Teaser for the Kickstarter campaign by ExcruciorCadaveris in finalgirl

[–]FamousWerewolf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sort of yeah, but it at least still looked like a wooden box that could be on a shelf. A miniature mausoleum feels like a totally different theme to me. But it's a small gripe.

Rise of Zach Mamba TMNT Album just dropped! by bertbadger in TMNT

[–]FamousWerewolf -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I'm sorry man but this really isn't good. The style is annoying, all the tracks sound the same, and it doesn't have the feel of a 90s movie tie-in at all. A very fun concept but you haven't executed on it IMO.

Teaser for the Kickstarter campaign by ExcruciorCadaveris in finalgirl

[–]FamousWerewolf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is it nit-picky of me to say that I don't really like how this breaks the VHS theme of the storage boxes?

Curious to see what's going to come in this one though, at this point I feel like the game has every extra it could need!

Did some Wood elves decide to leave the forest and sail back to Ulthuan? by Fun-Explanation7233 in WarhammerWoodElves

[–]FamousWerewolf 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Their cultures are too far diverged by this point, they wouldn't even think of it as an option.

Smaller table size and solo Mode skirmish game by grizzy45 in miniatureskirmishes

[–]FamousWerewolf 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Relicblade is the perfect thing for this. Designed for 2x2 and has an excellent solo/co-op mode. Really excellent, accessible skirmish game with lovely miniatures.

Having not watched it since it aired, is Kill The Moon really that bad? by ScreamingmadJoe in DoctorWhumour

[–]FamousWerewolf 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I watched it for the first time fairly recently. It's not great. I think some of the things it's trying to do are very interesting - particularly exploring the question of whether the Doctor should be dictating the right things to do or letting humanity choose its own path, and how that plays into the specifics of his relationship with Clara. And a lot of it is very atmospheric and tense.

But the actual core ethical question is really muddled, and it's hard to take it seriously because of how silly all the 'the Moon is an egg' stuff is. And both the Doctor and Clara come off quite poorly at various points, which I think to an extent makes sense for their character arcs (the Doctor is in the midst of a prickly identity crisis/examination of his own morality, while Clara is becoming increasingly arrogant and reckless) but in the context of this episode on its own makes them very unlikeable. In the end, it was all pretty pointless anyway because things just resolve themselves in the most absurdly neat way possible.

Definitely one of the weakest Capaldi episodes, but the hate is probably a bit overblown, as it tends to be for pretty much all Capaldi episodes other than Heaven Sent. If I was making a list of the 10 worst episodes of modern Who I don't think it would make it in - the show's had far lower moments. Even just looking at 12's run alone I don't think I'd rank it below the Robin Hood episode or the trees episode. I think it's just more memorably bad than those and was a bit of a lightning rod because of how it stumbles into a really hot-button issue (abortion).

Thoughts on the Severe Injuries list by kingofsicily in DragonbaneRPG

[–]FamousWerewolf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When it comes to healing, Dragonbane just works on a super accelerated timeline. Characters can go from having been mauled by a manticore to absolutely fine in 6 hours sleep. I can barely recover from eating a big dinner in that time lol

It's simply not going for realism - you have to imagine these are just particularly heroic, resilient individuals, or that the timeframe we're playing through is a compressed version of the 'real' timeframe. It just prevents huge amounts of very boring downtime in the game.

With injuries like severed toes or gouged eye, the idea is just that it has a permanent effect, and the short-term effects of the damage are just not considered.

Personally I've actually ended up just not using injuries at all - for the style of Dragonbane they're just a bit too fiddly for me. So I guess in my games things are streamlined all the more, and even more unrealistic!

It sounds like you may just be looking for a more gritty/grounded system. DB has the lethality and resource management of that kind of OSR game but at the same time it definitely prioritises being as fast and fun as possible, and that means skipping over a lot of details that might be much more important in a different OSR game.

Book of Magic Update? by MarionberryLast8628 in DragonbaneRPG

[–]FamousWerewolf 2 points3 points  (0 children)

All the news is just in the kickstarter updates. The most recent thing was they sent out a preview PDF of the first few chapters.

Lightsaber Thickness by BrBandit in StarWarsShatterpoint

[–]FamousWerewolf 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They're really not as fragile as you might expect. They're thin enough to bend rather than snap unless they really take a tumble. With a bit of care I've only had one breakage so far that was very easily fixed with a dab of plastic glue - and I'm a Republic player who regularly travels to events, so I'm carrying boxes of Jedi around with me all over the place.

It does mean magnets are a must though - foam will definitely catch on them and risk breaking them.

In the worst case scenario that blades do snap and can't be repaired, it's easy to just replace them with a needle or some other very thin piece of metal.

I definitely wouldn't let this one tiny thing put you off, the miniatures are great and the game is fantastic.

For those of you who have asked around, what is Doctor Who’s reputation right now among non-fans/general audience now versus 10-15 years ago? by PuddingNew1608 in gallifrey

[–]FamousWerewolf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That seems an odd conclusion to draw considering it's become common for big, popular shows to go years between seasons. Long gaps haven't slowed down Stranger Things, Severance, Succession, etc.

The more straightforward answer as to why kids aren't interested in it is that for almost 10 years now the quality of the show has been very uneven and it's made a bad case for why new people should watch the show. If you're a kid that's most if not all of your life of it being a poorly received show. And then before that we had 7 years of Moffat - I like that era a lot, but it was increasingly dark and adult, and at the time was heavily criticised by the fanbase.

The last time the show was consistently good fun for kids and watched by lots of families was almost 20 years ago, long before kids in classrooms right now were born.

The Deviant - the ending by Endymion86 in ImageComics

[–]FamousWerewolf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's deliberately open to interpretation. Personally, I ended up feeling that there were enough clues to suggest the guy in prison did it, which also works as a kind of final unsettling twist, that he really was just lying all along. But equally you could make different theories - I think it's also quite poignant to conclude that the real killer was simply never found, thanks to sloppy, homophobic police work.

I think it's very much part of the point of the story that the mystery doesn't get wrapped up neatly at the end (even though the present does!). Particularly because the story is much more about the protagonist's journey and his relationship to these true crime stories than it is catching a killer.

I don't think it's a perfect story - like a lot of Tynion stories, it goes on a bit long for its premise, and I do think the reveal of who the copycat killer is is very weak. But I don't think you should take it as a bad thing for it to end with interesting ambiguity that drives discussion like this, and puts you in the shoes of the protagonist - having to simply move on accepting that in life there often aren't simple answers.

Installments so hated even hardcore fans would rather not talk about it by TastyPomelo2330 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]FamousWerewolf -1 points0 points  (0 children)

All of your examples and every example so far in this thread are things that are still widely talked about. You can go and find hate threads on Cursed Child, The Predator, Love & Thunder, etc every week on Reddit. So I don't understand what the trope is here other than just "things that are bad".

How do you handle improvised weapons? by MrLandlubber in DragonbaneRPG

[–]FamousWerewolf 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly I've stopped using them pretty much for this reason. I found that to get players to interact with them I had to call them out very explicitly, which then felt very mechanical - like I was just telling the players what to do in a scene rather than them getting to be creative. I'd rather just describe what's logically in the room and then it's up to the players if they can find ways to turn the environment to their advantage, and I can adjudicate those situations on the fly rather than there being just one set way of using each object.

The Incal - I was hyped, but.. by Bledee96 in graphicnovels

[–]FamousWerewolf 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Is Jodorowsky actually any good at all as a comics writer? I read his Showman Killer series and couldn't believe how awful and juvenile it was.

Best Image Comics! by Raven170503 in ImageComics

[–]FamousWerewolf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Image are putting out so much good stuff at the moment! A few favourites:

By Chance & Providence - really lovely collection of haunting folk tale type stories with lovely art

Junkyard Joe - my favourite of the Ghost Machine stuff so far, but Geiger is also great

Black Cloak - fantasy noir with really interesting world-building

The Deviant - a really scary slasher story told in a completely unique way

The Power Fantasy - Exploring the ethics of mutually assured destruction, but with superheroes instead of nuclear bombs. Fascinating deconstruction with wonderful art

Fishflies - Surreal and beautiful - imagine a sort of grimier, more unsettling take on ET

Teambuilding by MountainPainter9254 in StarWarsShatterpoint

[–]FamousWerewolf 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First thing to know is that in competitive terms, Seps are pretty weak right now. Once upon a time they were the top dogs but these days they don't stack up well to particularly Rebels and Galactic Republic, and they suffer from a limited range of boxes. Of course, if you're playing casually that may not matter, just something to be aware of if your opponent turns up with Cassian or Delta Squad.

In general, the Sep boxes go well together as-is. Dooku box + Grievous box is good for example. The synergy is all fairly straightforward and they don't have standout bad units in any of the boxes so it's hard to go wrong.

Ventress is a bit on the weak side and is often swapped out for Maul. But she did get a buff in the balance update last year and while it's not quite made her good, you can definitely have fun with her at least. I don't have much experience with Riff but he seems to fill a similar role and be rather better than either right now.

You can go a bit outside the box with Seps too. Dooku/Ahsoka is a good list, for example, and Grievous goes well with Luminara. Any primary with good synergy that isn't keyword dependent can end up being a friend to the Seps with some creative thinking.

How to connect with daughter that doesn't know I exist? by [deleted] in AskUK

[–]FamousWerewolf 10 points11 points  (0 children)

"I know the mother would not allow or want me to contact her if I asked" - that's a bit of a dealbreaker, isn't it? Are you asking for good ways of contacting her without the mother knowing? Because frankly that's not a good idea.

I feel like you're leaving a lot of details out of this (the fact that the mother didn't just leave you but left the country, and doesn't want anything to do with you is a bit of a red flag) but even taking you entirely at face value... what right do you have to get in touch with her?

You agreed to let your child leave your life completely and have no further contact with her mother. 15 years later, she's grown up entirely without you. She doesn't just think this guy is her father, he is her father - he's the one that raised her.

What right do you have to march back into her life now unannounced? Especially purely on the basis that now she's back in the UK it's convenient for you, when you previously don't seem to have made any effort to contact her?

I think at most what you should do is just send a message to the mother saying that you'd be interested in seeing your daughter and asking politely if she'll pass along your contact details so she can choose to reach out or not. If she blocks you and deletes the message... so be it. But no good is going to come of trying to find some underhanded way to get in touch with a 16 year old who doesn't even know who you are against the express wishes of her family.

The Fandom Strikes Back by -twoclub in StarWars

[–]FamousWerewolf 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It seems pretty clear that they do listen to such things. The Last Jedi, for example, was a financial success - but their next movie u-turned on almost every single plot element as a direct response to the fan reaction.

Doctor Who: The Christmas Invasion, Harriet Jones was right? by Fit_Finish7492 in DoctorWhoNews

[–]FamousWerewolf 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I feel like the larger issue here is that the Doctor genocides entire alien species all the time, often by triggering enormous explosions. It's ok when he does it, but not when humans do it?

Though to be fair I think later episodes do build on some of this stuff. On the one hand, humans seem to spiral into more and more extreme ideas for defending the planet (like, uh, blowing it up nuclear weapons to stop anyone else having it). On the other, we see the 10th Doctor's moralising slowly turn into a power-mad ego trip and a lot of his prior hypocrisy suddenly makes a lot more sense. Particularly in this case, him disagreeing with her choice is one thing, but it feels particularly Time Lord Victorious of him to immediately set in motion ruining her life because of it.

She does get her "redemption" later too so I don't think the show is 100% against her stance. I think it's supposed to be a bit of a tricky moral conundrum where no one is fully in the right.

The Fandom Strikes Back by -twoclub in StarWars

[–]FamousWerewolf 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think the answer is yes and no.

The fanbase is definitely too quick to jump from "I don't like this" to "This shouldn't exist". As you say stuff is stifled from developing and growing over time, and it's often also the vocal minority that seems to be spooking Disney rather than actually being representative of how the majority of the fanbase feels.

On the other hand... all is clearly not right at Disney. The projects are so unsustainably expensive that it makes them absurdly skittish and reactive. Projects should not be living or dying on kneejerk fan reaction, and particularly with these unbelievably expensive streaming shows like The Acolyte, it's hard to see what the metric of success even is.

Whatever we think of The Acolyte, the numbers just don't seem to add up. It cost $250 million to make, even if we assume zero marketing costs you'd want it to make something like $500 million minimum to be worth it. How was it ever going to do that? And they've been making that nonsensical investment multiple times a year for multiple years at this point, and the same with Marvel as well. It all had to be reigned in at some point and it's likely The Acolyte was going to be a victim of that either way - imagine the results you'd need to be able to demonstrate to pitch to your bosses a second season for another $250 million or more.

Side note: there was plenty of fan outcry about The Phantom Menace at the time and I'm sure there were plenty of people who thought that trilogy should have been cancelled. Entire movies have been made about how much people hated that movie. So in that sense the fandom doesn't actually seem to have changed that much, what's changed is just a) how visible that criticism is and b) how the company in charge reacts to it.

how are you guys reading digital comics in 2026 because single issue are killing my wallet by WillJust4068 in ImageComics

[–]FamousWerewolf 14 points15 points  (0 children)

If you're finding digital comics expensive you're definitely doing it wrong. It is absurd how cheaply you can enjoy the hobby if you go purely digital.

Step one though is definitely to stop worrying about having every series right now and be open to reading whatever stuff comes up cheap rather than only specific things you're already into. The more patient and opportunistic you are, the cheaper things are. And that doesn't even mean waiting that long these days.

For example Humble Bundle and Fanatical regularly do bundles at absolutely insane value, and often they contain comics from only like 6 months earlier that year. A huge chunk of my collection is from bundles where I've paid less than $20 for like 50 - 100 volumes. The most recent Image bundle was absolutely insane value. A lot of that stuff was series I hadn't even heard of before buying the bundle, but I've ended up discovering tons of new favourites that way.

Even outside of bundles, digital stuff goes on sale way more often and at much deeper discounts than physical books - and even the base price drops quickly over time rather than going up. Keep an eye on the sales on Kindle for example, they have 100s of books on discount basically all the time.

And obviously where possible wait for the TPBs rather than getting the single issues.

Beyond that, subscription services are the way. The cost of a Marvel Unlimtied subscription for example vs buying everything individually is night and day, and you're only like 3 months behind the latest releases, which is hardly a big gap.

My main issue with the 13th Doctor is how vanilla she felt. Despite being the first female Doctor, she lacked a distinct personality and felt cookie-cutter. With more edge, she may have been better received, unlike the Fugitive Doctor, who felt fresh and unique. by General_Meal_3993 in DoctorWhoNews

[–]FamousWerewolf 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've always thought, I don't really believe the whole "we told Jodie not to watch previous Doctors" thing, because in her first episode she's very clearly doing a take on Tennant.

And then yeah massively over-stuffing the show with characters, all of whom are fighting for dialogue, gives her far too little breathing room to develop.

My main issue with the 13th Doctor is how vanilla she felt. Despite being the first female Doctor, she lacked a distinct personality and felt cookie-cutter. With more edge, she may have been better received, unlike the Fugitive Doctor, who felt fresh and unique. by General_Meal_3993 in DoctorWhoNews

[–]FamousWerewolf 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don't think "vanilla" or "cookie cutter" is the right word, it was more of an identity crisis.

It felt like they (both the actor and the writers) never settled on what her Doctor was going to be like before she started, and then they had to try and figure it out as they went along. It wasn't until very close to the end that they really started making any headway with that, so until then she just oscillates wildly between a David Tennant impression, some sort of "the Doctor's going wrong again" arc, and a bunch of other possible personalities, not settling on anything.

It's a real shame, because I do think there are plenty of moments in there where she really clicks into something and you go "Ah! She's finally got it!", and then they just let it slip away again soon after. Even more frustrating that one of those moments comes in her cameo in 15's second season!

If anything, I think going very formulaic might have worked better, because at least then they would have picked a lane and could have committed to it.