Type-Moon Weekly News Roundup: Where is the Ameno Fan Art?

This Saturday post is the weekly Type-Moon news in addition to the regular APB post on Sunday. If you have any suggestions for what to highlight on the Type-Moon Weekly News Roundup drop me a line via email or Twitter.

New York Comic Con 2013: Show Floor & Artist Alley

hisui_icon_4040 If panels are the brain of New York Comic Con, than the Show Room is the heart of the event, and Artist Alley is soul. The Show Room is the glitzy center of the convention that pumps life into the rest of the convention. It tends to be one of the biggest draws and where the casual attendees tend to spend most of their time. A New York Comic Con dealers room is filled with exclusive demos, sneak peaks, free swag, samples big and small, hidden signings, and tons of things to buy in every stripe of geekery. It is the clearly the most impressive part of the convention.

On the other hand a little off to the side is the equally impressive if a bit quieter (and only quieter in comparison) Artist Alley. If the roots of New York Comic Con are comics of all sorts than here is where they shine the most. A walk down the lanes lets you meet a wide variety of different artists whose mediums include traditional superheros, odd indy projects, popular webcomics, and even some manga artists. There you can converse about their work, trade tips on the trade, and buy exclusive pieces of art as well as more mass-produced pieces of merchandise. Artist Alley is probably the most intimate part of the convention and I’m including Sci-Fi Speed Dating in that assessment.

narutaki_icon_4040 This year saw the Show Floor back to its full capacity as the last remnants of construction finished after 2012’s con. And while the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle alley way was a pretty awesome way of connecting one side of the floor to the other last year, “The Block” got much more traffic now that you could see it unobstructed.

On the reverse, Artist Alley saw no visible changes from last time around, but that was actually a good thing since the North Pavilion is easily the most inviting section in the entire Javits Center. And finally finally, people don’t seem to be missing the existence of the alley.

Continue reading

New York Comic Con 2013: General Impressions

hisui_icon_4040 This year’s New York Comic Con felt a little more manageable. Last year felt like it was a convention cosplaying as scene from Soylent Green. This year was decidedly busy but not as overwhelming. You could conceivably go on to the show floor on Saturday afternoon and go from one end to the other in less than an hour without the offensive line of an NFL team escorting you. At the same time the content still seemed strong, the business in the showroom and artist alley seemed brisk, and major panels were still hard to go into. So the real question is why was this. How did the convention grow but everything seem less crowded?

narutaki_icon_4040 New York Comic Con is something I’m always anticipating; it probably helps that NYCC staff hype the show and make announcements for months before it is really on the convention radar. This year I had a bit of anxiety mixed-in since the 2012 convention was huge and packed, I was wondering what this year would hold. Would it be more crowded? Would I be able to get to the panels I wanted? What are the limits of the Javits space?

And the ultimate question for me: would NYCC be so big that I no longer enjoyed it? That was weighing on me like never before. And maybe because I was thinking about that so much, this year’s NYCC was able to pleasantly surprise me.

Continue reading