Jump to content

JB0

Members
  • Posts

    13136
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by JB0

  1. And yet when Cartoon Network was running Robotech, they opted to omit Mospeada instead of Southern Cross. Did we ever find out why?
  2. See, DLSS bugs me because it is a feature created to justify otherwise-useless silicon. Most people don't need hardware-accelerated AI, but nVidia wants to sell the same chip to AI researchers and game players(albeit at very diffrent prices). So nVidia had to create a graphics feature that would run on AI hardware accelerators, and chose fuzzy logic anti-aliasing.
  3. Both had prototypes created. I think the editorial decision was Unicron was too expensive and Arcee had cooties.
  4. I suspected there was something wrong with the arms, but wasn't sure what. That'd do it.
  5. They're upside-down and backwards is what's up. Left hand on right arm and vice-versa, then flipped so they open the right way around.
  6. But at least after a decade and twenty pages of posts, we can conclusively answer the thread's original question. "No Love for Southern Cross?" There's definitely some love. Not much, but it clearly exists.
  7. Turns out Steeljaw is the cybertronian equivalent of Spot or Rover, and is just the generic dog name for the uninspired pet owner.
  8. That's just silly. A time-travelling Porthos was Scotty's doing, not Archer's.
  9. Or Commander Riker's holodeck adventure... No, I'm not still mad about how Enterprise ended. What makes you think that?
  10. I can just hear KITT when I look at this.
  11. Yay! More comedy goldmines! Though this article seems to think that people enjoy this as something other than unintentional parody. Which is odd, since it is terrible.
  12. Holy cow. Rest in peace, mister Boseman.
  13. So... I actually put in an online order for the new Sky Lynx. And while waiting for someone to ship it, I actually found one in stores. I was stunned, I have literally never seen anything in this size bracket show up on retail shelves in any store in my area, when they stock anything at all. Last I was through, they didn't even have a space on the shelf FOR this bracket. Once I recovered from my confusion and disbelief, I realized I could cancel my online preorder and actually buy Sky Lynx off the shelf like a normal person(for definitions of normal that include thirty-something men buying children's toys). It was a good day for the local Target, as in addition to one Sky Lynx, they also had a bunch of Earthrise Starscreams snuggled in with the lone Grapple and pile of Astrotrains. The leftover Siege stuff was only about two thirds of their stock instead of 90%. I'm actually impressed with the amount of articulation Hasbro and TakaraTomy packed into this Sky Lynx. I expected no side-to-side joints in the neck and got two. But boy do I wish Sky's tail had even one side-to-side hinge in it. In some respects Sky Lynx is objectively better than Magna Inventa. The legs on Sky are much larger and thoroughly ratcheted. The armature that lets you raise the wing forward and up from its shuttle location is a very nice touch(Magna avoids the weird-looking wings by flipping them 180 and then folding out HUGE blue panels... devoid of any molded detail). And I adore the full-length cargo bay doors(which aren't really possible on Magna Inventa since part of the shuttle body folds away during transformation, allowing a larger neck). Hasbro's tolerances have let me down, though. Sky Lynx has a few joints that just can't hold their weight, and one's in a wing armature. But all his ratchets are nice and firm, and every joint of the Lynx legs is ratcheted. (No CW collapsing under his own weight nonsense) Scale-wise, Earthrise Sky Lynx looks like Magna Inventa's kid brother. And this thought makes me smile.
  14. With dark magics, gumption, and sheer dedication to wisecracking.
  15. Slammer is better known by the name "tiny white tank that came with Metroplex". Wingfinger is probably an error. Wingthing was Soundwave's Action Master partner. Neither character, for lack of a better word, is particularly high-profile.
  16. I was using a third-party s-video cable on my PS1, and it had a composite connector dangling off to tap. Never had a GunCon2 game. As promised, orange GunCon. I remembered wrong my Point Blank 3 box has a (very faded) "not for Commiefornia" sticker. You can tell from the screwholes and the chipped paint on the trigger that they spraypainted a regular GunCon to make it orange(but it was like this fresh out of the shrinkwrap).
  17. I will try to remember to fish mine out and take pics. (Fair warning: it is ugly.)
  18. I really liked that Devastator's face looked kinda like a Sinistar. Beyond that, I felt "angry giant robot bulldog" was a waste of a character(though it can be sung to the Ninja Turtles opening). But really, most of the Bayformers were a waste of a character.
  19. "NOT FOR SALE IN CALIFORNIA!" I love that sticker, it just seems so random. (Apparently, the GunCon tripped over some changes to the toy gun laws in that state. My copy's one of the later issues, and came with the GunCon painted solid orange and no "Too hot for California" sticker.)
  20. The Guncon 3 did it. PS Aim does it today. There's problems with mounting the sensor(Aim) or emitter(GunCon/Wii) properly, and subsequent calibration(particularly if the player is moving around). The frame inlay is meant to avoid the necessity of added devices and calibration. The shape and size of the frame in the device's view give it all the information it needs to calculate precisely where on the screen it is pointing, creating a "plug and play" interface. External sensors or emitters don't do that unless they are appreciably more complex. (Speaking of complexty, the GunCon 3 used two separate emitters mounted on opposing corners of the screen, and that would give screen-accuracy if they were mounted properly. My impression is they often weren't. And they were ugly by necessity, lending them a low wife-acceptance factor.)
  21. Licensed the Sinden Lightgun... which uses a digital camera and image recognition software. Smart design. I hadn't heard of this before, and I'd kinda like to get a Sinden now. And I DO give Polymega credit for actually licensing things instead of just stealing it and letting the community scream into the void. It doesn't fully make up for the "hybrid emulation" nonsense they were spouting during their original panhandling campaign, but it does mitigate things a lot. I'm also giving them credit for putting a low-end x86 in there instead of an ARM, it gives them the horsepower needed for more thorough emulation and avoids any unfortunate performance issues(particularly with more complex systems). *grumpy old man rant here* I'm just sayin'... this is mostly a case of polish and presentation, not anything revolutionary. I find the asking price rather steep for what it is, particularly the "system modules", which are all "a cartridge slot, a couple controller ports, and some caps and resistors". They looked at the Retron 5 and (especially) RetroFreak and said "We could sell this for TWICE what they're asking, but strip all the cartridge slots out and then charge people an entire system's cost for each cartridge slot." (If they tell me they never saw the RetroFreak before they launched their Kickstarter campaign, I will call them liars to their face.) ... And I'm still baffled by the use of Kega Fusion on a Linux-based system in 2020. *end grumpy old man rant* There is a non-zero chance I will buy some of their controllers. If they're decent quality and actually work with the original hardware, they're very tempting. (Still overpriced, but ... what controller ISN'T?)
  22. Pr'ly not, but I never said the guys in charge of Trek were in touch with current trends.
  23. Arcee's finally unlocked her GERWALK mode!
  24. Tube amps provide a warmer and more satisfying converging-energy cannon blast.
×
×
  • Create New...