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Messages - pizzasafari

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31
Off Topic / Re: What Was The Last Movie/Anime You Watched?
« on: November 03, 2018, 09:22:31 pm »
Watched all of Citrus today, never thought I'd get into a lesbian romance anime of all things but I surprisingly enjoyed it. I really liked Yuzu, I found myself relating to her in a lot of ways. No homo. She reacted to most things the same way I would so I was like YEEAH! THIS GIRL!

32
Be nice guys, he's trying to contribute at least.

I don't know the series you're referring to myself.

33
General / Re: REVIVE a Dead Video Game Series / Franchise
« on: October 24, 2018, 12:40:00 am »
Final Fantasy because IT IS DEAD

My pick would be Jet Set Radio. Breathe some vibrancy back into gaming. Put Smilebit back together and watch some magic happen. Imagine an open world Jet Set Radio game with modern technology? Jesus, man.

My runner-up pick would be Silent Hill. Put Team Silent back together, lock them in a cupboard for a few years and see what they bring out with them. We need a return to good third person survival horror. But of course that would never happen because Konami are an aneurysm.

I just wanna also throw in an honourable mention to Panzer Dragoon since someone mentioned it, that series had so much potential. It's a shame it died off so soon. Beautiful games and such an interesting world.

Edit: Oh man, another honourable mention to Dark Cloud/Chronicle. There's more than enough room in the world for a third game.

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General / Re: How Well Do You Handle Speed In Video Games
« on: October 23, 2018, 05:21:07 pm »
The only game/s in which I have a problem with speed is the Sonic games, the originals more so. I have absolutely no idea how everyone seems to be able to play those games without any problems. You need to know the levels inside and out in order to not be fucked up by obstacles you had no chance to react to.

35
Not counting films like Shaun of the Dead and Zombieland cause they're not horror:

Comedy works in a lot of horror. Or else we wouldn't have gems like Street Trash, Return of the Living Dead, and half of the Nightmare on Elm Streets. Having a dark sense of humor helps, of course.

Sure, but I don't think a film can be simultaneously horror and comedy, at least not successfully. A comedy focuses on making the viewer laugh, a horror focuses on scaring the viewer. It's hard to make both a focus and be successful, I'm not aware of any films that are both funny and scary, if they are then they're probably just funny and not scary. Shaun of the Dead and Zombieland aren't trying to scare the viewer, they're trying to make them laugh, so they're comedies. Something being both a comedy and a genuine horror is like being both hot and cold.

36
Not counting films like Shaun of the Dead and Zombieland cause they're not horror:

- Ju-On: The Curse 1 & 2, Ju-On: The Grudge 1 & 2, Beginning of the End
- Ring & Ring 0
- Saw 1 - 3
- I don't consider them horror but other people do, Let The Right One In & Let Me In
- Alien/Aliens/Alien 3
- The Shining
- Hellraiser 1

I feel like I might be forgetting some.

37
Off Topic / Re: What Was The Last Movie/Anime You Watched?
« on: October 18, 2018, 10:41:13 pm »
And following that, I just watched The Shape of Voice/A Silent Voice/whatever people call it, holy god that was good.

I really need to watch this as I heard it was good, being out at the same time generally as "Your Name", but I just never got around to it.  Just need to be in the mood for a heart tugger.

I really want to watch Your Name but it's not on any of the streaming services I'm able to use at the mo. But A Silent Voice is really really good, it's on Netflix at the moment if you ever fancy a watch.

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Off Topic / Re: What Was The Last Movie/Anime You Watched?
« on: October 18, 2018, 10:12:49 pm »
And following that, I just watched The Shape of Voice/A Silent Voice/whatever people call it, holy god that was good.

39
Off Topic / Re: What Was The Last Movie/Anime You Watched?
« on: October 17, 2018, 08:35:00 pm »
Just finished watching through Elfen Lied for the first time, ridiculous fanservice aside that was so much better than I was expecting. Though before watching it I absolutely loved Deadman Wonderland and now I hate it. To call Deadman Wonderland an Elfen Lied ripoff would be like calling the sun tepid.

40
General / Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« on: October 12, 2018, 10:14:55 am »
I still prefer games from the mid to late 90's to the games of today.

This this. There's plenty of amazing games coming out nowadays but generally speaking, most games had so much more heart put into them back then. Nowadays it's all so soulless.

42
First game I ever played when I was 2 or 3 years old was an action horror Doom clone, one of the first games I owned was Mortal Kombat 3, spent a while as a kid watching my brother play Dino Crisis, played a demo of Silent Hill around that time, and I was playing Grand Theft Auto from around age 6-ish, among many other things, and I'm perfectly fine. Absolutely nothing happened to me, I'm not violent, if anything I'm a pacifist. The idea that kids should be shielded away from mature things is rubbish, unless there's something wrong with that kid specifically, it just desensitises you to things that would otherwise be upsetting and makes you good at handling disturbing material. It really, really annoys me I see parents tearing a kid away from something because it's "too violent" or "too scary". Let them be scared, let that film ruin their entire week, then the next scary thing they see will be less disturbing to them. Then so will the next thing. Let them experience these things for themselves so they can learn, they can grow from it. I'm not telling the parents here what to do, it's just... damn man, it frustrates me.

Kids are going to be exposed no matter what.  It is best to be there to explain.

Also this. Very much this.

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Weirdly enough, I'm suddenly finding myself having a lot more fun than before playing the PS3 since the PS4 generation started. I'm not sure why, it just feels really good to play all of a sudden for some reason. Maybe because it's close in technical quality to PS4 games but without as much of the faffing around. I think it's probably gonna be a main focus for me, at least, so I'll probably be buying a lot more PS3 games. As for other people, hard to predict, but once people who grew up with the PS3 become the new collectors I don't see why it wouldn't be a collectible system in the same way the PS1 and 2 are.

Xbox 360 I haven't really cared about at all since getting my PS3, the Wii I've never liked.

44
Off Topic / Re: Your Favorite And Least Favorite Kind Of Music
« on: October 03, 2018, 03:12:28 pm »
Equally into electronic music and metal these days. Favourite metal is melodeath and industrial metal.

Least favourite, there isn't really any particular genre I hate as any genre can have good music. But whatever you call that genre that every single song on the radio is nowadays, like it's not pop or dance but somewhere in the middle, whatever that is, burn it.

45
Something very interesting I just found. I don't know how old it is, but it's from a while ago.

Nobuo Uematsu on Sakaguchi leaving Square:

1up: The consumer reaction, how many people went to go see it (The Spirits Within), wasn't very much, and it became a big financial failure for Square, and despite how much Sakaguchi-san had done for Square, it was this project that kind of led to his eventually leaving the company. Looking back, do you think that was a sad moment, especially considering how much he had done for the company and where he had brought the company? Japanese companies in general seem to be quick to look for a scapegoat whenever something doesn't go right. How did you feel about what happened with Sakaguchi-san?

NU: [Long pause] No matter what happens in the future with the company of SquareEnix and with the individual Sakaguchi, one thing that's not going to change is that he is the father of Final Fantasy. He made the series. And it was a difficult time when he left Square -- at that time it was still Square. As an individual myself, as someone who creates content, not purely for business purposes or making money or gaining profit from something I create as a content creator, it's really hard to say this, but I really don't think Final Fantasy should have been made after Sakaguchi-san left the company. Square the company owns Final Fantasy the property, so it's really up to them what they decide to do. But me personally, that's what I thought when he left the company. And I think at the same time that they started to change the direction of the company. We weren't sure who was in charge of what. It meant a lot of things if we look back at that time when he left and maybe soon after he left. There were a lot of changes, and it was probably a turning point for the company. I don't know if there has been another turning point within SquareEnix the company, but that was definitely a moment that meant a lot of different things.


1UP: Companies like this, entertainment companies, are always in it to make some kind of money because without making money you can't continue to produce and create new entertainment, but would you say that when Sakaguchi left Square, would you equate that to something like when Walt Disney died? Because after Walt Disney died, it changed from Walt Disney Productions to the Walt Disney Company. It acquired more of a corporate mentality as opposed to this -- I don't want to say a family business necessarily -- but it turned it from something that seemed a lot more...it had a humble human element in Walt Disney Productions; you know, there were real people behind it. It wasn't just a faceless corporation. When Walt Disney died, it became the Walt Disney Company and it acquired a corporate feel and maybe it lost something. It lost some of that innocence. And Disney as a corporation just started cranking out annual animated movies to capitalize on the public's thirst for cartoons and family entertainment, and it became much more of a business. Would you say that sort of transformation took place because before there were individual Final Fantasy games, and now they come like five at a time. Final Fantasy XIII times five.

NU: You know, the example of when Walt Disney died and became corporate, now that I've left the company, I can't really say, "Yeah, it's completely changed." It's probably better to ask someone who went through that change with Sakaguchi-san leaving, what they think of the company today, but in my opinion -- and I hope that Sakaguchi-san feels the same way -- is that we did treat each and every Final Fantasy as a birth of something, as a great product that we believed in. All we really wanted to do was to be able to express a very simple belief of friendship or family love or just love in general and if that becomes something that is going to be bought by money and can easily be a base for making a successful business, I just want that to be sold in that manner. Like, this was going to be a boxed package that was going to make money. That's not -- as one of the creators of the games that we worked on -- that wasn't necessarily our purpose. So that's the line that we always have between the business side and the creative side of the business. But all I hope for is that with the people who are still at SquareEnix, I hope that they still have that belief in them, and I wish that they would continue to execute their jobs and projects in the way that we were able to do back then. It's not a MasterCard slogan, but it's priceless. The work is priceless. And I hope that everyone continues to hold that belief. I don't know if this is going to be a good example, but if blood sells, that doesn't mean I think every single game is going to need blood because they think it'll make money. That's just easy to say in words, but it's not really why it should be in the game. There still has to be a very deep and important substance there to create that blood, and if it needs to be there, it needs to be there. But we're not going to make a game just based on blood and violence because it sells.

Edit: Also for anyone who wants to know, apparently the main culprit for Final Fantasy's downfall was former Square & Square Enix president Yoichi Wada (president from December 2001 - March 2013). Square had reach and Enix had money, and the two companies were in talks about merging for a while, but Square didn't really want to because financially they were doing fine. After The Spirits Within flopped (which discouraged Enix from merging) they were bailed out by Sony so despite what common belief seems to be they were doing fine, but Square made some major changes to its structure following this and Sakaguchi was essentially demoted. Around this time Wada used the position The Spirits Within had put them in to have Square make him their new director, and it was him that decided to go ahead with the merge with Enix and that together they would start releasing as many Final Fantasy games as they could and make it their main source of income. Like Uematsu is worrying about above, they decided to put profit before heart with the series and that's why we're seeing the Final Fantasy we're seeing today. Even if main series Final Fantasy games are still few and far between, you can't put heart into a game when that's your mentality.

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