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If you haven’t seen Keanu, you should. It’s pretty funny.

The title refers to Keanu the kitten, whom our heroes must rescue from drug dealers. Highlights include the violent death of Anna Faris (playing herself as a horribly brain-damaged coke addict) and a “vision moment,” in which Keanu the cat imparts wisdom to Keegan-Michael Key. The cat is voiced by . . . yes, Keanu Reeves.

I was amused.

This is a really interesting talk by Josh Mosqueira on how Diablo 3 evolved from a broken-ass Ebay simulator into what it is now. Of special interest is how aware the developers were of the horror show that was D3 in 2012 and how they set about fixing it. Even if you’re not a D3 fan, it’s worth watching to see how Blizzard thinks. (How/why they got rid of the auction houses starts at 42:00.)

Guess Nananea is back in the fold for OMDU.

I have to say I’m up to level 21 now and enjoying it.

Press Release:

With another new year comes another update to our streaming schedule for all things OMD! Now you’ll get access to the Robot Entertainment studio every single Thursday for fun, frivolity, and an inside look at developing OMDU. Additionally, we’ve retired Nananea’s “Meet Your Match” show and replaced it with “The Killbox”, her all new gameplay show all about wreaking the most havoc on those pesky greenskins

I breezed through The Darkening of Tristam thanks to my Hellfire jewelry. Went from level 1 to 36 in one pass on Master difficulty. (Should have done Torment I guess) Got a Butcher pet.

I was a little disappointed in that most of the old traditional Diablo levels were actually just D3 levels with Diablo textures. Seems as if they rushed to finish it as the first 2-3 levels were pretty detailed but the farther you went along the less the details became and the more re-textured D3 content I saw. It was still fun though and I doubt I would have played D3 again if there wasn’t something different to do so they got me…

I did get a cool helm gem for finishing all 16 levels that is going to kill everything.

RPS has a news item about how Robot Entertainment is making big changes to Orcs Must Die: Unchained.

Sigh.

In a nutshell, they’ve figured out that their silly PvP MOBA model is not what people want, so they’re rejiggering things to behave more like OMD/2. Well, duh.

These guys must have their own Scrooge McDuck / 3D Realms money vault, because I can’t imagine how their microtransactions are paying for the game’s development, which seems to have its version 1.0 clock set to geologic time.

Also, there’s a level design problem. I haven’t read the patch notes, but merely omitting PvP and making tactical/mechanical changes to traps and weapons — yeah, this isn’t going to do it. OMD2 had larger levels than OMD1, but it was still built from the ground up as a two-player co-op game. OMDU (unless they start completely over) is a multiplayer project with sprawling real estate. Just changing player/trap/enemy behaviors isn’t going to fix the strategic and tactical problems you’ll have when trying to play OMD/2 in those giant rooms. A big issue right now is having to run through miles of hallways to get to hotspots (and the portals and speed-up treadmills don’t help much). This is going to conflict with the single-player re-do, because single-player tower defense games must account for every inch of geography.

The only way to manage this without completely starting over is to (a) make the player much faster and much more powerful, and (b) make traps much cheaper, much easier to acquire, and far more effective. Even then, the levels will have to be revised.

Since the game was designed with microtransaction creep bolted in from the get-go, I don’t see how anything less than a complete overhaul will salvage the product or make it profitable.

I’ve tried really hard to like Westworld. I really have. I’m just not getting the allure.

I admire the concept. What could be cooler than to revisit the ideas behind Michael Crichton’s 1970s movie and develop a AAA HBO series using twenty-first century CG tech?

The problem is that Crichton’s movie was rather stupid, just as Jurassic Park and Timeline were rather stupid in their common thesis that money-mad, undisciplined corporate baddies would take a wonderful notion and let it get out of control because, you know, greed and hubris.

Never mind that such theme parks would never be remotely profitable or even possible, even if you could pull off genetically engineered dinosaurs, time travel, or cowboy/saloon girl robots. No one is capable of managing anything like this, and even if they were, any profit would quickly be eaten by operation expenses — even if you managed to find enough “guests” to pay such absurd entry fees.

But that’s not the problem with Westworld.

The series is just dull. No matter how much HBO hypes it, no matter how vigorously people try to make themselves believe in its edginess and originality, the show is a tedious soap opera that suffers from the same plodding development characteristic of all miniseries.

Then there’s the writing. Soap operas are silly, but you expect that. You anticipate absurd plot twists involving improbable identity revelations, incestual pregnancies, alien abductions, and so on. In a multi-million dollar uber-class HBO series, you really should not have to put up with such idiocy, but Westworld is full of last-second plot dumps wherein you discover that someone is X when you thought they were Y, or someone’s apparent escape was not a result of independent thought but part of a grand narrative, etc. The explanations for these silly reversals are on a par with Obi Wan’s rationalization that Darth Vader and Anakin Skywalker are the same person. The dumbness staggers the mind.

Game of Thrones requires patience. Westworld requires the suspension of reason and any expectation of quality writing.

I saw this last night. Just keep watching. As in all Jane Austen novels, patience will be rewarded.

The trailers try to make this out to be a zombie movie with strange Regency characters incidentally borrowed from Pride and Prejudice. In truth, it’s one of the best P&P adaptations ever made (no joke) and just happens to be set in a Regency under siege by the undead. Young women are placed on the marriage market, just as they are in Austen, but in addition to music, French, drawing, and dancing, one of their principal accomplishments must be combat.

The intermixing of Austen’s story and the zombie apocalypse is surprisingly skillful and extremely funny. Everything from the book is here — the Darcy/Elizabeth relationship, the Bennet/Collins entailment problem, the Wickham/Lydia elopement — the whole thing. The plot even manages to emphasize the class/money conflict so important to Austen, except that it’s adapted for the zombie problem. The Bennet sisters are in a precarious middle-class economic situation owing to the entailment of their father’s estate. Therefore, their father can only afford to send them to China for combat training as opposed to Japan, where the aristocracy goes. This is partly the basis for Mr. Darcy and Caroline Bingley’s contempt for the Bennet family. Other plot alterations relate to the zombie problem and are so ingeniously blended into the original story that you just go with it.

If you haven’t seen this, prioritize it on your Netflix list. If at all possible, read the novel first.

http://www.janeausten.org/pride-and-prejudice/pride-and-prejudice-online.asp