Monthly Archives: November 2020

#78 – Kingdom Hearts: Melody of Memory

Kingdom Hearts was a series I pointedly avoided whilst I was growing up (partly because I didn’t have a PS2) and it was only last year, when they FINALLY released Kingdom Hearts III – and brought the PS4 collections down in price – that I decided to play through the whole series…back to back. That was certainly an…experience. It’s reputation as a magical and convoluted series is GREATLY overstated – it captures the magic of Renaissance Disney twice across the whole series (both times in Dream Drop Distance, funnily enough) and it’s not half as difficult to understand as people make it out to be…it’s just so full of bullshit that putting effort into understanding it is a chore. It buries you in repetitive terminology in some effort to seem more sophisticated than it usually is. Nomura, I watch science fiction. You aren’t going to confuse me with this shit.

Never thought much of the music. But the demo was fun, so I took a chance…

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#77 – nothing & nowhere

When I was younger, I used to imagine that there would come a time when I would simply “become an adult” – age 16, 18, 21, it seemed to vary depending on who I asked. Now I’m 31 and old enough to know better – there is no magic number where you simply “become an adult” and there isn’t really anything to mark the shift between being a child and being an adult. It’s just an accumulation of experiences. Your reaction to and ability to adapt or deal with these experiences isn’t even a factor.

Not sure where I’m going with this. Let’s talk about nothing & nowhere, which I’m still not sure if I should capitalise or not.

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#76 – Lynne

Through Primary and Secondary School, my best friend was someone who had the same name as me, was born the day after me, and seemed to be better at literally everything than I was. They were smarter, more athletic, more popular, their parents had more money – and weren’t scary like mine were – and they were just BETTER. Being a day older was the only thing I had over them – and of course, when you’re a highly competitive kid who gets jealous easily, you cling to any perceived advantage you have like it’s the most important thing about your existence – and god, I was so bitter sometimes. It took me years to get over my inferiority complex and stop comparing myself to this person.

Lynne dredged up some very old, very painful memories.

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#75 – Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth – Hacker’s Memory

OK, real talk: I replayed Cyber Sleuth for a second time only so I could replay Hacker’s Memory for the first time. I know I could have just skipped it – and I think a small part of me would have thanked the rest of me for it; the narrative side doesn’t get any better with age or replays – but with the two games being as connected as they are, I figured it was a good idea to refresh my memory…after all, it had been a couple of years.

But this game is better in just about every way, and it had all led up to me reaffirming that with a replay. This is why I bought the games on the Switch in the first place. I adore this game.

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#74 – Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth

Digimon is certainly an interesting franchise. Despite the surface similarities to Pokemon it was never actually intended to be a direct competitor – a fact that certain sections of the Pokemon fandom would do well to remember – and if you spend even a little time with the franchise you’ll realise it’s nothing like Pokemon at all.

For one thing, the games are much, much better.

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