Japanese LeSportsac Store

For those of you who are coming here from clicking the Tokidoki tag… I don’t really have much to offer you.

But here’s a blurry camera-phone picture of a LeSportsac store in Japan, at the frightening-to-men “Women’s Theme Park” mall, Venus Fort.

As an aside – if you think Tokidoki bags are expensive in the US, they’re crazy expensive in Japan.  The few I saw looked to be about 25000 yen ($210?) for bags that are about $130 in the US.

That’s all I’ve got.

Hope it brightened your day, now you can go back to looking for photos of the newest prints or something.

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she still lies trapped within the system

…Well, that’s what the game SAID.

Now, I will stop being oh-so-enigmatic with my obscure quotes and explain.

Before explaining, though: I finished Trace Memory. I missed a couple of things along the way, so even though I completed the main character’s quest I didn’t get the entire story. I may go back and see if a second run-through works better. There’s supposed to be bonus stuff if you beat the game a second time, anyway.

I wasn’t quite ready to jump right in to a second play-through, though, and so I went to the shelves o’ unplayed games.

My criteria were:

1) Not an FPS. Played too many of those lately and Halo 3 is coming next week.

2) Somewhat artsy. This skews the balance rather in favor of asian developers, which is fine since I’ve played an awful lot of western-developed games lately too.

3) Short, because, well, Halo 3 is coming next week.

Orange letters on a black spine jumped out at me. Rez.

Who was I to say no to that?

I bought Rez last month, at a little shop in Nakano Broadway, for the kingly sum of 980 yen. Since the North American release goes for a fair sum of money, I think I did all right there, especially as it’s smart enough to look at the system configuration on my Japanese PS2, realize that the console is set to English, and set itself to English mode.

It’s not exactly as short as some would claim, but it is a pretty short game. You need to unlock levels in stages – beat level 1 to unlock level 2, then you can start on level 2 and beat it to unlock level 3, repeat for level 4… and then you need to beat all four of those levels in the same play session to unlock level 5. If you’re good at shooters, this probably doesn’t take very long. For me, it took three or four hours to unlock level 5 and then several tries to beat level 5… with the “not so good ending”, I’ll admit, and that’s where the title of this post comes from. Explanation finished.

(I would need to get a 95% shot-down rate for the level to get the “good ending” – this is unlikely. I only managed an 85.7% rating, so I’d need to hit a LOT more targets.)

It was a good time. It plays an awful lot like Panzer Dragoon would if you could only use lock-on firing, and it manages to pull off a “next-generation TRON” look better than Tron 2.0 did. I’m glad it’s being reissued on XBLA because I’ll be able to recommend it to people without having to say “oh, yeah, if you can find a copy that’s not TOO expensive…”

School starts next week. I’ve got a schedule of Economics, Statistics, and Drama, and something like $320 in textbooks to buy for those classes. Education: No place for wimps.

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Time for a little less FPS in my diet, also: pork.

I took a look back and realized that 5 of the last 6 games I’ve played have been first-person shooters, so it’s time for a change of genre.

I’m giving Trace Memory a shot. It’s a point-and-click style adventure game with lots of puzzles. In terms of genre it’s about as far away from an FPS as you can get without involving mahjong or dating.

For some reason, the Tron 2.0 image header at the top of the blog stopped working, but it was time for a new look anyway. The new one features tonkatsu, which is one of the World’s Most Perfect Foods – even more so when you realize you can get katsu-curry.

Tonkatsu is pork, coated with panko breading, and fried. It’s not exactly a diet food. Normally it comes with a heapin’ mound of shredded cabbage and a bowl of rice. It’s damn yummy.

This is a photo of… well, it’s a photo of one of the fake food displays outside a tonkatsu restaurant. In most Japanese restaurants, what you get on your plate is pretty much exactly what you see in the display, so when you’re not feeling adventurous you can order from the display and know that you’re not going to get any real shocks.

tonkatsuheader1.jpg

It looked like I’d get two katsu, two fried and breaded shrim, a crab croquette, some rice, and some miso, for about 13 bucks. There was also a little cup of assorted seafood in gelatinous goop that I figured I could safely avoid.I wasn’t feeling adventurous. I was actually feeling really worn out at the time. Mountain o’ fried food with rice and miso sounded really good.

I got seated, waved off an English menu (possibly my mistake) and ordered me some katsu goodness.

It came.

I went to stir up the miso.

It went “clink, clink”.

Sounded like ice cubes.

Very odd, I thought to myself. It’s kind of hot out, yes, but I’ve never heard of iced miso and OH MY GOD IT HAS SHELLS IN IT.

I’m not a shellfish guy.

There’s a certain kind of horror that comes from finding whole mussels in your miso that’s hard to express.

I managed to drink most of the miso, and I even ate a couple of the mussels. I didn’t want to, you know, look like I was wasting food.

Then I covered it up and tried to pretend they didn’t exist.

Apart from the Stealth Mussels, it was every bit as fine a meal as I have ever had, and I would gladly order it again, as soon as I learn how to say “no molluscs please” in Japanese.

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Being behind the times… not a bad thing.

…because, I tell you, if I’d purchased and played Halo 2 back in 2004, I’d have been fuming for 3 years about that “ending.”

That’s a little harsh, I guess. I’ve seen and read a lot worse cliffhangers, and some of them won’t ever be resolved. Beyond Good & Evil comes to mind. The Architect of Sleep comes to mind as well, but that’s pretty obscure. I’ve run in to a surprisingly large number of people who read it and remember it, though.

As it is, I only have a couple of weeks until the game with the real ending comes out. So I guess I’ll be picking that up early on.

The week of the 25th has a few other things happening… Heroes season 2 starts, and I’ll be recording it since NBC had their little snit and yanked it off iTunes… Legion of Super-Heroes season 2 starts as well, and I think Stargate Atlantis season 4.

Oh, right, and I have classes starting on the 24th. That will put a bit of a damper on the whole week-long orgy of fanboy delights. Still, I have my classes scheduled, I have my student loans figured out… things are all coming together for, I guess, my Sophomore year? It feels weird calling it that since I didn’t take full time classes last year. Let’s call it my Freshman+ year.

So – 13 credit hours, a full time job, the new TV season and videogames. No problem.

I’m so dead.

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So I hear there’s this game called Halo.

I’m occasionally a little stubborn.

Let me explain further.

I’ve owned an awful lot of game consoles, dating back to the Genesis, and I noticed that I had a habit of buying a console early in its lifespan and buying some really expensive games for it that were bargain-bin titles within a couple of years.

Probably the worst example is paying roughly $100, with tax, to own an imported disc of Battle Arena Toshinden in September of 1995. At least I played it a fair bit.

So recently I’ve been trying to hold off on buying consoles TOO early, and when I do I try to hold off on the full-price titles that everyone and their cousin is buying and that will be the first candidates for the budget line / bargain bin.

This was the case with our XBox. By the time my wife decided we needed one, it had been out for a while and there was a lot of discounted software available for it.

But, Halo was still 50 bucks.

I decided, damn it, I was going to grit my teeth on this. It was going to become a matter of principle. I was NOT going to buy Halo until it hit Microsoft’s budget line. Microsoft didn’t have a budget line yet, but I was sure it was coming.

And it did. And Halo wasn’t in the budget line.

I gritted my teeth some more, and eventually it dropped to $30.

Then it dropped to $20.

Then they re-issued it in the Platinum Hits packaging, and I bought the damn thing.

Didn’t play it, mind you, but I owned it.

Recently I’ve been enjoying Xbox live sessions with a friend and some of his relatives, and it’s been a little tough joining in.

I made a list of my Live-compatible games, and it was stuff like, mmm, Perfect Dark Zero, Dead or Alive Ultimate, and Dead or Alive Xtreme 2, and they have stuff like, mmm, Call of Duty 2, Rainbow Six, Ghost Recon, Gears of War, Counterstrike, and Halo 2.

We don’t really have similar tastes in games.

Nonetheless, Call of Duty 2 was discounted to $30, so I bought that so I’d have one game in common. I added Counterstrike, because it was $10.

They play a lot of Halo 2.

I was trying to hold out for it to be released in Platinum Hits packaging, and then I realized:

The Xbox is dead and discontinued. Microsoft will not be adding new entries to the Platinum Hits line. I will have to pay $30 for Halo 2.

Damn it.

So I bought that, and happily joined up for the next Halo 2 night.

It didn’t go well for me. Of a dozen or so games, I actually managed not to go negative a couple of times.

Obviously I need practice. Just as obviously, I can’t start playing Halo 2 without having played the original Halo, and I’ve heard the original has quite a good storyline and there’s the spectre of Halo 3 coming out later this month to make me feel even further behind.

Sunday afternoon, around 4, I put Halo in the 360 and decided, well, let’s see how this goes then.

Monday morning, around 2, I took Halo out of the 360 and staggered to bed.

Then I played for a couple of hours before work.

Then I got home, and actually managed not to put the disc in until 8 or so.

Four hours later, I have to admit: That was a heck of a ride.

I’ll give the sequel a shot while this one is still fresh in my memory. It would be kind of keen to be up-to-date before the final game of the trilogy is released. Anyone’s guess if that’s going to happen or not, of course. Me being up-to-date, that is, not the game coming out.

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Speaking of Zombies…

I tried to run through Dead Rising a couple of times, and didn’t do very well.

Attempt 1 (several months ago): Die to first boss fight after not having saved for over an hour. Put the game aside in disgust, not realizing that I can just start over and keep all the XP I’ve gained.

Late last night: pick it up again.

Attempt 2: Beat first boss, but let Brad die to zombies.

Attempt 3: Beat first boss, keep Brad alive, actually progress the story a little ways, then die trying to get in to the security room through a door that I’d forgotten was now welded shut.

Attempt 4: I started attempt 4, and then had a thought.

Time progresses at a fixed pace. My helicopter pilot will be back in 72 game hours (6 real-world hours) regardless of what I do, right?

I came home from work on my lunch break. I started a game.

I took some photos of Willamette as we flew over it.

I got Frank to the couch in the security room. I saved there.

And went back to work. I figured I’d come home and find myself eaten by zombies anyway.

Five hours later, I got home from work.

Frank was still standing there, so I took him up to the roof, then went and browsed Kotaku and the penny arcade forums for a while.

Right on schedule, my helicopter landed and I got 20 points of Gamerscore for surviving for 3 days. It seems as though I’d also gotten 20 Gamerscore just for staying inside so long. I got 50000 bonus XP for living, and gained two levels.

Obviously I didn’t get the “good ending”, and I’m not going to count this as “beating” the game, but I thought it was pretty funny.

deadrisingendb.jpg

deadrisingach.jpg

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Nobody minds when you shoot Nazis

It’s true.

Even though everyone is pretty much OK with Germany these days and has been for 60-odd years, Nazis are still considered pretty much fair game to gun down in videogames.

This makes them one of the two Top Videogame Bad Guys, the other top pick being zombies.

Nobody minds when you shoot zombies, either.

I am given to understand that there have been quite a few games based on World War II, taking advantage of the fact that Nazis don’t have any advocacy groups, but it’s not really my genre. I like cute, and there’s not much cute about WWII shooters.

Mind you, being a shallow male, I am easily swayed by busty half-vampires in skin-tight leather outfits, so I do own Bloodrayne, which features Nazis aplenty. It’s not really a historical simulation, though. It’s also not cute, but it’s, uh, it’s, uh, did I mention the skin-tight leather outfits?

And is “skin-tight” hyphenated, or two words, or is it just one word, “skintight”? I am not sure, and the spell checker doesn’t complain about any of them. I’ll go with hyphenated.

All that aside, the group of guys I game with on Wednesday nights play a whole lot of various shootin’ games, and so I wound up buying Call of Duty 2, since it was cheaper than buying Rainbow Six Vegas or Gears of War, the other games they play a bunch of.

And I played through the training mode, and got the 50 easiest achievement points I’ve ever gotten, and then mostly played multiplayer online.

And, I got my butt whupped a bunch. So I thought, well, let’s try the single player game and see how that goes and maybe I’ll get a little better.

I don’t know if that’s actually happened, but I did wind up playing through the entire single player campaign. It didn’t manage to convert me into a raving historical FPS fanboy, but I will admit that it’s a pretty solid game and if I had more interest in the source material I’d probably be raving about it.

Gamerscore +150 for “Winning the war” means that I have cracked the 1K barrier. I am mighty.

This leaves me with two Xbox360 games to finish. “Prey” and “Dead Rising”.

One of those features Zombies… 🙂

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Random bits of swag from Japan

I have an Acer laptop – I bought it because it was a) really quite inexpensive, b) had a huge (17″) widescreen display and c) had a built-in numeric keypad.

Last weekend we noticed that CompUSA had the newer model from the same line on sale, so my wife wound up with an Acer laptop as well.

The question of “how to tell them apart” came up, as the only real difference is that mine has a build-in webcam and hers doesn’t.

Fortunately, there was a booth at Comic Market selling really cool die-cut vinyl logo stickers of various types, and I bought an “Earth Defense Force” logo sticker for the princely sum of 300 yen.  So, my laptop joined the EDF and now we’ve no fear of accidentally taking the wrong laptop.

edflaptop.jpg

Unfortunately, the clear adhesive sheet they give you to protect the logo sticker once applied kind of spoils the effect, but what the hell.

Also, a couple of things that I cannot rationally explain buying.

Let me sum up:

1) I don’t smoke.

2) I’m not really a big Evangelion fan.

3) I was really worried about bringing these on the plane.

4) I’m not sure how safe they are to store.

5) So why did I buy two Evangelion lighters from a Lawson’s combini?

Boxed:

evalightersboxed1.jpg

And removed from box:

evalightersunboxed1.jpg

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That there, that was some pretty good Dark.

I don’t know as I’d call it Perfect, but it was pretty good.

One of the absolute worst “money spent” to “games completed” ratios I’ve ever had was buying a Nintendo 64. It did have some quality games – I won’t dispute that – but I owned one for a full decade and didn’t finish a single title on the system. I finally sold it, this year, along with the 11 games I did have for it, and got a whopping 78 bucks off eBay for the package. Mind you, it still had the receipt in the box, showing that I’d paid $80 for the “Doom 64” cartridge I bought at the same time as the system.

On the other hand, the game I came closest to finishing was a $10 game I bought near the end of the system’s life: Perfect Dark.

I actually managed to play all the way to the final boss fight, which I then lost several times in a row before getting entirely too frustrated and giving up on it. So I ALMOST finished one (ONE!) Nintendo 64 game.

It was a hell of a game, though. So, when we added an Xbox 360 to our humble geek apartment, I bought Perfect Dark Zero, the prequel-sequel.

THAT game, I just managed to finish – on the absolute lowest difficulty setting, netting me a whopping 10 points towards my Gamerscore, which now sits at a lofty 920.

It’s a lot easier game than the original, or I’ve developed l33t FPS skillz… let’s go with “it’s a lot easier”, shall we?

It’s also, well, it’s not as epic as the original, but that makes a bit of sense. If they made the prequel game all wowie and zoomie and bang, then Joanna’s reactions to events in the original game wouldn’t make sense. If they’d thrown in, say, aliens, then you would expect her to be all “like, yawn” in the original game instead of “omg! alienz!”

…so to speak.

The designers did go way over the top with the escort missions. I hate escort missions. Perfect Dark Zero has, like, seven missions that involve escorting or defending people. There are 13 levels. This ratio sucks.
At least you’re usually escorting guys with guys who can defend themselves, not random unarmed civilians who run out into the middle of firefights and get themselves shot.

But, even with far too many escort missions, it was some pretty good Dark.

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Graphical overloads come in pairs.

I’ll preface this with: I am a cranky old bastard who doesn’t like the idea of buying games as download versions, because having physical media around makes me feel all secure and comfortable and safe and stuff.

On the other hand, Jeff Minter put out a game on Xbox Live Arcade. This makes me suck it up and deal with the idea of a download-only purchase.

And it (Space Giraffe) is goodness. It is shooty and musicy and all the things one wants from a Minter game. It is also bloody hard and I die a lot after about level 10. This is also kind of as expected from a Minter game.

I had to buy 1600 Microsoft points to buy this 400 Microsoft point game, so I had 1200 Microsoft points left over. I bought Geometry Wars.

Geometry Wars is also goodness. It doesn’t have the Minter touch, but it is also shooty and musicy and very much a “zone” game.

Hmm. Could “Minter” be a genre? You could stick stuff like Geometry Wars, Robotron X, maybe Rez into the “Minter” Genre and they would all go together fairly well.

It fits neatly into the standard game genres between “Fighting” and “Puzzle”. A gap which, I think everyone can agree, needs a little filler.

I still have 800 Microsoft Points to spend. I’m thinking that I’ll probably break down and buy the Street Fighter II HD version when it finally comes out, since I haven’t bought a new Street Fighter II game since the 3D0.

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