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Various thoughts on a variety of topics.

Various Thoughts

Various thoughts on a variety of topics.

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  • References real-life historical events in some manner.

  • Min-Maxing My TRPG Build #8 & Modern Villainess #4

    Posted on February 2, 2024 3:37 pm by Offkorn Comment

    TRPG Player‘s ninth installment is a bit strange in the way the protagonist frames the journey as though he and his party members are level 1 when… he’s obviously far, far beyond a first level character. It’s not a major issue, and the series certainly has a history of excessive modesty, but the disconnect is something to keep in mind for potential future developments.

    I’m going to have to drop the Gendai Shakai series with the release of its fourth novel. The level of patronization is just insane, the slow pacing guarantees that it’s not going to decrease any time soon, and the protagonist’s personality has begun to frequently flip-flop between ‘adult in a child’s body’ and a literal child. That last issue is particularly galling because the Afterword makes clear that it’s an intentional choice to promote the author’s belief that age=authority/credibility, which is an opinion that I refuse to support.

    Related posts:

    1. MODERN Villainess #1-3 & Free Life Fantasy: Online -IMMORTAL PRINCESS- #4 The Gendai Shakai de Otome Game no Akuyaku Reijou o...
    2. Min-Maxing My TRPG Build In Another World #1-4 Canto II TRPG Player ga Isekai Saikyou Build o Mezasu (English subtitle:...
    3. Free Life Fantasy: Online -IMMORTAL PRINCESS- #3 & Min-Maxing My TRPG Build #6 Free Life Fantasy Online’s third entry is much the same...
    4. Private Tutor to the Duke’s Daughter #1-4 & Min-Maxing My TRPG Build in Another World #5 The Koujo Denka no Kateikyoushi series is a romantic comedy...
    5. Min-Maxing My TRPG Build #7 & The Sorcerer’s Receptionist #4 Having finally returned home in the previous novel, TRPG Player’s...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Fantasy Gendai Shakai History Paranormal Romance Schuld Tofuro Futsukaichi TRPG Player ga Isekai Saikyou Build o Mezasu Young Adult Novel
  • ~A JOURNEY OF~ BLACK and RED & The Calamitous ~Bob~

    Posted on January 17, 2024 11:01 am by Offkorn Comment

    Despite the ‘this was originally a web serial’ warnings in the Foreword of Alex Gilbert‘s Journey of Black and Red series, for the most part the books feel very much like proper books. Only the occasional missed stopping point hints toward their origins.

    Content-wise the first seven novels feature a nice mix of comedy and action accompanying a consistent series of plot developments covering the period from North America’s Revolutionary War through its Civil War. What’s particularly notable is that while a lot of urban fantasy series will reference some past event that separates their timeline from actual historic events, this one decides to actually focus on the divergent event itself. At this point the only thing I have to complain about is that it’s never properly explained how the protagonist was able to fake her death when dead vampires are supposed to turn to ash.

    A work by the same author, The Calamitous Bob is remarkable for being completely different. Setting, characters, comedy style; all different. The only similarity the two share is the protagonists’ absolute mercilessness toward their enemies. While for the most part that’s a good thing and the variety is welcome… this series is unfortunately nowhere near as well constructed.

    Although perfectly solid up through the third book, it begins to deteriorate early in the fourth following the ‘Birth of Harrak’ arc’s conclusion only to end up a complete mess by the end of the fifth. The worst part is, I can’t even see what the author was going for that would result in such a pile of inconsistent and self-contradicting plotlines. There’s just no discernable rhyme or reason whatsoever to the event developments.

    Related posts:

    1. Recent Books Normally I do these three at a time… but, well…...
    2. Blood Heir & So I’m a Spider, So What? #12 I actually read Ilona Andrews‘ Blood Heir way back at...
    3. Sparrow Hill Road & Laughter at the Academy The first of Seanan McGuire’s Ghost Roads novels is a...
    4. Free Life Fantasy: Online -IMMORTAL PRINCESS- #7 & Moon Blossom Asura #3 Quite a bit occurs in the seventh Free Life Fantasy...
    5. I Surrendered My Sword for a New Life as a Mage #2 & The Magic in this Other World is Too Far Behind! #1-7 The second Moto Saikyou no Kenshi wa Isekai Mahou ni...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged A Journey of Black and Red Alex Gilbert Fantasy History Paranormal Romance The Calamitous Bob Urban Fantasy
  • MODERN Villainess #1-3 & Free Life Fantasy: Online -IMMORTAL PRINCESS- #4

    Posted on September 7, 2023 12:50 pm by Offkorn Comment

    The Gendai Shakai de Otome Game no Akuyaku Reijou o Suru no wa Chotto Taihen series (English subtitle: It’s Not Easy Building a Corporate Empire Before the Crash) is primarily economics porn. You’ll see the phrase “bad debt” quite often and be subjected to seemingly unending financial mechanics and fake newspaper articles. Secondary to that are the school life elements, which are horrid (a grown woman pretending to be a kindergartener is just…), with the otome game aspects coming in far last.

    While superficially about the protagonist’s efforts to prevent her future ruination, it’s really more about how ‘no good deed goes unpunished’ with every action she takes to try to save the economy getting opposed by various levels of opposing greed, incompetence, or just flat-out patronization. Which is to say she’s more of a hero than a villain.

    Covering the first half of a ‘survival’ arc, the fourth Free Life Fantasy novel is basically identical to previous entries. Ending halfway through the event doesn’t even end up a negative since the storyline, such as it is, has always been tertiary.

    Related posts:

    1. Min-Maxing My TRPG Build #8 & Modern Villainess #4 TRPG Player‘s ninth installment is a bit strange in the...
    2. STAND ALONE, TAKING GROUND, & SHATTERED DREAMS A human-centric space opera, John Van Stry‘s first two Wolfhounds...
    3. ROLL OVER AND DIE #1-4 & Free Life Fantasy: Online -IMMORTAL PRINCESS- #2 The “Omae Gotoki ga Maou ni Kateru to Omouna” to...
    4. ALL I GOT IS THIS STAT MENU & MAGICAL GIRL: CRYSTAL GENOCIDE The All I Got is This Stat Menu series, by...
    5. Free Life Fantasy: Online -IMMORTAL PRINCESS- #6 & My Magical Career at Court #3 Free Life Fantasy remains perplexingly readable despite its sixth installment...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Akisuzu Nenohi Fantasy Free Life Fantasy Online Gendai Shakai History Science Fiction Tofuro Futsukaichi Urban Fantasy Young Adult Novel
  • Fushi no Kami #7 & The Apothecary Diaries

    Posted on February 4, 2023 3:33 pm by Offkorn Comment

    To my great surprise, the seventh Fushi no Kami novel turned out to be the series’ conclusion.

    This was surprising mainly because half is devoted to talking in circles, a quarter is devoted to creating a hamfisted solution to the love triangle issue, and then the actual conclusion is handled by two abrupt 2-year time skips. Like… nothing gets resolved. The only potential silver-lining (if it can even be called that) is that I definitely would’ve dropped it here. Meaning I now don’t have to worry about missing anything or it potentially getting better.

    Kusuriya no Hitorigoto starts out with what could be seen as a self-contained novel. It’s got an established beginning, end, and plenty of development in-between. Sure it sometimes comes across more like a collection of short stories, but that’s not necessarily a negative. Honestly, it’s everything I had hoped the Koukyuu no Karasu Anime would’ve been like.

    That said… I’m conflicted on whether or not to continue. I enjoyed it, yet honestly can’t see it ending up anywhere good if the additional volume summaries are to be believed. Guess I’ll take a ‘wait and see’ approach.

    Related posts:

    1. Fushi no Kami: Rebuilding Civilization Starts with a Village #1-6 On the surface, Fushi no Kami is your standard ‘person...
    2. Disillusioned Adventurers #3 & Rebuild World II The third Ningen Fushin novel unsurprisingly has a bit of...
    3. So I’m a Spider, So What? #15-16 The last two Kumodesuga books were originally released a mere...
    4. Relatively Recent Books Been procrastinating with adding these because it’s a pain. May...
    5. 86: Darkest Before the Dawn & Mist The follow-up to the fifth 86 novel, Darkest Before the...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Fushi no Kami History Kusuriya no Hitorigoto Mizuumi Amakawa Mystery Natsu Hyuuga Romance Science Fiction Young Adult Novel
  • The City of Brass & THE WORLD’S FINEST Assassin #5

    Posted on June 25, 2022 11:24 am by Offkorn Comment

    S. A. Chakraborty‘s first Daevabad novel, The City of Brass, is rather strange. Pretty much all of the factions involved are terrible in some manner, while the faction the book seems to want to get you to sympathize with by the end (the Daeva) is arguably worst of them all. Character-wise it isn’t much better: The protagonist flip-flops between being highly intelligent/cunning and self-destructively moronic seemingly at random, while the primary love interest is an emotionally erratic, violent bigot.

    If it were a little more consistent in its characterizations or a little less uniformly terrible with its faction behavior I’d say it’d be worth checking out for paranormal romance fans. As it is though it’s just too uneven to recommended continuing the series.

    Something else that can’t be recommended is the 5th Ansatsu Kizoku light novel. I thought the third was bad (it is) but this one blows it out of the water. Just horrific event progression all-around to the point I’ll be dropping this series as well.

    Related posts:

    1. Thirteenth Child Trilogy & Elise Kova Patricia C. Wrede‘s Thirteenth Child trilogy is a very slow...
    2. THE WORLD’S FINEST Assassin: Gets Reincarnated in Another World as an Aristocrat #2-3 Decided to check out this series after the Anime adaptation...
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    4. Solo Leveling #7 & Banished from the HERO’s PARTY #8 There’s a great deal going on in the seventh Solo...
    5. Blood Heir & So I’m a Spider, So What? #12 I actually read Ilona Andrews‘ Blood Heir way back at...

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    This entry was posted in Book Related and tagged Ansatsu Kizoku Daevabad Fantasy History Paranormal Romance Romance Rui Tsukiyo S. A. Chakraborty Urban Fantasy Young Adult Novel
  • VINLAND SAGA & Kimetsu no Yaiba

    Posted on February 11, 2021 1:45 pm by Offkorn 7 Comments

    The problem (well, one of the problems) with Vinland Saga is that the protagonist is pretty bad: He starts out bad, becomes merely tolerable, and then ends bad. The show seems to be aware of this and as result shows him as infrequently as possible… which is of course another problem. The best character by far ends up being the protagonist’s sister, and she only appears in like 3 episodes. All the rest feel out of place in one way or another; Askeladd ripped from a Roman epic, Ragnar from an English play, Thorkell from One Piece, Canute from Berserk. None of them feel like they should coexist in the same creation.

    Also based on a manga series, Kimetsu no Yaiba in contrast actually comes across as a self-contained work. The problems here mostly stem from the worldbuilding being poorly thought out, the plot developments being boilerplate battle shounen, and Nezuko’s identity consisting of little more than being brainwashed luggage. Pretty much the only part of it I really enjoyed was the (over)reaction humor since most of the action scenes are polluted by overly obnoxious graphic effects.

    Continue reading → Post ID 11115

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    This entry was posted in 2019 - Autumn 2019 - Summer Anime Related and tagged Action Amazon Prime Battle Shounen Comic Adaptation Comic Relief Drama Finished History Hulu Incomplete Source Netflix Partial Adaptation Series Televised Urban Fantasy
  • Assassin’S CREED: VALHALLA – Conclusion

    Posted on December 1, 2020 1:10 pm by Offkorn Comment

    Oxenefordscire ended up more like the beginning of the midgame rather than the midpoint of the game itself.

    While exploration and combat never changes from that point, the main questlines take a hard turn into railroad central. Early main quests are good at giving you the illusion of choice; later ones not so much. This works on a thematic level (the whole unchangeable fate/destiny thing) but it’s not a lot of fun to experience. Oh, I guess there was one change in the exploration aspects: You’ll want to clear all 10 Anomalies before completing the Norway quest that sends you to the far northeastern point of the map.

    Ultimately ended up at 142 hours with 94% completion, all areas cleared, and 65 Mastery points. I never did find any Black Bears or Wolf Fangs for the hunter requests though (or small Sturgeons and big Redfish for the fishing requests), and had to look up the location where to use those various Mysterious Tablets (the area is instantly recognizable, but also easily overlooked since there’s no treasure chests there).

    One final thing:

    If you’re experiencing random freezes, try installing the “Visual Studio 2015, 2017 and 2019” C++ update. The x64 one fixed the issue for me.

    Related posts:

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    2. Assassin’S CREED: ODYSSEY This… somethingth… entry in the Assassin’s Creed franchise incorporates quite...
    3. Assassin’S CREED: VALHALLA – Midgame With roughly 50% of England cleared (Oxenefordscire, Lunden, and everything...
    4. FINAL FANTASY XIV: ONLINE – Duty Finder Of course shortly after I posted about not having to...
    5. Dragon’s Dogma I first played the demo for this game way back...

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    This entry was posted in PC Video Game Related and tagged Assassin's Creed Exploration History RPG Science Fiction Third Person Perspective
  • Assassin’S CREED: VALHALLA – Midgame

    Posted on November 22, 2020 2:09 pm by Offkorn Comment

    With roughly 50% of England cleared (Oxenefordscire, Lunden, and everything lower level), 7 zealots killed, 11 Order members killed, all non-feast buildings constructed, silver equipment, and 205 skill points this seems a decent enough place to mark as the midpoint of the game.

    With ~55 hours invested so far it’s quite large, larger than it seems because there’s also an Asgard ‘dream world’ map (cleared that too) along with apparently a Vinland area (haven’t gone there yet). What’s really remarkable about this is that each area so far has felt pretty distinct in both the landscape and questing departments, all of which was enjoyable until the bizarre Odyssey-like change in the Eivor/Sigurd dynamic that occurs in Oxenefordscire.

    Combat-wise I’ve been using heavy dual-wielding. Started with a greatsword & dagger combo, switched to a spear & dagger combo, and then finally settled on a greatsword & spear combo (using the Dual Swap skill depending on whether it’s a boss fight or not). It’s extremely effective for plowing through enemies I can’t assassinate/headshot ahead of time (I do however still miss the 3-enemy chain assassination ability quite a bit).

    There’s no shortage of skill points (and you can respec whenever you want) so there’s not really any need for skill breakdowns, though Brush with Death and Advanced Assassination are godly, Explosive Corpse and Battlefield Bolt are garbage, Counter Roll is kind of sketchy since you need to dodge into attacks for it to work, and Auto-Loot is just plain nice to have. Abilities are a bit trickier. I’ve been rolling with Valkyrie Dive (great quick stun), Rage of Helheim (you have to hold the button to connect), and Throwing Axe Fury (crowd control). Bow abilities I’ve mostly been ignoring apart from Powder Trap (to blast through weak walls).

    As far as settlement buildings go, some are certainly more useful than others. The Blacksmith (equipment upgrades), Hidden Ones Bureau (quests, targets, rewards), Hunters’ Hut (quests, rewards), Seer’s Hut (quests), Museum (quest, rewards), and Fishing Hut (rewards, at least one Mystery event requires the fishing line) are probably the most important. The Barracks (cosmetics), Tattoo Shop (cosmetics), Shipyard (cosmetics), Stable (cosmetics, don’t have to travel for horse training), and Trading Post (don’t have to travel to other cities to shop) meanwhile are all nice to have. The feast-buffing ones are obviously situational (although the Bakery has a couple quests), and the Cartographer is completely useless if you happen to be the exploring type.

    At some point you’ll also get an Opal Shop for free. This serves as a method to buy Cash Shop items with in-game currency rather than actual money. On the positive side of things this currency is renewable through simple daily quests… on the negative, these quests award 5 opals a piece and you only get two a day (a new piece of equipment costs ~130 opals). So while you ~can~ technically get these pseudo-DLC items for free it’s not exactly something worth obsessing over (and besides, there’s plenty of equipment/customizables already in the game).

    All in all a very impressive showing so far even with the recent main plot hiccups. The only other thing I can really complain about is the inability to assassinate zealots the same way you could assassinate mercenaries in Odyssey. Oh, and I guess it’s also a bit annoying that the most efficient path forward is to complete the main questline in each area before exploring; it reduces backtracking and some items don’t appear until a quest triggers them (if you see a chest marker on your map that doesn’t have a related item for instance, chances are it’ll appear later during a quest).

    Related posts:

    1. Assassin’S CREED: VALHALLA – First Impressions The follow-up to Odyssey, Valhalla trades ancient Greece for medieval...
    2. Assassin’S CREED: ODYSSEY This… somethingth… entry in the Assassin’s Creed franchise incorporates quite...
    3. Assassin’S CREED: VALHALLA – Conclusion Oxenefordscire ended up more like the beginning of the midgame...
    4. Nier: Automata – First Impressions This game is quite a bit different from conventional RPGs....
    5. ELEX If you’ve ever played a Gothic or Risen game before,...

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    This entry was posted in PC Video Game Related and tagged Assassin's Creed Exploration History RPG Science Fiction Third Person Perspective
  • Assassin’S CREED: VALHALLA – First Impressions

    Posted on November 17, 2020 10:14 am by Offkorn Comment

    The follow-up to Odyssey, Valhalla trades ancient Greece for medieval Europe (specifically Norway and the Viking invasion of England).

    The exploration aspects remain pretty much identical, though points of interest have been streamlined/condensed for a far less cluttered experience and it doesn’t appear to be possible to highlight enemies while in Bird View any longer (I suspect the ranged ability which automatically highlights enemies replaced it). You also now have to manually click on a chest marker if you want it shown on your compass rather than that happening automatically.

    Combat on the other hand is a bit different, with boss fights now being geared toward counters/parries and slower deliberate fighting instead of hectic hack & slashing (random trash mobs can still be attack-spammed into oblivion though). A particularly interesting choice is the implementation of a stamina system which drains when you dodge/block, use a power attack, or miss with an attack, but refills when you connect with normal attacks or just move around normally. This encourages a more engaged, hybrid playstyle and avoids the trap Elex fell into.

    The biggest change though is the equipment system: It’s been drastically simplified so that there’s only one or two varieties of a particular weapon or armor piece. Rather than continually finding new randomized variations with slightly better stats, you instead directly upgrade whichever particular weapon/armor type you want to use. I’m not sure how I feel about that just yet considering my fondness for collecting things, but it does make sense from a gameplay perspective and makes finding a new weapon something of a special event.

    All-in-all, at this point with Rygjafylke cleared (make sure to periodically check your map at its most zoomed-in setting to catch any resource chests; they show up as faint gold specks), I’m pretty well satisfied with this incremental upgrade so far. We’ll see how things progress when the assassination ability is finally unlocked and the action shifts to England.

    Related posts:

    1. Assassin’S CREED: VALHALLA – Midgame With roughly 50% of England cleared (Oxenefordscire, Lunden, and everything...
    2. Assassin’S CREED: VALHALLA – Conclusion Oxenefordscire ended up more like the beginning of the midgame...
    3. Kingdoms of Amalur – Endgame Yeah, the game really falls off a cliff once you...
    4. Assassin’S CREED: ODYSSEY This… somethingth… entry in the Assassin’s Creed franchise incorporates quite...
    5. Random GOG Games Back during GOG‘s Insomnia Sale I picked up a bunch...

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    This entry was posted in PC Video Game Related and tagged Assassin's Creed Exploration History RPG Science Fiction Third Person Perspective
  • LEGIⓧN & THE ALIENIST

    Posted on August 21, 2020 11:35 am by Offkorn Comment

    Based off of a Marvel Comics’ character, the 3-season television series Legion is a study in high-concept insanity. It takes guts to make something so deliberately incoherent, to essentially thread together one concept episode after another until you have a consistently inconsistent schizophrenic tapestry… that I can’t deny. Doesn’t mean it’s worth watching though.

    The Alienist is something quite a bit different. A Victorian era thriller with police procedural elements set in New York City, its first season mainly busies itself with highlighting police corruption and reminding people that prostitution is a gender-neutral profession. I’m not at all surprised that it had a middling reception (though I liked the first half or so), especially since the narrative basically falls apart once the focus shifts to ‘the west’.

    The second season, subtitled Angel of Darkness, puts a greater focus on Sara and women’s suffrage in general with the murder victims being babies this time rather than adolescents. The corruption elements here come across as excessive/overwhelming and the work as a whole almost feels less like a thriller and more like soapbox preaching. Meaning I can’t really recommend watching this series either.

    No related posts.


    This entry was posted in Movie & TV Related and tagged Action Comic Adaptation Drama History Marvel Comics Mystery Novel Adaptation Paranormal Romance Romance Series Televised Thriller Urban Fantasy

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