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Tycho

I avoided Spaceteam originally because people said it was like Artemis, and Artemis is already like Artemis, so I felt like I had that base covered.  There is a lot of shit going on over here, a lot of shit to do, and I don’t really have the luxury of doing any of them twice just for kicks.

It’s not actually like Artemis though, in any way, except that they both involve Space, but space is physically and conceptually vast.  It can probably contain two games without them ever touching.

I tworted something to the effect that Artemis simulates Star Trek, while Spaceteam simulates Galaxy Quest, that is to say, it’s a parody that just happens to be rendered as a simulation.  I said it that way to make people curious, so that they would go get it, because it doesn’t cost any-Goddamn-thing which is nonsense but does streamline the process.  But there are other ways to explain it.

It doesn’t actually matter what game I am playing: if it is a multiplayer game, that game is about capital C Communication.  For me, anyway.  For Kiko, it’s almost certainly about precision head-shooting, a fact which reveals itself in the stats.  But I am absolutely driven to communicate, I am a Word Furnace.  I’m getting right down to the bedrock here, what our disaffected youth refer to as Real Talk.  It’s a compulsion that has basically guided my entire life, all of it, until I was able to find or even create a context where near constant communication was not incredibly rude and is, in fact, required.

And so, for me, a multiplayer game that you mostly play by communicating just fucking twists my head around.  Spaceteam is a situation machine that creates an endless sequence of stellar probs, and you and your friends have to fix it, except no one player has access to all of the controls.  And the controls are all named nonsense sci-fi bullshit.  In the latest update, the patch notes suggest that you could now “Frog Blast The Vent Core,” which seems good.  For the vent core, if not the frog.  So telling people what to do under time constraints when the names of things are crazy, or are covered with slime, or on a panel that has been dislodged by tachyons, or has been replaced by symbols with no obvious description is the game.  And it is awesome.  For me, and probably for you

A project manager type like Robert Khoo is a must in these situations.  It helps, anyway.  Well, I guess it helps sometimes.

(CW)TB out.

all on your machine

Gabe

It is December 31st and that means it’s time for a top ten list! I took a stroll back through 2012 and came up with my 10 favorite Penny Arcade strips from the last year.

10. Exclusivity

We had a very serious love affair with Star Wars: The Old Republic. The highlight for me was my character’s class story. I feel like the story and choices in SW:TOR really put the RP into MMORPG. That role playing got me into a bit of trouble with my wife but I couldn’t help it. Even my Jedi Consular could not resist flirting with a beautiful Twi’lek.

9. Incredibility

This really felt like the year of the Kickstarter. Some incredibly high profile designers used the service to bankroll new games. Of course you also had a lot of characters like John Videogames here with wild and ambiguous ideas begging for millions.

8. Anthrophila

Not much to say about this one. I just really love the gag and the drawing of Gabe in the last panel.

7. Anticipation

I love Hero Academy but waiting for your friend to make their move is brutal. When you have time and you want to play, you can’t imagine what bullshit your friends are up to and why they can’t put in a couple turns. Again this is one of my favorite third panel drawings of the year.

6. Firebird

This was a joke we came up with when we heard they were sending Angry Birds to space for the next game. I know it’s a simple gag but for some reason it still cracks me up.

5. Crowdsourcing

“I’m going on the Internet, to find people who agree with me” is still something we say around the office.

4.The Delicious Invasion

This was easily our most controversial comic of the year. We got quite a bit of hate mail over this one but I still love it. Tycho and I both felt like the uproar over the Mass Effect ending was ridiculous and poking a group of people who are already mad is always fun.

3. Draw Something Else

This was probably our most linked strip of the year. I saw this comic everywhere I went for a while and 9 times out of 10 they had removed the Penny Arcade URL. I even saw it with different avatars in place of Gabe’s face and attributed to different people. I think it’s fair to say this one “went viral”.

2. Fleamium

Sometimes we make strips that Tycho and I call “dense”. We use the term to mean that we’ve tried to pack as many jokes into a strip as possible. I feel like this is our best strip of the year in terms of getting a joke in every single panel.

1. Mindcraft

I know it’s not a LOL strip but I still love this one. For me it’s a record of a very powerful Dad moment. It may not be funny but it’s true and it’s my favorite comic from 2012.

So that’s my list. Chirp me a Tweet and tell me what your favorites are.

-Gabe out