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May 15, 2010

Strider for the NES is a killer action game

Filed under: Gaming — Tyler @ 11:58 pm
Strider (NES)

Click the picture for facts about Strider (NES)

There were many 2D side-scrolling action games for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) but one game in particular combined action elements with role-playing skill upgrades as well as an evolving plot with mystery and adventure. This game is called, Strider. It is a killer game. In this game you play a character named Strider Hiryu. Your character is a powerful Ninja-Secret Operative who carries a big sword. You get your missions from the control room in your orbiting base called the “Blue Dragon” (Thanks to Wikipedia for that tidbit of information). It is cool because the control room looks like something out of an Anime or high budget science fiction movie. When you use your sword it makes a slash-effect that cuts enemies that are in front of you. You can slash very quickly so if there is an enemy that takes more than one hit, you can slash repeatedly and dispatch them pretty fast. Also when you kill enemies there are usually cool death animations like exploding blood splotches, or else the enemy can fly backward a ways. You can also stab enemies by holding up on the control pad. I didn’t find myself using this move very much until the end of the game where you need to do it in order to use your fireball combo attack.

The gameplay is probably the best part of Strider. You can slide under things, triple jump across walls, jump into transport tubes. And later in the game you can even get some magnetic boots at walk on walls. You don’t have a tremendous amount of health points. So you need to be careful when getting into combat with enemies. I usually find myself ducking a lot in order to avoid gunfire and waiting and watching for enemy patterns in order to choose the best time to strike. But in some cases the best thing to do is just avoid combat all together by jumping over bad guys (which you can do if you get enough momentum down a hill and jump at the appropriate time). Your slide is a great way to get underneath small areas, also it can be used to dodge enemy fire when timed properly. Strider is realistic in the sense that you can’t touch enemies by jumping on them or running into them. If you do so you will get hurt and will bounce backward.

The settings in the game are great. Each level is a different part of the Earth. You can fight in the dark, Sci-Fi urban areas of Kazah, and also visit the deserts and pyramids of Egypt. Strider does a great job of making each level look different. And if you explore each stage completely, you will encounter people that will talk to you and give you information that you need in order to complete your mission. Sometimes talking to people will also give you special abilities or computer disks which you use to visit new areas. You also can LEVEL UP by talking to people and that increases your health points and energy points. It is very rewarding from a gaming perspective to talk to people in the game because it gives you a short break from the action and it makes you really feel like you are in a mysterious situation doing the work of a ninja.

There are passwords that you use to save your progress in the game. And this is a good thing because the game is pretty long. It takes more than a few hours to beat it. The levels have multiple areas and the dialogue parts take some time. Even though you get to use passwords to save your game, I recommend playing this game when you have a good amount of time on your hands. This is because if you are pretty good at action games you will do well fighting through the stages and will want to proceed on your adventure without stopping. Strider is a compelling game that flows well from area to area. Even though there is a decent amount of exploring in each stage, you will find yourself completing your objectives without a whole lot of frustration. And fighting bosses and difficult areas pumped my adrenaline a great deal and it made me want to play the game more and more.

Vampire Hunter D is a Violent and Genius Anime

Filed under: Reviews — Tyler @ 10:04 pm
Vampire Hunter D

Click the picture to learn about Vampier Hunter D the Anime

Vampire Hunter D is a movie that has a special place in my heart. I first saw it on the Sci-Fi channel in the early 90’s. The movie surprised me with how detailed the animation was. Also the voice acting was excellent and the story was very cool. This film is a staple for Anime lovers. The main character, D, has such a cool demeanor that sets the tone for a intense movie. The film takes place in the future, after the world has been devastated by a nuclear holocaust. It is so far in the future that mutants and other creatures roam around on the Earth. There are villages of humanity that still exist, and their technology is advanced and yet the villages look old as if they were built in 18th century. The buildings are generally made of stone. They kind of have a Gothic look to them. A cool thing about the movie are the weapons. There is a main female character in the movie called Doris. And she has an awesome electrified whip that probably inspired the Iron-Man character Whiplash. Her whip split into a hydra-like shape and then electrified and did energy damage to her enemies. Vampire Hunter D has a really cool crescent-moon shaped sword. It is razor sharp and can cut most enemies in half with a single slash. He also has special items. He has an item that he only uses once in the movie that is a small blue-ish light on his chest. When he switches it on, it scares away and damages enemy mutants. Doris’ little brother, Dan, has a large laser rifle that fires in concentrated bursts. It can hurt both people and non-corporeal creatures, list mist-monsters. Mist-monsters float in the air and they like to eat people and cattle.

One major reason why you should watch Vampire Hunter D, is that it is extremely immersive and you will feel like you are part of the dark futuristic universe. There is this one scene that takes place before Vampire Hunter D and Doris enter the town. It basically shows the setting and landscape of the village and outlying natural views. This scene is very intimate and I remember how I felt when I first watched it. There were children singing and a church-bell was ringing in the distance. I felt the cool dead wind brush past my cheeks. I felt the somber despair that the people endured in order to survive so long. Whenever Vampire Hunter D enters a new area the art is simply amazing. There are scenes when D is riding his horse through the wastelands and it is breathtaking.

This movie is violent. There are scenes where Vampire Hunter D slices this one monster dude in half and you can see all of his internal organs in a cross-section and then they all spill out. It is nasty. There is another part where D stabs a giant in the tongue and cuts his head and shoulder off. The amount of blood that sprays out is immense. Before the final battle between D and the villain of the movie, Count Magnus Lee, there is a short part where another character tries to attack the count. This character has white hair and uses these cool flying blades as weapons. Anyway, he tries to use this enchanted incense candle to stun the Count but the Count uses his telekinetic powers to put out the candle. Then the Count picks this dude up in the air with his mind like Darth Vader or something and then smashes the guy against the metal pillars in the castle. Finally the Count smashes the guy and then concentrates and then makes the dude’s head explode. Head parts fly all over the place and it is a real mess. And the count says something like, “I haven’t had fun like this in ages.” Yeah, so basically this movie is not for young kids.

There are many lines of wisdom in Vampire Hunter D. The hero talks to Dan about what it is to be grown up. And this demon entity that is trapped in D’s hand often reflects on D’s humanity. He challenges D by questioning his motivations with Doris. Also D’s hand brings up part of D’s struggle between his vampiric ways and his humanity. The voice acting is superb in this movie. I love the voices of all the characters in both the English, and Japanese versions. There is a super famous voice actor who does the voice of D. His name is Michael McConnohie, he has done the voice of Shin in the awesome Anime, “Fist of the North Star.” This voice actor is amazing and he really captures the essence of D.

If you are looking for a violent and semi-romantic vampire Anime, then Vampire Hunter D is great. This movie is definitely worth adding to your Queue on Netflix.

-Tyler

Access your inner Rudimentary Failure with Gamma Rain

Filed under: Music-Reviews — Tyler @ 12:17 am
Gamma Rain

click on the picture to listen to Gamma Rain on MySpace

It’s not everyday that I listen to brand-new and unique electronic music. But tonight was my lucky time, because I got to listen to Gamma Rain. Gamma Rain is an experimental electronic project by Tim Allen. Now I am pretty sure this is the same person who makes music who is known as Derj. But this Gamma Rain music is less aggressive and more experimentally electronic than Derj. This song, “Rudimentary Failure” is mind bending to say the least. It has three primary movements and it uses tweaky digital sounds that seem to warp my brain patterns as if to wake me out of a trance. I always knew that music affected brain frequencies via sonic interference but Gamma Rain’s “Rudimentary Failure” really made this way of thinking concrete. It’s not that I feel smarter after listening to the song over and over again, it’s more like I feel slightly more alert and aware. This is sharp music. You can’t help but be changed a little by it.

The first movement of “Rudimentary Failure” is an upbeat, positive, almost playful beginning. It sounds like you are in a digital forest in the winter. And the snow is falling on the electronic pond and is making music as each snowflake hits the surface and ripples vibration patterns of binary code on the water. The drums sound like they are being played by buck-toothed squirrels. The squirrels are playing the beats on over-sized, hollowed out acorns.

The second movement is the brain reprogramming part. At first the left channel sound, seems to be kind of wierd and uninviting. But then after a few patterns it sounds like it is flipping a switch in my brain. Almost accessing areas of the mind that were dormant.

The final movement includes cool tonal samples of human voices that bounce in the center of the mix. It actually sounds like there is music right in front of me, even though I am listening to it on headphones.

I am really excited to listen to what other new music Gamma Rain has in store for us. I definitely like this experimental style that is set forth in “Rudimentary Failure.” I am going to keep an eye on Gamma Rain because I think he is really onto something here. The music coming out of this artist is very unique and seems to belong to its own style.

-Tyler

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