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Xenocide

Posted: Thu Oct 31, 2002 10:02 pm
by Ben
Image

How you like me now?

Posted: Fri Nov 01, 2002 1:09 am
by laura(from michigan)
:: How you like me now?

Sorry ben, I dont know why you think your galaga score would make us like you any better. I think your going through a lot of different methods to try to make people like you better, when in fact you seemed pretty likeable all along, without all this video game stuff, and whatever.

Maybe you just need to relax??

Posted: Fri Nov 01, 2002 3:06 am
by Ben
It's a figure of speech. Maybe they don't have those in Michigan.

Wait a minute, who the hell is "Laura (From Michigan)"? I'm talking to cartoon characters again. Wrong base, bitch.

Posted: Fri Nov 01, 2002 3:08 am
by Ice Cream Jonsey
The possibility of an unregistered female AUTOMATICALLY means "fake cartoon character" to you, now, doesn't it Ben?


Did you ever think for a second that maybe she is my guhrl and that I am SNOGGING 'ER?

Posted: Fri Nov 01, 2002 3:21 am
by Ben
Good point, Jones.

Sorry, laura, my deepest condolences.

How you like me NOW!??

Posted: Fri Nov 01, 2002 4:32 am
by Ice Cream Jonsey
No, you were right the first time.


Also, that is the first time in 14 years of my using this handle that someone has called has called me "Jones."

Posted: Fri Nov 01, 2002 11:44 pm
by Ben
By the way, who's with me that Galaga has possibly the best music ever to come out of the "golden age" of arcade games? To wit:

1. The "Perfect!" tune (as Bruce can attest to) is monumentally satisfying.

2. The "Fighter Captured" music is *incredibly* complex, and made only more impressive by the fact that the "Fighter Recovered" music is exactly the same, except redone in a major, vs. minor key. The minor version is tense (reflecting the state of mind of a space army that just got a fighter captured), and the major version is triumphant. In fact, I had a guy ask me about what the difference was between a major and a minor chord, or key. I think Galaga is a nearly perfect example about how those two concepts affect music, and the person listening to them.

This from a fucking WUMPUS game, fer chrissakes.

Posted: Sat Nov 02, 2002 1:04 am
by bruce
Ben wrote:By the way, who's with me that Galaga has possibly the best music ever to come out of the "golden age" of arcade games?
I gotta go with the electro-pop stereo version of Tocatta and Fugue in D Minor that fuels <i>Gyruss</i> (with that booming bass track, too....OH yeah), but I'll give Galaga second place.
Ben wrote: To wit:

1. The "Perfect!" tune (as Bruce can attest to) is monumentally satisfying.

2. The "Fighter Captured" music is *incredibly* complex, and made only more impressive by the fact that the "Fighter Recovered" music is exactly the same, except redone in a major, vs. minor key. The minor version is tense (reflecting the state of mind of a space army that just got a fighter captured), and the major version is triumphant. In fact, I had a guy ask me about what the difference was between a major and a minor chord, or key. I think Galaga is a nearly perfect example about how those two concepts affect music, and the person listening to them.

This from a fucking WUMPUS game, fer chrissakes.
#1 is certainly true. I can't make my head play the fighter captured music, so.....

God damn, you're right. That's really cool.

Bruce

Posted: Sat Nov 02, 2002 7:26 pm
by Lex
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:No, you were right the first time.
Yes.
Also, that is the first time in 14 years of my using this handle that someone has called has called me "Jones."
Do you like? Does it make you feel more grown up? Do you want more of it? Go ahead, the first few are free.

Posted: Sat Nov 02, 2002 11:28 pm
by AArdvark
The best music from an arcade game was "Reactor" with its bass thumping, fuzz guitar effect. I liked Gyruss and the Bach thing, but I would stand there and keep rolling the trackball just to make the music play even wen I wasn't feeding it quay-monsters.



THE
CHEAP
BOOM BOX
AARDVARK

Posted: Sun Nov 03, 2002 7:41 pm
by Lex
You are all too old to have been "there" when it was fresh, but the music for the Amiga space-simulation Awesome was, well... Awesome. Seriously. There was also a side-scrolling shooter on that platform called "Pegasus" which I only had the demo of, Christ, I've never had a game that I could just pause and rock out to since then. Remembering those images makes me tingle - you know how things don't look quite the same when you're a kid. Maybe because your brain hasn't finished re-wiring itself into adulthood yet, but that was adtounding. There was some real deep shit on that platform, and the music was absolutly incredible. I remember recently playing the PC version of the Bitmap Brothers classic "Gods", and being seriously dissapointed at the terrible music quality when compared to the ("Real Human Speach!") "Into... the Wonderful." of the Amiga. Likewise for that wonderful intro music from Magic Pockets; the Amiga version of any classic will always shine besides its bastard brothers.
Oh christ, I really miss my Amiga.

Posted: Mon Nov 04, 2002 1:09 am
by Ice Cream Jonsey
Did anyone see my bottle of Geritol? Anyone? You DAMN KIDS.

Posted: Mon Nov 04, 2002 2:20 am
by Ben
Are you "feeling me"?

Image

Posted: Mon Nov 04, 2002 2:46 am
by Ice Cream Jonsey
The "old video game font" is possibly the greatest font ever created.