(no subject)
Apr. 7th, 2010 07:13 amForgot to mention that I noticed someone's name "Mabel Katz" while looking around online two nights ago. A coincidence, since we own a cat whom we named Mabel.
http://hoopono.blogspot.com/2007/11/is-zero-limits-cult.html
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Anyway, I should mention that what I intend to bring up with Dr. Perret has a lot more to do than with that whole SwordQuest issue. In fact, most of it has to do with this blog and my own life in general. But, just yesterday, I got an idea on how I might go on about starting it over.
Well, for the record, I am planning on naming my future company Retro Savior. Retro, as in old video games, and Savior, as in saving said games from forgottenhood. If it's successful enough, then I might seek the rights to reproduce the game series, and start the whole thing over, what with the club, the t-shirts, etc. Instead of having whoever wrote the DC comic books write the remaining ones, I might hire someone to instead write a four-volume manga from scratch to correspond to each game. And, most importantly, I might hire someone to craft a new set of (the same) artifacts. (Atari's emblem appearing on the sword's hilt very much proves that said sword was put together by someone or some company living at the time, not actually preserved since the Middle Ages.)
Well, enabling something like that to happen through Retro Savior means that I'm gonna have to make it all a big-time exception to the rule. If it goes through, then the SwordQuest series will be:
1) the only American games,
2) the only games on a 2nd-generation console,
3) the only games on an Atari console to be re-released by Retro Savior,
4) the only manga series to be written from scratch by the company,
5) and AirWorld will be the only game made from scratch.
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Yesterday, shortly after Mom came home, she had me take the paper and cardboard to the road. I noticed a rather large, black, fuzzy caterpiller under one of the boxes, and showed it to her, she she had me put it in a tupperware with some grass and leaves to show Dad later on.
After I got finished, we then went on another walk at Cathedral Pines. While we were there, we noticed a gravestone belonging to someone named Joseph J. Masem. The inscription said that he was the one responsible for founding Cathedral Pines as a national park, and we could already tell that he was the one whom Masem Court was named after.
http://hoopono.blogspot.com/2007/11/is-zero-limits-cult.html
-----
Anyway, I should mention that what I intend to bring up with Dr. Perret has a lot more to do than with that whole SwordQuest issue. In fact, most of it has to do with this blog and my own life in general. But, just yesterday, I got an idea on how I might go on about starting it over.
Well, for the record, I am planning on naming my future company Retro Savior. Retro, as in old video games, and Savior, as in saving said games from forgottenhood. If it's successful enough, then I might seek the rights to reproduce the game series, and start the whole thing over, what with the club, the t-shirts, etc. Instead of having whoever wrote the DC comic books write the remaining ones, I might hire someone to instead write a four-volume manga from scratch to correspond to each game. And, most importantly, I might hire someone to craft a new set of (the same) artifacts. (Atari's emblem appearing on the sword's hilt very much proves that said sword was put together by someone or some company living at the time, not actually preserved since the Middle Ages.)
Well, enabling something like that to happen through Retro Savior means that I'm gonna have to make it all a big-time exception to the rule. If it goes through, then the SwordQuest series will be:
1) the only American games,
2) the only games on a 2nd-generation console,
3) the only games on an Atari console to be re-released by Retro Savior,
4) the only manga series to be written from scratch by the company,
5) and AirWorld will be the only game made from scratch.
-----
Yesterday, shortly after Mom came home, she had me take the paper and cardboard to the road. I noticed a rather large, black, fuzzy caterpiller under one of the boxes, and showed it to her, she she had me put it in a tupperware with some grass and leaves to show Dad later on.
After I got finished, we then went on another walk at Cathedral Pines. While we were there, we noticed a gravestone belonging to someone named Joseph J. Masem. The inscription said that he was the one responsible for founding Cathedral Pines as a national park, and we could already tell that he was the one whom Masem Court was named after.