philmophlegm: (Ico)

This...this is a Lego Star Destroyer.

Got decent broadband? Looking for a way to show it off? How about live streaming HD video from the International Fricking Space Station?

Was dinosaur blood "not too hot, not too cold"?

This is sad. I wonder if Satao was descended from the elephant in Mike Resnick’s SF novel ‘Ivory’. (Incidentally, I strongly recommend that book.)

Welsh kids are really bad at getting into Oxford and Cambridge. (Is the appropriate response to this to feel smug at having done so?)

Remember my LJ post discussing whether you had to agree with an author's views to like their work? Any Marion Zimmer Bradley fans here...?

"The only serious black mark against the NHS was its poor record on keeping people alive." Oh, that's ok then.

I love this article about France midfielder Paul Pogba playing Football Manager on the plane.

O Fortuna Misheard Lyrics

Football's rudest names. One day in Football Manager, I'm going to include the Peruvian leagues, just so that I can manage Deportivo Wanka.

Noddy Holder given the Freedom of Walsall. I've been to Walsall. I think I'd just want to be free to leave.

World of Warcraft player gets to level 90 without picking a side. That's a lot of herb-picking.

PC only game being developed by some ex-Team Ico staff. That's interesting...

Gamechanger - The Virtual Tabletop Gaming Surface.

Black-Footed Cat kittens. I want hybrid pets!

Ten Myths About Britain's Relationship With The EU

More than half of UK households take more in benefits and services than they contribute in tax.

Which UK political party's "Friends of Palestine" group linked to an article saying "no Brit should consider voting Labour as it is run by a Zionist Jew...the time is ripe to cleanse British public life of Zionists and Jerusalemites"? The BNP? No. Respect? No…

philmophlegm: (D&D Basic)
logo

I have a new business. It's called The Shop on the Borderlands and it's an online retailer of used / secondhand / classic / old / out-of-print roleplaying games. Please have a look around, and if you know any roleplayers point them at it. We're also on Facebook and Twitter (@ShopBorderlands), so like and follow the shop too if you're interested.
philmophlegm: (D&D Companion)
I imagine a lot of role-players come to RPGs having already read some epic fantasy. In my case, I'd read a lot of Tolkien and quite a bit of Donaldson before I ever played The Keep on the Borderlands. It is natural for the the epic fantasy fan to want to reproduce that epic fantasy feel in D&D, or his fantasy RPG of choice. Most of the D&D scenarios I wrote in my early DMing days were aspiring to epic fantasy.

The thing is, D&D (and by extension, most fantasy RPGs) is not epic fantasy. What it is, is swords and sorcery. As Gary Gygax made clear in Appendix N of the first edition AD&D Dungeon Master's Guide, authors like Tolkien were not the primary inspiration for D&D. I mean yes, there are hobbits (or there were until the lawyers got involved, and they became 'halflings') and orcs and elves and dwarves, but D&D as originally imagined is all about a party of adventurers entering a dungeon, killing some monsters and getting some loot. That sort of thing has much more in common with L. Sprague de Camp and Robert E. Howard than the likes of Tolkien or Donaldson or Eddings. And indeed, the aforementioned Appendix N lists Sprague de Camp and Howard as "the most immediate influences" on AD&D, along with Fritz Leiber, Jack Vance, H.P. Lovecraft and Abraham Merritt. Since AD&D was first published in the late 70s, a lot of fantasy has been written*. I'd be interested to see what literary influences were cited by the developers of more recent versions of the game.

Because D&D wasn't created to run epic fantasy scenarios, it's not actually that good at recreating that epic fantasy feel. Most D&D campaigns, even if they avoid traditional dungeon-crawling, still feature lots of skirmishes. Through the whole of The Lord of the Rings, how many times do Frodo and Sam actually partake in combat?

Dragonlance is an example of an epic fantasy trilogy that was D&D. (I've just finished the third book in the original Chronicles trilogy, and have been surprised by how good the third part was - I thought the first book was pretty poor.) However, when you read the books and you flick through the original AD&D modules, it's clear that the modules have much more dungeon crawling and monster slaying than the books. Conversely, the books have more character interaction.

It seems to me that any DM who wants to run an epic fantasy campaign may want to look beyond D&D...

Read more... )
philmophlegm: (Fiend Folio)
Card Hunters. Like a cross between 1st edition AD&D (and with the art style taken from that era) and Magic: The Gathering, played on PC but with a fake tabletop vibe. And free (although you can pay for extra loot). Good fun and simple to play. Runs in your browser. Oh, and I imagine it'll run on pretty much any PC.



Toys meme

Aug. 27th, 2013 06:58 pm
philmophlegm: (D&D Basic)
The list is from one of those TV programmes where they count down the Top 100 X Of All Time, where 'X' is something like "Celebrity Breakdowns", "Sitcoms", "Shocking Rock Videos" or, as in this case, "Toys".

Repost or comment here or both. Bold for toys and games you own or owned, italics for those you've played with but which belonged to someone else. (I reckon it counts as owned if it was owned by someone else in your household, like a sibling.) Oh, and post your total scores at the bottom. If you need a reminder of what these toys actually were, http://www.listchallenges.com/top-100-toys-as-voted-for-on-the-channel-four, there are pictures here.

Read more... )
philmophlegm: (Wrexham club shield)
The Elfish Gene, Mark Barrowcliffe

I have somewhat mixed views on this. It's an autobiographical account of growing up and choosing to be a role-player rather than being cool. It's well written, and funny in places, almost endearing in others*. It's the sort of book that you'd probably end up liking if you read a chapter and think to yourself "Yes, that's exactly how it was!". On that basis, it scores points by being British (and not yet another jocks versus nerds American high school tale), but it loses some points with me because the author is quite a few years older than me. (Old enough to have been around and role-playing within a few years of the birth of the hobby). The biggest problem though is the central premise of the book, summed up in the book's subtitle "Coventry, 1976. For a brief, blazing summer, twelve-year-old Mark Barrowcliffe had the chance to be normal. He blew it." While I don't doubt that this is a true recollection of the author's school days, it didn't remind me of mine. In particular, despite what all the stereotypes (and this book) say, RPGs were just as much for the cool boys in my school. And because that is a large part of the author's story, it meant that I couldn't identify with him as much as I was expecting to.

* There are other parts of the book where the author comes across as a sociopathic git. It is possible that the problems he had were not so much because he played D&D but because he was somewhat unlikeable. He's now quite a successful fantasy author, writing as M.D. Lachlan.



The Big Short, Michael Lewis

An account of how and why the credit crunch happened. You'd think this would be dull. Not a bit. I stayed up into the early hours of the morning reading this. Couldn't put it down. Impeccable research and I can't fault his economic analysis. What sets this apart from other books on the subject is the way the author uses vignettes of the key players (individual credit ratings analysts, hedge fund managers, insurance traders etc) to tell the story. Brilliant writing and you'll learn a lot, even if you think you know the full story. (Hmmm, telling a complicated factual story using vignettes of important individuals. I've read another book that used that technique. [livejournal.com profile] kargicq, you might be on to something...)


Moneyball, Michael Lewis

Same author. This time the subject is baseball statistics, which again sounds like a difficult subject to make exciting. Once again he does it. The story centres on the Oakland Athletics, a team that managed a lot of success in the 1990s despite having a player salary budget a fraction of the bigger clubs. How? Lewis explains how the Athletics' general manager looked at baseball statistics differently to assemble a team of cheap but effective players. Probably of narrower interest to a non-baseball audience, but still a very well-written book. (The film, starring Brad Pitt, is also very good.) It offered some inspiration to this online marketing consultant, and in fact I gave the spare copy of it that I owned to a participant in an online marketing workshop we ran earlier this year.


Inverting the Pyramid, Jonathan Wilson

A book about the development of tactics and formations in association football. I suspect that something like 90% of the people who bought this book play Football Manager. And I further suspect that more than half of those read the book and decided to try implementing some of the classic formations of great football teams in their current campaigns. I certainly did. (I had particular success using the 1970 Brazil formation with my Manchester City side, less success with the 1974 Dutch formation.) It's very pleasing to me that perhaps world football's first important formation, the 2-3-5, which lasted for decades in Britain, was invented by Wrexham AFC (see userpic). If you play Football Manager, you will get a lot out of this book. Other football fans, the sort who don't really care about tactics, won't. That simple.
philmophlegm: (Hivers)
Help me out with an alternate history scenario.

Alternate histories where Germany won the Second World War are pretty common - off the top of my head I can think of Robert Harris's 'Fatherland', Philip K. Dick's 'The Man in the High Castle' and that Star Trek episode with Joan Collins in it*. However, the scenario I need help with is one where Germany won the First World War.

What has happened is that the war of attrition of 1915 to 1917 dragged on into a stalemate. The United States stayed out of the war. The Russian Revolution happened as it had happened in our timeline. Germany was able to reduce British industrial capacity through Zeppelin raids. German U-Boats cut off the flow of raw materials from the British Empire. And slowly Germany was able to advance through France.

Britain and what is left of France and the rest of the allies surrender to Germany in 1934. Southern Britain is a lawless place with much of its infrastructure destroyed. Many people have fled to the north. The Royal Family has moved to Canada. Under the terms of the surrender, Ireland has been granted independence, guaranteed by Germany. Large parts of France have been carved off as vassal states of Germany, most notably Burgundy. The same has happened to Italy, with Lombardy now a separate kingdom subject to the German Kaiser.

That's about as far as I got. My question is: what does the world look like in 1935, with Germany the dominant European power?







* Well, ok that isn't actually set after a German victory, but it does show how the non-death of an American pacifist leads to German victory.
philmophlegm: (Beyond the Mountains of Madness)
Bunn and I watched the Doctor Who story 'Colony in Space'* last night. In that story, there is a scene where the Doctor and the Master are able to determine what happened to the planet's now-primitive-but-once-advanced native race by interpreting a sort of history-book-as-wall-painting.

This is of course, something of a cliche. Or a 'trope', if you will. Lovecraft's 'At the Mountains of Madness' is a particularly fine example, dating from 1931, and an earlier Lovecraft short story (1921's 'The Nameless City' features the same idea).

My AKICOLJ question is: Are there any earlier examples in SF / fantasy, or even in other genres?








* Pertwee / Jo Grant story. I was surprised to find that it wasn't familiar, which means that I can't have seen it before. It was very good. One of the better Pertwees. The sort of space opera that Poul Anderson or Andre Norton would have written in the early 70s, which was when it was broadcast. Truly terrible mining robot though.
philmophlegm: (Witcher)
Today's big job was tidying up the library. We've removed a number of duplicates and some books that we're never likely to read or don't really want to see again. More on that later.

We've also moved the books we want to read next onto to-read shelves. However, by the time we'd finished, we had three to-read shelves each. (Note that this isn't how many books there are in the library that we haven't read, this is the just the books we haven't read and want to read NOW.)

Anyway, I thought I'd share the contents of my to-read shelves with you in the hope that someone would say "Oh, definitely read x next" or "I hated y, but you might like it" or even "Knowing your tastes, I don't think you'd get on with z".

Read more )
philmophlegm: (Default)

I thought I’d do something a little different with this Phligm Phlagm post. Instead of using links grabbed from Twitter or andrewducker, I thought I’d put up links to some of my own favourite LiveJournal posts. And by that I mean ones that I wrote.

Sort of a ‘Phlegmatic Greatest Hits’, or at least a ‘The Best of Philmo Phlegm’ compilation.




Read more... )

philmophlegm: (orbit)

World goal of the season contender from (of all places) Bolivia

"The Apple Boycott: People Are Spouting Nonsense about Chinese Manufacturing"

This house is up for sale and is quite close to where we live (in fact we sometimes walk the dogs nearby). Tempting, but moving is such a hassle. Oh, and we'd have to increase the mortgage ever so slightly. The seller is environmentalist and politician Zac Goldsmith.

I think David Milliband has given up hope of ever being Labour leader.

It's more than a little unfair to blame Obama for the US national debt or even the vast increase in it.

The shocking poverty that this family of nine (yes NINE!) would be reduced to with the proposed cap on benefits. I mean they'd have to stop spending £32 a WEEK on mobile phones, cut down on the tobacco and booze and maybe even think about a cheaper Sky package...

How to illuminate your PC. I've done this. Hell, I did this with an Orac-style transparent case once.

"Germany's meteorology institute allows the sponsorship of weather systems." What!? Am I the only that thinks that's a bit odd? And it#s rather unfortunate that BMW chose to sponsor a weather system that's killed 150 people so far...

Kate Green MP has managed to get 'Top Totty' ale banned from the House of Commons bar. I wonder how she'd feel about this beer from Macedonia.

Steam / XBox Live -style achievements for tech support workers

Astonoshingly over-the-top preparations by role-playing GMs. I say "astonishingly over-the-top", but some of them sounded all-too-familiar...

Our friendly local zookeeper on that story about the lion eating the owl.

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