Tuesday, September 29, 2020

#PokémonSwordShieldEX #TheCrownTundra Coming October 22!

Hey fellas: this is just one of many reveals from what just streamed; so for now, I’ll focus on this one since it’s the biggest piece of information I was waiting for.

On October 22 of this year, just over four months since the launch of the Isle of Armor and just under a year since the release of “Pokémon Sword and Shield,” the second chapter of the “Expansion Pass” will launch: “The Crown Tundra.” The titular area of the Galar region is heavily based on Scotland; and sees you exploring the land under the guidance of a man known as “Peony.” On top of many monsters from the previous titles returning with new special forms (such as the Kanto Legendary birds), the quest will focus on a new monster known as Calryex. 

As someone who has enjoyed the base game and the Isle of Armor chapter so far (I am nearing the combined 350-hour mark of gameplay logged), I look forward to not only telling you more ahead of launch; but exploring the new section once it goes live this October. That will be all for now, take care.


Sunday, September 20, 2020

Digimon Adventure: Last Kizuna is a Disappointing Finale (First Viewing Thoughts)

Hey fellas: I just saw Digimon Adventure- Last Kizuna, and… it’s not exactly what I was expecting. I mean, as a Digimon movie, it’s at least better than the 2000 one. As a movie on its on merit, it’s all right; but as a finale to the series? Personally, it’s a bit of a disappointment. They tried to sell this as the “Logan” or “Endgame” of the original storyline, but it instead comes off more like “Dark Phoenix.” There will be some spoilers for the film if you care, but nothing you probably don’t already know; so let’s get started.


The basic plot is as follows: five years have passed since the events of the Tri movies; and 20 years since the events of the original TV series. As the Chosen Children/Digidestined are on the verge of graduating college and going their separate ways, it’s discovered that so too are their Digimon as their bond wanes; right as a pair of enigmatic people from New York and a new Digimon threat known as Eosmon threatens both the digital world and real world alike.


Essentially, if you have any familiarity with the franchise; you have a solid idea of what to expect already. I appreciated the risks the Tri movies took even if not everyone did; but this movie surprisingly plays it safe. In fact, I was able to telegraph many of the plot points before they actually took place. For the record, I only skimmed summaries beyond the previews; but before I begin detailing the issues I have with this movie’s handling of the story; I will point out the good things in it.


First and foremost, the animation is quite impressive; really showing off how many advances there have been since the original, especially in the action sequences. The sound is also great, with the music being energetic and the voice acting being a big factor of praise in both dubbed and subbed versions. I am glad they got the original cast back for the former, and in the latter; they found another strong replacement for Tai’s original VA after her untimely passing. 


Now, comes my thoughts on the story; and it’s not the first time I’ve felt this way about anime that’s well-regarded either. Many fans felt this to be a worthy and emotional sendoff for the original anime: I didn’t. On the contrary, I felt this had to be one of the most uneven mixes of both past and present since the infamous finale of Enterprise, “These are the Voyages.” I didn’t hate that either; but given how that’s my least favorite Star Trek finale, it’s also not a comparison I make lightly.


This movie gets absurdly heavy-handed with its metaphors about age; and what’s meant to be the story’s emotional center instead ends up as its biggest detriment. In many ways, it’s almost like there were ideas for at least two different screenplays that were combined in this one. Part of me wonders if it might have been better to make this an OVA series instead of just one 94-minute film. It really doesn’t help that on top of not implementing the whole “growing up without growing apart” thread that well; the “adult” parts of the movie just feel really forced. Characters getting drunk at a soba parlor? Check. Agumon stumbling upon Tai’s stash of girlie movies? Yup. Characters trying to figure out a life path that’s somewhere in between a stereotypical “Generation Z” member and an extra from “Reality Bites?” If the US theatrical release hadn’t been cancelled by this pandemic, I’d be filling out requests for my refund already.


Yet, that’s the fatal irony with this movie: the whole idea that age would be the end of the adventure is utter nonsense. In fact, this movie essentially takes far longer to tell the same story that the final episode of the first season did; but with less emotional impact. I don’t currently have plans for a full review of this movie; so I will try to keep things brief for my wrap-up.


Even with what the movie tries to say about predestination over free will; or the relationship between age and maturity; the film somehow gets less emotional response from me than the infamous scene of Tommy Westfall playing with a snow globe. I’m not saying they had to end it all with everyone getting turned into orange juice; but the finale of the TV series didn’t leave me feeling as empty. (Side note: I did at least like how this movie further de-canonized the infamous distant finale of 02, but how did I not notice that Davis/Daisuke was such a fracking simp? I didn’t think much of that when watching the show in between Beast Machines and Power Rangers back in the day, but wow did his pursuit of Kari not age well.)


Despite the best efforts of the denouement itself, I felt nothing. When the audience has no emotional investment in the story, the departure just doesn’t work. At its core, the film doesn’t seem to understand that maturity and adventure are not mutually exclusive. That’s a major reason why Spirited Away isn’t just my favorite Miyazaki film; but one of my all-time favorite movies: Chihiro’s arc and her subsequent goodbye to Kohaku was much more effective and emotionally-resonant to me. 


Above all, while “Digimon Adventure: Last Kizuna” may not be the worst finale I’ve ever seen; but it’s also not the finale other people I know praised so much. It’s at least better than the 2000 Digimon movie, and an OK movie on its own; but it’s a bit of a disappointing finale to this story. If you want a good Digimon anime, just go rewatch Tamers on Hulu; as I plan to. I leave you with one of my favorite quotes from a much better story about the line between maturity and wonder, the classic “The Little Prince:” “It’s all a great mystery, look up at the sky and you’ll see how everything changes.”  

That will be all for now, I will talk more about The Crown Tundra once it has a concrete release date. Later.

Thursday, September 17, 2020

Level-5 Abby Closed Down.

This is a sort of follow-up post to one I made a while ago, and I think it's important based on what has happened since then.

As revealed by an anonymous former employee on Twitter (who shall remain undisclosed to protect their identity), Level-5 Abby has closed down as of July 2019. This information has also been verified via this release from Games Industry, with the remaining employees folded into the main branch of Level-5 International.

Since the date of this information coincides with the informal announcement of the international release of Yo-Kai Watch 4 last year at Anime Expo; this has raised even further concerns over not just that title, but the state of the company as a whole. 

As I suggested in the previous article, if you are a former employee of the company; feel free to come forward and let others know about it. You don’t have to tell me personally, but if you have any information or grievances, people need to know about them.


Friday, September 4, 2020

"Pokémon Sword and Shield" at 18M Sold, "Let's Go" at 12M Sold, Nintendo Switch at 61M Sold!

Hey fellas: I thought would address this as I continue work on my other posts, since another big sales milestone has been crossed.

As of their recent quarterly report, “Pokémon Sword and Shield” have sold over 18.22 million copies as of June 30, 2020. This is just under two weeks after the launch of “The Isle of Armor” chapter of the Expansion Pass; but even more significantly, this marks another record for the franchise. Though one of my associates, who shall remain undisclosed suggested things have finally given way for the series; the opposite has happened instead: not only have games outsold the games released on 3DS in a fraction of the time they had on the market, they’re now in the top 3 bestselling games in the entire franchise to date. Number one is still the original Red, Blue and Yellow at 31.4 million copies, closely followed by Gold, Silver and Crystal at 29.5 million copies. At this point, it’s less of “if” and more “when” the titles will move further up the list. “Pokémon Let’s Go Pikachu and Eevee” have also sold a respectable 12.2 million copies to date. The titles have managed to remain among the bestselling titles on the Switch, alongside other big names such as “Animal Crossing New Horizons” at 22.4 million copies, “Super Smash Bros. Ultimate” at 19.99 million copies (with Sakurai all but confirming the game just passed 20 million in a column for Famitsu), “Super Mario Odyssey” and “The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild” at well over 18 million copies and “Splatoon 2” at 10.7 million copies. The top game on the system still remains “Mario Kart 8 Deluxe” at 26.7 million copies.

On that note, the Nintendo Switch itself has further proven successful, with the console now having sold 61.44 million units to date across all its versions; less than 500,000 away from surpassing the 61.91 million the original Nintendo Entertainment System sold in its entire lifecycle. Talk persists of an upgraded model with new features in the near future; much as has been done with the company’s previous systems (part of the reason I let other people get a new console at launch first). If you were to ask me what I would want out of an upgraded Switch, my answer would be simple: longer battery life in portable mode and finding a solution to Joycon Drift. I love my Switch and the Pokémon games released for it so far, so those two features would make it even better as we head towards the 25th anniversary next year. That will be all for now, take care.