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Jan. 3rd, 2008 06:38 amFuyuki's Hot Night has been revised on AdultFanFiction.net and posted onto DeviantArt since yesterday. So far, two people have already added it to their Favorites gallery in the latter website.
I responded to Powerlord's response to my Virtual Console post in the VGMusic forum. Billybandit's response to my second post was quite derogatory, but I still actually found it to be fucking hilarious. Here's just the part of the thread discussing whether or not Nintendo will have complete or near-complete libraries of games:
( Read more... )
Okay, those comments I made about the Sega 32X... I know. I am hypocritical for making them. First, I state on this blog that Knuckles Chaotix is the only worthwhile game on the 32X, and then I say that I hope that the Virtual Console's Genesis emulator comes with a built-in Sega CD/32X (and by the way, I meant the latter comment for everyone else, not for myself). But I'm mostly an anime-game fan and a Sonic the Hedgehog fan, and everything else on the 32X fulfills neither of those two interests (not that Mick & Mack as the Global Gladiators or Silver Surfer did either, but I downloaded those two games for different reasons). What's also ironic is that the Neptune happens to be my favorite scrapped console to refer to, thanks to its several references by the Angry Video Game Nerd. All it was going to be was a standalone 32X; not like it would've had its own games, unlike the Saturn.
The game billybandit was referring to as my "crappy ancient Japan-only anime-puzzle game that nobody cares about" is obviously the SNES hentai hack of "Columns" which is available on ROM sites. Well, no, I'm not expecting that one to ever get archived, both because it's pornographic and because it was never even made in Japan, just at some guy's house.
Did you notice that I wrote "PC-FX" and not "PC-Engine" when referring to the console that supported Makeruna Makendou Z? Previously, I thought the two were the same console, but that turned out to be a mistake. The PC-Engine (which was renamed Turbografx-16 in America) came first, has an 8-bit CPU and 16-bit graphics, and supported games like Castlevania: Rondo of Blood and the original Valis IV (not Super Valis IV, which is a SNES-butchered version of that game). The PC-FX is the failed successor of the PC-Engine, and is a completely 32-bit console. It was never released anywhere outside Japan, so if you're going to buy it and any games on it, the Region Code will be irrelevant. You're only problem will be trying to translate all the Japanese text to understand the games.
Finally, look what I found last night!!!
[end of commentary]
Moving on, last night, Dad invited the rest of us to watch some more Popeye episodes on DVD. Marie was doing her homework, and Brian was working on something on his computer, so they didn't watch all the episodes me and Dad watched last night. First, we watched an episode that also featured Betty Boop (who was made by the same person who created Popeye). The second episode we watched involved Popeye, Olive, and Wimpy settling in a log cabin. Wimpy asks Popeye to get some "duck dinner", and Dad asked me if that's where I got it from. (Actually, that's just a coincidence; "duck dinner" was something I made up once when we were fishing at Yaphank Lake and there happened to be ducks--or rather, swans--on the water.) Most of the other episodes we watched aren't quite noteworthy, but we ended the session with Dad's favorite, "Popeye the Sailor Meets Sinbad the Sailor." All of us watched that one, even though several of us came in after it started. It sure sucks that towards the end, it started skipping, but it's a good thing that it was towards the end and not the entire episode. I suggested that we exchange it for a fresh disk, but Mom said she'll check it out first to see if it happens again.
I responded to Powerlord's response to my Virtual Console post in the VGMusic forum. Billybandit's response to my second post was quite derogatory, but I still actually found it to be fucking hilarious. Here's just the part of the thread discussing whether or not Nintendo will have complete or near-complete libraries of games:
( Read more... )
Okay, those comments I made about the Sega 32X... I know. I am hypocritical for making them. First, I state on this blog that Knuckles Chaotix is the only worthwhile game on the 32X, and then I say that I hope that the Virtual Console's Genesis emulator comes with a built-in Sega CD/32X (and by the way, I meant the latter comment for everyone else, not for myself). But I'm mostly an anime-game fan and a Sonic the Hedgehog fan, and everything else on the 32X fulfills neither of those two interests (not that Mick & Mack as the Global Gladiators or Silver Surfer did either, but I downloaded those two games for different reasons). What's also ironic is that the Neptune happens to be my favorite scrapped console to refer to, thanks to its several references by the Angry Video Game Nerd. All it was going to be was a standalone 32X; not like it would've had its own games, unlike the Saturn.
The game billybandit was referring to as my "crappy ancient Japan-only anime-puzzle game that nobody cares about" is obviously the SNES hentai hack of "Columns" which is available on ROM sites. Well, no, I'm not expecting that one to ever get archived, both because it's pornographic and because it was never even made in Japan, just at some guy's house.
Did you notice that I wrote "PC-FX" and not "PC-Engine" when referring to the console that supported Makeruna Makendou Z? Previously, I thought the two were the same console, but that turned out to be a mistake. The PC-Engine (which was renamed Turbografx-16 in America) came first, has an 8-bit CPU and 16-bit graphics, and supported games like Castlevania: Rondo of Blood and the original Valis IV (not Super Valis IV, which is a SNES-butchered version of that game). The PC-FX is the failed successor of the PC-Engine, and is a completely 32-bit console. It was never released anywhere outside Japan, so if you're going to buy it and any games on it, the Region Code will be irrelevant. You're only problem will be trying to translate all the Japanese text to understand the games.
Finally, look what I found last night!!!
[end of commentary]
Moving on, last night, Dad invited the rest of us to watch some more Popeye episodes on DVD. Marie was doing her homework, and Brian was working on something on his computer, so they didn't watch all the episodes me and Dad watched last night. First, we watched an episode that also featured Betty Boop (who was made by the same person who created Popeye). The second episode we watched involved Popeye, Olive, and Wimpy settling in a log cabin. Wimpy asks Popeye to get some "duck dinner", and Dad asked me if that's where I got it from. (Actually, that's just a coincidence; "duck dinner" was something I made up once when we were fishing at Yaphank Lake and there happened to be ducks--or rather, swans--on the water.) Most of the other episodes we watched aren't quite noteworthy, but we ended the session with Dad's favorite, "Popeye the Sailor Meets Sinbad the Sailor." All of us watched that one, even though several of us came in after it started. It sure sucks that towards the end, it started skipping, but it's a good thing that it was towards the end and not the entire episode. I suggested that we exchange it for a fresh disk, but Mom said she'll check it out first to see if it happens again.