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Tycho

It’s very strange, being an old person.  You have to constantly remind yourself that a lot of the rules that seemed incredibly useful at one point are dumb, or were always so, or were phantom exertions from someone else’s hierarchy.  Also, if you want to take Karate for some reason, or no reason, and if you can find a half an hour somewhere, you can probably do it.

Some things you want as a young person lose their relevance; some of them you could get, now, but can’t see the point.  When I was in my larval form, before my ninth molt, I thought it would be fucking awesome to have Devastator and Omega Supreme have a big fight on the floor of my room.  I could do that now, and please what remains of that young man in my current iteration, but I know that they’re just plastic now and the living part of them is gone.

  At some point I decided to become a verb.  I wanted to develop a suite of custom flagella devoted to altering my environment; I got hooked on it.  Beneath it all, the desire for supreme kicking knowledge has managed to retain its ancient heat.  It was like finding something under a mess which has been a mess for so long that it’s simply what the room looks like now; it had become geography, which gave the rediscovery an archaeological cast.

Watching my son bow into the dojo and cinching his white belt feels more real to me than all the other real things I am supposedly experiencing.  It’s heavy in my hand, I could break a window with it.  I have very few memories like this.

(CW)TB out.

a human in flesh

Tycho

You can now play Dominion without facing in a particular direction or making an obeisance to (insert god here).

(CW)TB

Gabe

I picked up Burnout Crash this weekend and could not put it down. I’m serious, I downloaded it at about 10:00am and at 9:00 at night Kara and I were still playing it. We needed to get the house cleaned that day so we played in shifts. While she did a couple levels I would vacuum the family room. Then I would play a few levels and she cleaned up the kitchen. Gabe was out at a birthday party all afternoon so we only had to neglect the baby. By the end of the day we had racked up 192 stars.

The next day was my birthday and I had some friends over. Everyone who tried a level said the same thing:  “just let me do one more!” The controller got passed around the couch all night and then they went home and I saw them pop up on on XBL playing it! The game is crack.

I don’t usually read reviews but when I started telling Tycho about Burnout he told me that they were very mixed. It looks like some people don’t like the announcer. An option to turn it off would be cool but it didn’t detract from my experience obviously. The other complaint I saw is that the game is too random. That your skill does not automatically equal a high score. I’m not sure this one is as fair. It is true that the game has a lot of random elements but that’s what makes it fun. This is not a puzzle game like Tetris where you you are trying to play skillfully so as to avoid chaos. This game is chaos and you are trying to play skillfully so as to manage it. There is no question that each one of these intersections is a cluster fuck. The trick is being fast enough and skilled enough to ride that mess to victory.

What really keeps you coming back is the way it is constantly showing you how your friends are doing on given levels. The “Crash Wall” is a list of your buddies along with their scores and the desire to beat a friends high score is a fucking animal instinct. Even during a level you can see your friends high score with a bar building up that represents your score and how close you are to beating them.

If you were put off by the reviews I suggest you give it a try. At least grab the trial and see what you think. Burnout Crash is easily one of the best puzzle games I’ve ever played . If you give it a shot I don’t think you’ll be disappointed.

-Gabe out