(no subject)
Jan. 13th, 2008 06:11 amIt turns out that the same person who drew this pic of Mai is the same person who owned the defunct webpage specifying the differences between Kendo Rage and Makeruna Makendou. He stated specifically so while responding to a comment I left on his work under the name DMXrated. This confirms once and for all that the person whom I've been calling Hikari up until a few days ago is, in fact, Mai (the main character of MM1/Kendo Rage, not Makeruna Makendou 2). He told me that he has plans on revamping the webpage to be more wholesome and accurate, and also agreed to read SMW2: Yoshi's Island rewritten when I offered it to him.
I downloaded Jim Power: The Lost Dimension of 3D yesterday. I still am playng Pokemon Pearl, but I decided to give this game a try as well since it just occurred to me to do so. When I got started playing it, I tried to see which button-equivalent keys do what, and I found out that pressing the "A Button"/F-key uses a Super Bomb. That's something that I either missed or never bothered to use when Brian borrowed a cartridge copy from Craig so many years ago. Also, during my first try, I noticed that I seemed to have infinite lives and superbombs when I should've already been at the continue screen. ??? At first, I've been wondering why I've been getting so many files of the same game upon extracting each ROM. There were five ROM files when I downloaded Mahou Poipoi Poitto, and the same was true with Neon Genesis Evangelion and Getter Love!! I did copy all the files onto my Nintendo ROM disk, and didn't know why so many files, but it now turns out that each of the files contains the same game, but slightly different game data from one another. I even tried opening one that turns out not to work, but I did find a file with the proper game data, which makes sure that when you die, you lose one life.
Mom made brownies last night. We weren't supposed to have any because they were for Scott's party, which we aren't going to attend. Mom did serve us some cream puffs with hot chocolate sauce while we were watching this DVD called Montery Pop.
And speaking of Montery Pop, I didn't watch as much of it as Brian and Marie did. It's not really a movie, just a series of videos of concerts from the 60's, a time when there were no music magazines (such as RollingStone) or channels such as MTV and VH1. Brian had been listening to the same songs, such as All the Leaves are Brown (by The Mamas & The Papas) by playing them on his computer, whether he was actually on the computer or doing other stuff within our house.
I was still sleeping while Dad and Brian were getting ready to drive up to Ithaca. Brian did say goodbye to me moments before I woke up, and I returned the goodbye.
I downloaded Jim Power: The Lost Dimension of 3D yesterday. I still am playng Pokemon Pearl, but I decided to give this game a try as well since it just occurred to me to do so. When I got started playing it, I tried to see which button-equivalent keys do what, and I found out that pressing the "A Button"/F-key uses a Super Bomb. That's something that I either missed or never bothered to use when Brian borrowed a cartridge copy from Craig so many years ago. Also, during my first try, I noticed that I seemed to have infinite lives and superbombs when I should've already been at the continue screen. ??? At first, I've been wondering why I've been getting so many files of the same game upon extracting each ROM. There were five ROM files when I downloaded Mahou Poipoi Poitto, and the same was true with Neon Genesis Evangelion and Getter Love!! I did copy all the files onto my Nintendo ROM disk, and didn't know why so many files, but it now turns out that each of the files contains the same game, but slightly different game data from one another. I even tried opening one that turns out not to work, but I did find a file with the proper game data, which makes sure that when you die, you lose one life.
Mom made brownies last night. We weren't supposed to have any because they were for Scott's party, which we aren't going to attend. Mom did serve us some cream puffs with hot chocolate sauce while we were watching this DVD called Montery Pop.
And speaking of Montery Pop, I didn't watch as much of it as Brian and Marie did. It's not really a movie, just a series of videos of concerts from the 60's, a time when there were no music magazines (such as RollingStone) or channels such as MTV and VH1. Brian had been listening to the same songs, such as All the Leaves are Brown (by The Mamas & The Papas) by playing them on his computer, whether he was actually on the computer or doing other stuff within our house.
I was still sleeping while Dad and Brian were getting ready to drive up to Ithaca. Brian did say goodbye to me moments before I woke up, and I returned the goodbye.