11.18.2008

'I'm not dead yet'

Despite my eulogy for the game last week, it seems that HeroClix is not dead yet.

Catalyst Game Labs has made a bid for the game, plus several other properties that WizKids Games managed before it met its untimely demise. Also in the bidding war is Piñata Games, a newly formed company comprised of former WizKids staffers. Catalyst is familiar with certain WizKids properties, which is a plus for them; Piñata is waging a respectable grassroots campaign that many HeroClix fans are supporting.

I applaud Piñata for thinking big, but I cannot endorse the Save HeroClix campaign it's spearheading. The upstart is asking HeroClix supporters -- many of them barely old enough to carry a driver's license let alone a credit card -- to blindly donate to the cause.

Suspicious in concept and execution, the campaign makes no promises as to what exactly the money goes toward. Does it bankroll Piñata? Will it be used to buy the HeroClix franchise, in the event Piñata wins the bidding war? But what happens if Piñata loses the bidding war? Does it pay the mortgage of the guy who ran the collection effort?

While it's obvious to me that the money is lost if the startup fails, I fear too many people are donating to the cause without thinking this through. So, seriously people, engage the brain before you hit the "donate" button. If you have $10 to spare and want to sink it into Save HeroClix, fine. But if Piñata folds next month and you suddenly regret your donation, don't come crying to me. Because you're only going to get a big "I told you so."

Yeah, well, at least I don't have a mullet.



From KittyKittyBangBang

Happy Geography Awareness Week!

From Google LatLong:
For the third year in a row, Google is delighted to work with My Wonderful World, a National Geographic-led campaign to give kids the power of global knowledge, on Geography Awareness Week. Beginning today, students and teachers alike can explore a range of geo-activities using Google Earth. Working together on projects like this, that encourage people to roll up their sleeves and explore the world, is what Google's Geo Education initiative is all about.

Win holiday gifts - Elmo Live and U-Command Wall-E

KaBOOM! is giving away two of the hottest toys this holiday season on the KaBOOM! Playspace Finder Sweepstakes this week.

Miscellaneous links

Here's a random sampling of Interesting Things Found on the Internet lately...

11.17.2008

Sign win



From FailBlog

11.15.2008

How's our blogging? October 2008 edition

October 2008 stats for the Think Lynsen blog, AKA "You only love us for our images, don't you?"

Visits
Visits: 2,091
Visitors: 1,532
Pageviews: 2,923
Time on Site: 0:56

Top 5 states providing visitors:
Minnesota
Maryland
California
Wisconsin
District of Columbia

Top referrals (excluding email)
images.google.com
thinklynsen.com
Blogger
Google
images.google.ca

Top web search terms
slashdoe
think lynsen
thinklynsen.com
lynsen
thinklynsen
washington post express
go soak your head
apocalypse ponies
imageevent down
spaceballs the animated series

Top posts
Awesomeness.
In the not too distant future...
Don't walk means don't walk
DiCaprioooooooooooooo!
No business cards? No problem.

Marching for marriage

More than 5,000 people marched Saturday in Washington against the passage of Proposition 8, the California constitutional amendment that banned same-sex marriage. The protestors sought the return of marriage rights for same-sex couples.

I was at the event and took several photographs of people preparing for the rally and starting the march. You can see my shots here, including an adorable picture of two girls under a sign reading, "Let our mommies marry!"

You can read more about the march here at the Washington Blade.

Keith Olbermann on the passage of Proposition 8



Thanks to Rick Klau for pointing this out.

11.14.2008

KaBOOM! is hiring for two new online community positions

KaBOOM! is an awesome place to work! Feel free to pass along these job postings.

KaBOOM! Playspace Finder Coordinator

Do-It-Yourself Online Community Manager

Countdown to Black Friday

Have you ever journeyed forth on the madness that is Black Friday? I have. It's not pretty. As such, I almost certainly will be sleeping in Nov. 28. But if you're planning to make the rounds in two weeks, you can track the deals via these helpful resources:

Black Friday Ads, which claims to be "the official Black Friday 2008 website," is tracking weekly sales leading up to the big shopping day in addition to Black Friday news.
BlackFriday.info is the simplest site, posting scans of Black Friday materials as it gets them. But the ads, which are considered proprietary, are subject to removal at any time.
Black-Friday.net allows you to submit your e-mail address so you can be notified when ads to your favorite stores are posted. If you value convenience, this might be a good way to go.

Should you go forth: Good luck. You're gonna need it.

11.13.2008

The Best of Larry Hama? Not quite

Details of the long anticipated "G.I. Joe: The Best of Larry Hama," a forthcoming tome collecting several classic G.I. Joe tales, have finally been revealed. And unfortunately, this selection of stories falls short.

According to product details posted at Amazon.com, the hardcover volume set to publish in April 2009 includes these old-school "G.I. Joe" comics:

• Issue 21, "Silent Interlude," a visceral tale told without dialogue and often heralded as the finest G.I. Joe story ever told
• Issue 24, "The Commander Escapes," which shows just how difficult it is to keep the villainous leader under lock and key
• Issue 26, "Snake Eyes: The Origin," the first in a two-part series exploring the story behind the Joe team's most mysterious member
• Issue 34, "Shake Down," an inspired tale showing a showdown between two great pilots
• Issue 63, "Going Under," which demonstrates the lengths to which Joe team members will go to rescue one of their own
• Issue 85, "SFX," an encore of the famed silent issue that again goes quiet to tell the story of a ninja showdown
• Issue 86, "Not Fade Away," a special issue that introduces the original Joe, Joseph Colton, into the mythos
• Issue 91, "No Simple Solutions," which follows on plot themes introduced in the origin of Snake Eyes
• Issue 104, "Hero of the People," a tale showing Snake Eyes going undercover to rescue his dead sister's former fiancee
• G.I. Joe: Special Missions 17, "All In a Night's Work," where Joe team members resolve a delicate hostage situation

I wholeheartedly approve of the tome including issues 21, 26, 34 and 86. Issues 24 and 85, while well written, are not necessary for this collection. And having not seen issues 63, 104, and Special Missions issue 17, I can't vouch for them, but they have little renown and I cannot explain why they're included.

I also cannot explain why this collection does not include issue 27, the second half of the Snake Eyes origin story; any part of the monumental, four-issue Cobra civil war story; or the hard-to-find final issue. These were missed opportunities, to be sure, and the publisher's failure to include these issues will stop me from buying the book.

Although it's likely too late, IDW Publishing should reconsider its choices before sending this book to print. Subtract issues 24, 63, 85, 104 and SM 17, add issues 27, 73, 74, 75, 76 and 155, and make this volume all it can be.