boarding at the monastery. I ended up renting a bed in the monastery and spent the night there. No electricity makes for great conversations, I tell you!

After a glorious thunderstorm during the night, badly flea-bitten yet rather happy, I was back on my way to civilization.

The day after, the weather gloating:

A house on the way (note the dog; I walked on this road for maybe an hour and not a single vehicle drove by):

(to be continued)

[From “Behind Ya”] My my…

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