Useless mutant powers

By Shamus Posted Friday Jun 2, 2006

Filed under: Nerd Culture 18 comments

I’ve always thought the powers of mutants in the X-Man universe were pretty off-the-wall. Aside from nitpicky issues like where all the energy comes from and how special DNA can manipulate the physical world, I’ve always wondered what other mutant powers there are in the world. The X-Men and the mutants serving under Magneto are obviously the best, and their powers lend themselves to warfare, whcih is why they are high-profile mutants. But even among these guys, their powers are really diverse. Controlling the weather. Teleportation. Laser eyes. Freezing stuff. Turning into metal form. It’s pretty clear that powers vary quite a bit, and there must be a lot of powers out there that aren’t nearly as cool.

So what about all the poor mutants who have stupid or pointless powers? Imagine all the wash-outs from Xavier’s school:

  1. Rash: Can cause foes to experience mild itching.
  2. Mood Ring: Her skin turns a different color depending on how she feels.
  3. Dry-Man: Immune to high humidity.
  4. Styles: Can control the movement and color of her individual strands of hair to create any hair style she wishes.
  5. Quackster: Can perfectly imitate the sound of any duck in the world with such fidelity that it can even fool the ducks themselves!

But these guys are the lucky ones. Imagine the poor guy who finds out he’s a mutant but doesn’t know what his powers are. How does he go about finding out? I imagine his journal would be fun to read.


Day 1

I’ve just been to the doctor and the blood test reveals that I’m a mutant! Tomorrow I’ll experiment to see if I can figure out what my powers are.

Day 2

I cannot control the flow of elecricity. That’s a shame. That would have been nice. My hands are not immune to electrical burns, either. I also don’t seem to have any special healing powers. Still, I’m just getting started. I’m sure I’ll have better luck tomorrow.

Day 3

It turns out I can’t see through the wall of my neighbor’s house and into her bedroom. I can’t leap over her chain-link fence in a single jump. I can’t outrun a dog. I can’t use telepathy to convince a rottweiler to stop biting me.

Maybe I’ll stick closer to home for my experiments tomorrow.

Day 4

I learned an awful lot about my powers today. It turns out I can’t put out fires with my mind. I also can’t repair burned carpeting and furniture. Finally, I also discovered that I can’t control the minds of firemen to get them to stop laughing at me.

I’ve got some good ideas of what to try next!

Day 5

It seems that I can’t fly. At least, not from the roof of my house. My right leg is also not unbreakable.

With the cast on, I’ll have to limit my experiments a bit. One thing is for sure: My mutant powers don’t protect me from the itching underneath this #%@ cast!

Day 6

Not immune to rat poison.

Day 7

Oh geeze, I am REALLY not immune to rat poison. I think I’ll take it easy today.

Day 8

My skin is not immune to kitchen knives, thumbtacks, or hammers. My hair is not fire proof. I can’t regrow lost teeth. My eyes are not immune to tabasco or tear gas. I can’t leap over cars in oncoming traffic. I cannot command swarms of angry bees, hornets or wasps.

This is hard. I don’t know what to try next.

How upset is he going to be when at last he learns his mutant power is “can see into the minds of goldfish”?

 


 

More website graphs

By Shamus Posted Friday Jun 2, 2006

Filed under: Pictures 4 comments

Fledgling %Otaku has several more website graphs like the one I put up a couple of days ago. Then there is an interesting exchange in the comments of that post about the appearances of different sites when viewed as graphs. Some sites are just a few tightly packed nodes. Some are sparse and sprawling. Some, like this site, are a bunch of different patterns all hanging together.

So I started thinking about what other pages I might feed into this thing and what they would look like.

First, if you remember from a few days ago, this is the site you are reading right now:

Now let’s look at Google:

Talk about minimalisim! Just under 60 total tags. This explains why the site loads so quickly. There are two purple tags – two images. One would have to be the Google logo itself, but I wonder what the other one is?

Now let’s look at the other end of the spectrum:

This is the printer-friendly version of my book, which has the entire novel on one page. (If you’re curious, you can see it here. It may take a bit to load for some of you, as it is well over 400k of HTML.) This represents about 330 pages of text. The orange dots are paragraphs, and the grey tendrils are areas in bold or italics. I’m rather surprised at the number of tables (red dots) spread around. Now compare that to this:

This is In the Beginning was the Command Line by Neal Stephenson, which is a very large essay (highly recommended, by the way) with no formatting or images. So now we can see that large blocks of prose tend to look like huge orange dandelions.

This is fun. Go on. Try it for yourself.

 


 

Gay and Gothic

By Shamus Posted Thursday Jun 1, 2006

Filed under: Nerd Culture 24 comments

Unexpected news:

DC comics announces that Gotham has a gay hero.

Even more unexpected:

It isn’t Batman.

It’s Batwoman.

This is a brilliant move. They brought back a hero they killed off decades ago and just re-remade her as a lesbian. They can leverage the “bat” name recognition and claim that they are making a move towards more diversity, while also pandering to the young male facination with lesbians. Let’s face it, if they had simply announced Batman was gay (which everyone jokes about anyway) it would have been a fatal move. Call it homophobic if you want, but heterosexual teenage boys don’t want to read comic books about the lives of gay men.


Left: Old and busted. Right: New and busted.

(If they really wanted to have a lesbian character, she would be mannish, with a butch haircut and a male costume. That would be a real nod towards the lesbian community, but it wouldn’t entice fanboys. Since they chose the spandex, heels, and makeup route, we can discern what their real goals are, and it has nothing to do with diversity.)

But I’ve never liked these “me too” female characters. Spider-Girl. Super Girl. Hawk Girl. Batwoman. She-Hulk. Ms. Marvel. They are never going to move out of the shadow of their male counterpart. The sad thing is that the me-too ladies outnumber original female characters who have their own book. Wonder Woman is the only one I can think of that isn’t a sad pantomime of a more interesting hero, or a supporting character from some other comic that was given her own spinoff series. She stands on her own, which is all too rare for female heroines.

I actually like the concept of comic books. I love the visual storytelling. It’s a unique medium and I think after all these years their full potential is still untapped. As they have reached out to adults, they have added boobies, swearing, and gore. That isn’t what is keeping the adults away. Comic books are still saddled with the story-telling skills of Saturday morning cartoons. Evil twins. Amnesia. Nobody ever stays dead. Dialog is clumsy and ham-fisted. Villians monologue while the hero is tied up. Women fight in six-inch heels. This lesbian character is just another clumsy attempt at growing up. It proves that while comic books are decades old, their mindset is still 15.

For the record, I do read comics from time to time, but I’m always struck by how much better they could be if the writers would just aim a little higher.

Later on the DC shill has this to say:

This is not just about having a gay character,” DiDio said. “We’re trying for overall diversity in the DC universe. We have strong African-American, Hispanic and Asian characters. We’re trying to get a better cross-section of our readership and the world.

Lame. If you create a character who’s hispanic because you want a hispanic character, then you are going about things the wrong way. You already tried that. Remeber El Dorado?

Make someone who’s interesting, and who’s different from the heroes we already have. If you do this, you’ll end up with a diverse cast in the end, and they won’t be a bunch of obvious plastic stereotypes. Get rid of that Affirmative Action mentality and just write us a good story about people. (With super powers.)

 


 

Who’s your DM?

By Shamus Posted Wednesday May 31, 2006

Filed under: Tabletop Games 2 comments

Cineris has just discovered that this site is the #1 search result for “Cleric of Pelor”. That’s cool, although I’m going to take a wild guess and say that this is probably not one of those hot search queries.

It’s always funny when this happens. Once in a while my searches will take me to USSClueless or Lileks. If you don’t look at the address before you click, this can be disorienting. As in: Wait. Did I accidently switch to another window. No? Wow. Funny ending up here.

 


 

Yu Yu Hakusho

By Shamus Posted Wednesday May 31, 2006

Filed under: Anime 41 comments

It’s time to admit what a fraud I am. I’ve been leading you all on, leaving you with the impression that I am a discriminating otaku with a taste for thoughtful, intelligent anime. It’s time to pull away the mask and admit that I’ve watched Yu Yu Hakusho. Specifically, I watched the 7-disc “Chapter Black” saga in just two sittings.

If Haibane Renmei is Masterpiece Theater, then Yu Yu Hakusho is Clown Midget Jello Wrestling. This is not top-shelf anime. It isn’t even bottom shelf. This is the sort of anime you take off the shelf and hide when friends come over so they don’t know you like it.

This is about the fourth time I’ve sat down to write about this series. Every time I try, it all comes out as a scathing review that tears the show apart and catalogues its many flaws. That isn’t really fair, since I couldn’t stop watching it.

The plot:

Yusuke Urameshi is a high school student who is also a “spirit detective”. He works for some people in “spirit world”, which is a heaven-ish sort of afterlife place. He’s called a detective, but he’s loud, profane, rude, and taken to punching things that annoy him, so he isn’t really much of a detective. The plot seems to be: Some powerful supernatural being threatens earth: Yusuke punches his way through his minions with much bravado and angst, and then faces the bad guy in a cataclysmic battle using energy blasts and intense shouting.

Why do I like this? I think I’ll cite Steven’s review of Dragonball Z:

OK, it’s trash. I know it’s trash. But it’s my kind of trash.

I couldn’t stop watching. At the end of one show it would really look like the team was screwed. How will they get out of this one? It strung me along to the end as the fighters stumbled from one frantic battle to the next.

It has all the classic cliche’s. The more desperate the situation, the stronger the heroes become. Foes love to tell the protagonists their super powers before a battle, making sure to mention their limitations, goals, how they got their powers, and what their weaknesses are. It’s disguised as trash talk, but it’s really just exposition delivered by yelling and / or maniacal laughter. Once the audience knows the rules, the combatants get to it and punch, kick, and energy-blast the ever-loving crap out of each other.

Admit it. You have a show you like as a guilty pleasure. A show you like even though you know better. C’mon. You know you do. What is it? Confess in the comments below. You’ll feel better, and so will I.

 


 
 

Public Service Announcement

By Shamus Posted Wednesday May 31, 2006

Filed under: Rants 4 comments

Apparently a woman named Candy has been anxious to get some information to my readers. She’s so passionate about her message that she’s fighting to overcome near-illiteracy to get it out. Unfortunately, she left her comments on old posts where most of you won’t get to see them. She seems so intent on reaching you that I thought I would help the poor lass out by relaying her message to you myself.

Candy would like you to know that you can get che@p phenterm1ne, r1talin, v a l i u m, and zoIoft online, without needing a do.ct.or.s perscripti0n. This is great news to many of you, I’m sure.

She also provided some links, but I’m sure you can find all that stuff through Google.

(Sigh. Fine! I’ll install Akismet. Jerks.)