Full Metal Panic: Gauron

By Shamus Posted Tuesday Sep 19, 2006

Filed under: Anime 22 comments

Steven was talking about anime villians yesterday and he singled out Gauron from Full Metal Panic as a good example of a terrible bad guy:

Gauron […] is close to the worst villain ever IMHO. He’s a cartoon, in the worst meaning of that term. He’s the distillation of unfeeling brutality, but there’s no obvious reason why he became what he is. He’s an icon, a contrivance, a caricature.

Full Metal Panic: Gauron
Gauron has two facial expressions: Evil Sneer, and Evil Sneer 2. I like the spoilers on his eyebrows.
Which is spot-on. There is nothing to this guy. I complained about him as well when I finished the series. One thing about Gauron is that he could have been a great villian, and they wouldn’t have needed to re-write the series. The overall plot could have remained, all they needed to do was replace his boilerplate bad-guy talk with something interesting. We spent enough time watching him sneer and taunt that he could have told us his life story if he had one.

At the end we finally learn his “big secret”, which is that he isn’t working for the bad guys, or for a government, or for himself: He’s just trying to commit suicide. He wants to die in a glorious conflagration of twisted metal and burning fuel, and he wants to take as many people with him as he can. I actually think that’s a good hook for a character. That was a good place to start, not end! He was all premise and stubble.

Full Metal Panic: Gauron’s Mech
Some days Gauron’s mech just can’t do a thing with it’s hair, and he’s forced to pull it back ino a polytail. One of these days he’s been meaning to get a perm. If he could just get the budget increase he wants, he could go through with his plan to have his mech fully decked out with a fearsome beehive hairdo!
A writer who knew what he was doing and who cared about his work would have taken that idea and built a character on top of it. What made him want to die? The fact that he wanted to die suggests that at some point in the past he had something to live for, something he cared about. What was it and how did he lose it? What made him want to go out with a bang like this instead of just jumping off a cliff? Why did he choose Sousuke as his rival? What was he doing before he began his suicide quest? How did he feel about being defeated repeatedly yet miraculously surviving? Did he see the humor in it, or was he just frustrated? The writer wouldn’t need to answer all of these in the show, but he should at least have the answers in mind when writing. It was clear that were no answers. Gauron had no history, no backstory, no motivation.

Like the series itself, Gauron was a great idea that was never really developed or explored.

UPDATE: Lots of great comments below, and a great post on the villian from Xenogears at Criminally Weird. I didn’t play console games between 1985 and 2002. Since this game fits into that very wide gap, I missed it. I gather that it is one of those games people talk about when they reflect on the greatness of Final Fantasy VII and start looking for something to fill that particular void.

 


 

DM of the Rings VI:
Lootless

By Shamus Posted Monday Sep 18, 2006

Filed under: DM of the Rings 39 comments

Lord of the Rings, D&D campaign, Frodo Nazgul, Treasure, Loot, Cash, Money

On one hand, it makes no sense for the monsters and encounter areas of the gameworld to come pre-stocked with loot. It also makes no sense for feral beasts and the shambling undead to walk around carrying fabulous cash prizes.

On the other hand, gold coins are shiny and make a fun jingling sound when you have lots of them.

 


 

Pictures from Silent Hill

By Shamus Posted Monday Sep 18, 2006

Filed under: Pictures 49 comments

Here are some great Silent Hill images for you:


Silent Hill

It wouldn’t be Silent Hill without an endless supply of framerate-boosting fog.

Silent Hill

You can’t leave Silent Hill. Once you get in, the streets are all mysteriously blocked by construction and roads come to an unlikely halt at the edge of a chasam.

Silent Hill

One of the great things about Silent Hill is the way everything seems a bit out of date, but in an odd way. Some things are a quarter century out of style, but only look a few years old. Other things are current, style-wise, yet show decades worth of decay.

Silent Hill

Even when there aren’t any monsters around, Silent Hill is spooky because the town is intact, yet deserted. The power is on, but nobody is home.

Silent Hill

The town has a worn out feeling. Everything is neglected and shabby. Fences, gates, and walls make up a large part of the scenery.


Ok, I am just messing around here. These were all taken in my hometown on my way to church yesterday morning. All of them are untouched, except for #3 where I edited out a pedestrian and covered the billboard advertisements. The streets really were this empty, and it really was this foggy. It was a very strange, quiet morning and it made me think of Silent Hill.

 


 

Lightsaber Duel: Ryan VS Brandon

By Shamus Posted Saturday Sep 16, 2006

Filed under: Nerd Culture 4 comments

In the past I’ve mentioned the work of Ryan Wieber. He’s a hobbyist who makes lightsaber duel movies. His last one was very well done and showed a lot of polish, but since then he’s gotten even better.

I like that they avoided the mistakes common to a lot of fan-made stuff. They don’t engage in any dialog or try to establish setting or motive. While a total lack of acting ability and clumsy fan-written dialog can really give a film the authentic Episode III feel, these short movies don’t have enough time to build a story. So, they wisely left it out and focused on the dueling, which is why everyone watches these things anyway.

The fight shows a lot of imagination. They keep it varied and interesting, and don’t just try to re-hash what we’ve seen in the movies. They are also really fast. The speed of this battle is similar to that of the fight between Obi-wan and Annikin in Episode III. It must take a lot of practice to get their routine down to the point where they can perform it this cleanly.

Nicely done.

 


 

Are you Marketing to ME?

By Shamus Posted Saturday Sep 16, 2006

Filed under: Pictures 10 comments

Advertisements are not written with the engineer in mind. I know this. Marketing – particularly the marketing of personal care products – is aimed at people who care about image. Ads are for people who will buy something not based on what they think of the product, but based on what they think other people think of a product. They are for people who can be hooked by clever slogans, soothing words, nice images, and who recoil at the cruel, hard world of numbers and quantifiable properties. You know, normal people.

If someone is selling perfume, they don’t bother telling you it smells good. They show you people who they hope you will envy or desire to emulate, and then imply that they use the given perfume. Engineers are all but immune to this sort of thing because a) Who cares what that moody idiot uses? and b) Why should I expect the same results? Plus: c) while we’re at it, just what sort of results are we talking about here? How does this increase my chances of mating with another person as compared to smelling like regular B.O.? How much will this improve my odds? How were those numbers obtained, and what was the error margin of the study?

No, marketing to engineers and mathematicians is mostly a waste of time. Better to aim your salesmanship at their friends, spouses, and coworkers and hope your product is purchased as a gift on their behalf. Given the way engineers tend to smell, this is actually a pretty safe bet.

I know all of this, but I still get incredulous when I read the idiotic things I see on packaging. I get irritated and defensive, as if someone wrote them for me. What do you mean? Do you actually expect me to believe this stuff? You think I’m an idiot or something?

Case in point:

Suave Conditioner

Suave hair goop. Haircare has now advanced so far that you need a PHD in Molecular Biology just to get your hair wet. Shampoo, PH-balancing conditioner, oily / dry correctional post-conditioner rinse, super-hold gel, and let us not forget that towering nemesis of the ozone layer, hairspray. (And let us not speak of the complex chemistry set they sell you if you plan on changing your hair color!) Whatever this is, the back of the bottle has this to teach me:

Suave Conditioner – Costs less than more expensive brands!

Translation: This product does X, and costs less than products which cost more. Of course it costs less than more expensive brands. It would be impossible for it to be otherwise! It reminds me of this old post from Steven: A blurb which sounds nice but contains no information.

But I suppose that’s better than simple nonsense:

A box of off-brand generic band-aids.

Seems harmless enough. But when we look closer:

A box of off-brand generic band-aids.

What exactly is “family protection”, and how would it differ from the other forms of protection offered by other types of band-aids? Are these designed to be worn by more than one person at a time?

And my favorite sort of blurb: The herbal paradise utopian new-age eco-spiritual sales pitch:

Some sort of herbal thing. Stuff.

Go deeper into a world of botanical bliss and unleash the power of your naturally beautiful hair. This luxurious conditioner, blended with 100% organic botanicals will take your hair to a place it’s never been before.

This one paragraph is a deep, bountiful source of untapped insanity. This reads less like a sales pitch for shampoo and more like an invitation to join a cult. Fully deconstructing this and holding each bit of sophistry up to the cold light of reason would take ten pages, but my favorite bit is this: “will take your hair to a place it’s never been before”. So, I guess it’s like the U.S.S. Enterprise of shampoo? Scotty! Three to beam down, plus my hair!

 


 

Adobe Hackrobat

By Shamus Posted Friday Sep 15, 2006

Filed under: Rants 3 comments

A long time ago I gave an example of how people use PDFs when they shouldn’t. Later I followed up with a bit about how Adobe Acrobat is a grotesque resource hog that makes Jabba the Hutt look like Jenny Craig. Now to complete the trilogy we have this slashdot story about various security flaws within either PDF files or Acrobat. Like so many Slashdot stories, it has these frustrating gaps in the piece so that the users can read the whole thing and still come away with enough diverging interpretations to get a really good flame war rolling. A key quote:

After reading the article I am not sure if this is an Adobe Reader problem or a PDF problem. Every example cites an Adobe product, but the “hacker” said, “I do not really consider these attacks as vulnerabilities within Adobe. It is more exploiting features supported by the product that were never designed for this.” Translation?

Ok, so is this a fundamental flaw in the design of PDFs or poor implementation on the part of Adobe? By saying “features supported by the product” it leaves open the view that PDFs are inherently flawed and Adobe just followed the spec. I doubt this, but the story isn’t clear enough.

Either way, it sucks and does little to improve my opinion of the PDF format. There are a very small slice of people who need it and use it well, and an army of imbeciles who misuse the thing on a grand scale.

 


 

DM of the Rings V:
First Encounter

By Shamus Posted Friday Sep 15, 2006

Filed under: DM of the Rings 36 comments

Lord of the Rings, D&D campaign, The Fellowship needs a cleric, Nine Nazgul, Beastiary, Boo-Ya, Eat It KNAVE

Remember: That which does not kill you was simply not permitted to do so for the purposes of the plot.