Ongoing Investigations: Case #202

narutaki I checked out the new WSJ USA title World Trigger. In it our world has come in contact with another dimension which spills out monsters (known as “neighbors”) who begin wreaking havoc. But an organization named Border suddenly appears with the technology to fight them claiming they’ve been training for this for years. The world settles into a routine of monster attacks but with relative normal life surrounding it.

Osamu, a high school student who is picked on, lives in the city which Border headquarters resides in. He befriends the new and odd transfer student Yuma. As you might imagine Yuma has something to do with Border. He has a rather carefree attitude and doesn’t shy away from the bullies at school.

Yuma reminded me a bit of Allen from D.Gray Man with his look, his power manifestation, and his pet. Osamu did surprise me a bit at then end which gave the story a boost.

I found the first chapter a bit unremarkable otherwise. The fight nor the monsters nor the powers have distinguished themselves yet. But it certainly seems worthy of following to see where it leads for at least a little while.

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The first 2 chapters of 87 Clockers reinforces the idea that you can make a manga about anything if you are clever enough. This time Tomoko Ninomiya’s is tackling the topic of overclocking PCs. Which after writing Nodame Cantabile it is a bit of an unexpected change in subject manner. That is not to say that Ninomiya has completely forgotten about classic music because the main character is a violinist. I have to wonder if the protagonist is a violinist because Ninomiya is just that much of a musical aficionado or because she wanted to create a link for her fans to a rather obscure subject with a hook that ties into her blockbuster title. Not that the answer would make or break my enjoyment of the series. I’m just glad to see Ninomiya writing a new manga. It is just an interesting question.

87 Clocker centers around Kanade Ichinose who is an amazingly passive guy. He is currently studying the violin and is good enough to get by with great grades but nothing in his life has sparked his interest. He goes out of his way to avoid conflict so he has never really lost but at the same time he has never done any better than marginally better than acceptable. But when he meets a strange girl named Hana standing barefoot outside in the cold he unexpectedly finds himself seduced both by her beauty and drawn into her world of overclocking.

You don’t get much geekier than a manga about modify computer hardware to make it go faster in a competitive setting without making a manga about abacus tournaments or Star Trek trivia contests. So far the first two chapters mostly introduce the idea of the manga and don’t get too much into technical talk. But I can feel the pages wanting to explode out like a particularly wordy chapter of Initial D. When Kanade and Hana go to Akihabara the hardware talk starts to get serious but so far it is not a tech manual packed into a single page but more just color for the story of the characters. How long that continues is something to be seen.

The main thrust of the story seems to be Kanade’s growth from a herbivore male to someone with passion and ambition. The fact that he is perusing Hana romantically at all is a sign that there is still something left in side him that can change. Presumably getting into the world of overclocking will show him his inner strength. At first he is totally gung-ho about Hana when he thinks she is this wilting flower that needs to be saved. Then he is nearly heartbroken when he thinks she is dating her roommate.  But then Hana says that Mike is not her boyfriend Kanade is reinvigorated. Part of me wants it to be revealed that her roommate, is her fiancée or husband. I think a forbidden romance would be wonderful. Just not enough scandalous romances in manga.

Hana is a strange character. At first she seems like Mike’s clueless assistant. Sort of the girlfriend who participates in her boyfriends hobby but is hardly an expert. But the second chapter reveals that Hana is just as knowledgeable as Mike. I really hope that Hana grows as a competent female character. One of the best parts about Nodame Cantabile was that Nodame was a genius. She was always very odd but her talent was undeniable. Hana has the ability to be just a great. I hope her potential as a character is more than just a love interest.

The only problem with 87 Clockers is that is pretty much licensing poison. If the infinitely more assessable Nodame Cantabile was bomb in English I can’t see this burning up the charts. Maybe someone like JManga would give it a shot but I would not hold my breath.

The Ongoing Investigations are little peeks into what we are watching and reading outside of our main posts on the blog. We each pick three things that we were interested in a week and talk a bit about them. There is often not much rhyme or reason to what we pick. They are just the most interesting things we saw since the last Ongoing Investigation.

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Ongoing Investigations: Case #201

Narutaki, my roommate, and I ventured to downtown Brooklyn to see the unboxing of a new table top roleplaying game magazine called Gygax Magazine (named after Gary Gygax who was one of the co-founders of Dungeons and Dragons). We trekked on down to the Brooklyn Strategist to see the event. I had never been to the store before so it was nice to see another gaming store in the area.

If nothing else Narutaki learned that not all stereotypes are baseless slander. The Brooklyn Strategist was hardly a huge shop so when the place was packed with people you had to get pretty close to most of the attendees. So we got very clear proof that the archetypical unwashed slightly balding guy was out in full force. Not everyone was like that but the gamer smell was strong. I want to go back to that store when it is not as crowed to get a better impression of what the place is like normally.

But during the event we were able to pick up the first issue of the Gygax Magazine which is a pen and paper roleplaying game magazine. While the name would imply a wholly Dungeons and Dragons themed magazine it is a general pen and paper roleplaying game magazine with a D&D slant. Some of the content was purposely generic swamp town write-up to the very specific like modified Pathfinder feats.

I really liked the Cosmology of Role-Playing Games article. It tried to create a galactic map of American pen and paper roleplaying games from 1974 until today. It states up front that it is clearly incomplete. Any complete guide would be a monumental undertaking but overall it seems fairly comprehensive and at least touches up some of the smaller independent titles. I think they could have broken down the groupings a little better as opposed to sort of throwing very disparate games of the same wave in with each other. But at the same time creating very distinct blood lines might have overcomplicated an already pretty monumental article. So I liked what I saw. I just wanted more. That said I think anyone other than hardcore tabletop players will find one or two titles on the list they would probably want to look into on name alone. Stars Without Number and Gumshoe seemed interesting to me.

Random thought: A modified Traveler could be used to run an awesome Legend of the Galactic Heroes game.

Leomund’s Secure Shelter is pretty much the rules lawyer section of the magazine. I will also say that the Keeping Magic Magical is pretty much my philosophy to a tee. The Banshee section was quite good at laying out different ways of playing a classic monster that would work in almost any fantasy setting.

I would have liked a few more sci-fi, horror, historical, or other style of RPG articles but it is the first issue. They did have a Godlike article which is a historical superheroes so it was hardly all fantasy all the time.

As always What’s New with Phil & Dixie is a classic strip and always enjoyable.

I liked the magazine a lot and I hope they can continue creating compelling content in the future.

As I have just started playing Dungeons & Dragons, this new quarterly Gygax Magazine promising insights into the game and others got me curious. It is also available digitally which might be how I’d read it in the future.

The first issue is a mix of history delving, anecdotes, and ways to add new experiences to your current games.

Some of the shorter articles felt as though they had a lot more to say but get cut off before they could. I understand space restrictions of course, but in the future it might be better to structure the article to be short as opposed to just cutting it off at its limit.

It was fun reading about other DM experiences in “Still Playing After All These Years” as well as the piece about the storytelling of Gary Gyax from his son’s perspective “The Gygax Family Storyteller.”

I found the piece about running a campaign for your toddler rather fascinating! Before reading it I didn’t imagine it really possible for that age group but it sounds pretty fun from the writer’s experience.

The comics in the back are a fun extra. I really loved the one from Girl Genius creators What’s New with Phil & Dixie.

I liked this magazine even though I’m a newbie player.

The Ongoing Investigations are little peeks into what we are watching and reading outside of our main posts on the blog. We each pick three things that we were interested in a week and talk a bit about them. There is often not much rhyme or reason to what we pick. They are just the most interesting things we saw since the last Ongoing Investigation.

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Ongoing Investigations: Case #200

To celebrate getting to the 200th Ongoing Investigation (which I’m still pretty sure only like half our readers understand) we decided to open up what we talk about in the post to the readers like we did with the 100th. This time we had a poll to help reduce the number of suggestions of shows one of us has already seen (and avoid having people suggest we watch Little Busters!, Oreimo, or something equally repellent). We still got a bunch of requests for Oreimo, but luckily other things won out.

narutaki Future Boy Conan (eps. 1-4) was the oldest series (1978) on the list and a very popular choice by readers which kinda made me happy.

The series style will seem very familiar to any Ghibli fans; character designs, flying machines, etc. Future Boy Conan immediately felt very proto-Laputa specifically too, especially the relationship between Conan and Lana. This was definitely not a bad thing.

At the beginning, Conan was living on a tiny uncharted island with his grandfather after the world had gone to hell. Lana washed ashore after escaping from some baddies. But then they showed up and stole her away leaving Conan to try to find his way to her in wide open ocean.

The world outside is a harsh but exciting place as Conan sets off in his small handmade ship which brings him to another island and one step closer to Lana.

Things progressed at a rapid pace and not at all in the ways I expected for the show. I’m certainly curious to see where it is headed.

What I liked best about Future Boy Conan was the true spirit of adventure that was present in each episode. Conan was fearless, resourceful, loyal, and damn strong! Heck, he took on (and kills) a shark in the first scenes we saw him in.

Random note, we watched the BD version which looks really crisp and the color was great.

I have always been curious to watch Future Boy Conan if for nothing else to see what Hayao Miyazaki could do when he was still in his prime when he worked on his only full TV series. The show itself has always had a bit of a legendary reputation in a small circle of people in America who revere it as a little known classic. On the other hand in Japan it seems like one of those series that inspired a whole generation of current animators. With a strong pedigree and the knowledge that Isao Takahata was balancing out Miyazaki it seemed like a good choice for the list. Thankfully the show has lived up to the decently high expectations I had set for it in my head.

The first thing to note is the budget and animation on the show seems quite high for a TV series. It is not quite at the level of a full on Ghibli movie but for a 26 episode TV series it impressive. You can tell a good deal of love and care went into animating this show. And since we were watching the Blu-ray version it came through looking crystal clear. It probably did not look this nice when it first played on TV. But the character designs, character types, and themes clearly mark this unmistakably as a Miyazaki directed TV series.

Conan (the Future boy not the detective) is your stock plucky but naive shonen hero. He is also crazy strong but I suppose you can’t be a 98-pound weakling in a post apocalyptic world. Conan  kills a giant shark and throws car size boulders with only a small amount of difficulty. He is hardly the most original character in that respect but he is fairly likeable in a very Monkey D Luffy fashion. His first friend on his journey Jimsy is a bit more of a burden than an asset but thankfully while being a bit rough around the edges he is a decent counterbalance to Conan.

Captain Dyce is definitely an odd duck in his mood swings towards Conan. He goes from being indifferent, to straight out trying to murder him several times, and then settles on rather harsh but considerably less homicidal when he finally captures him. If Captain Dyce killed Conan it would have ended the series rather abruptly but it seems odd for Miyazaki to make the Captain so blood thirsty and then dial it back just as quickly.

You can see that much of the series would go on to greatly influence Castle in the Sky. While there are many significant differences between the two the echoes from Conan that go on to shape Castle in the Sky are unmistakable. The relationship between Sheeta and Pazu was clearly a refinement on Conan and Lana’s relationship. And the post apocalyptic vibe and themes or environmentalism and the futility of violence are very much the same even if Laputa’s world has recovered to a far greater extent. I’m curious to see how much more Castle in the Sky borrows from its older brother as I watch more Conan.

But I assume that out of the three series we watched we are most likely to continue watching this series. I’m curious to see how well Miyazaki does with a longer form of storytelling. So far he has done a good job of it. I hope he can keep it up.

The Ongoing Investigations are little peeks into what we are watching and reading outside of our main posts on the blog. We each pick three things that we were interested in a week and talk a bit about them. There is often not much rhyme or reason to what we pick. They are just the most interesting things we saw since the last Ongoing Investigation.

Continue reading