Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Author: Scott (Page 58 of 104)

Day 170: shanghai east and funktastic gameplays

Two good things happened today:

Thing the first – a co-worker of mine introduced me to a small restaurant that I would have never seen or eaten at in San Mateo called Shanghai East.  It was a completely affordable and delicious lunch and someplace I’d like to visit again.

I’m not an expert on Chinese food in the area, and it’s always nice to find new places to get some Chinese food, especially if they have some Shanghainese menu options not available everywhere.

There’s a dim sum place within walking distance of our house, but we only go there occasionally because it’s often packed during weekends.

Thing the second – a different co-worker pointed me to the EarthBound Funktastic Gameplay, which is an event that happens yearly among the EarthBound fan community and started this evening.  During the 24-day “camp,” everyone in the community plays EarthBound (often for the nth time) while sharing their experiences, joys, and sorrows with others online.

It’s a great idea because it means that many people will be in the same rough place in a particular video game that you’re all collectively playing on your own.  There isn’t too much communal discussion about video games whilst in the middle of them.  Most discussion comes after you’ve finished the game or after different amounts of time with the game.

The EBFGP is not only a great way for fans to share something they love, but to go through a shared experience that is the closest a non-MMO game can come to all being in the same places doing the same things.

It echoes an idea I’ve tossed around my head for a while, which is having a “game club” that’s similar to a book club.  We’d all decide on a game to play, all play overnight to the same rough plot points, then meet up and discuss our thoughts on the game: where it was designed well/poorly, what we thought of the plot and characters, and where we’d like to see it go or what we expected in our next sessions.  It’d be a fun shared experience, as well as a learning opportunity as game designers.  The difficulty is finding a game that’s easily accessible to all of us and being able to divide such a game into appropriate chunks over a week or month.

Still, I think it has promise.

Day 169: computer elbow

Since I’ve moved out here to California and started working at EA, I’ve found that I have developed a much more severe case of computer elbow. I wonder if other people who spend most of their day in front of a computer experience this as well, or if I somehow sit and rest my elbows in a particular way.

I know that some of my co-workers have computer elbow. It’s a combination of a dryness of the skin at the elbow and a slight soreness at the elbow near the end of the day. There’s no actual pain and I’m fairly certain that I’m not doing any permanent damage to any of my muscles, but there are definitely days where I feel worse computer elbow at the end of the day than others, and they’re usually the days I spend longer hours sitting in front of that infernal machine that rules our lives nowadays.

Do other people get computer elbow? It may have to do with sitting at a flat surface and resting your elbows on it for extended periods of time, so marathon letter writers may also get it, making it less computer elbow and more like desk elbow.

Oh, and I really only get it on my right elbow. There goes my bowling and arm wrestling career.

Day 168: winner winner chicken dinner

About a month ago, Katie and I participated in a joint Google/Virgin Airlines contest of skill called Day in the Cloud.

Well, guess what? Katie won it. I’m writing this on the brand new free netbook that arrived in the mail today, along with a bunch of Virgin airline ticket vouchers and a stylish laptop bag (which is way too big for a netbook, but perfect for Katie’s Macbook).

Don’t go up against the Dai family when it comes to an online puzzlestorm. You will go down.

Go us! We’re awesome! This netbook is almost comically small, but very cute. It’s like those miniature horses – not terribly practical, but awesome if you got one for free!

Day 167: prelude to a rooster hat

I preordered a game this morning online for the first time in a very long time (maybe ever?  I’ve been trying to comb my memory for another preorder, but can’t come up with anything immediately) because I wanted a hat that made me look like a rooster.

Sigh.  What’s to become of me?

I’ve been making turkey sandwiches for lunch for me and Katie the past couple of days, and I have to say that it’s been giving me a great feeling of satisfaction.  Certainly, the satisfaction seems disproportionate to the amount of work I actually do in the morning to make the sandwiches.

It also saves a small amount of money each day on lunch, which I can then use to buy things like games that come with rooster hats.

I was looking for something clever to write about Courage Wolf here, because he always cheers me up when I’m uncertain or unsure about something (like the awesomeness of free rooster hats), but in searching for a good Courage Wolf, I found a site called knowyourmeme.com, which is…well…a little too meta-Internet for me.

Courage-Wolf-get-ahead-of-yourself-and-stay-there

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