I just spent the last 3-4 months working on a deep dive video essay on the 2005 movie Hoodwinked and I’m about to upload it to the YouTube channel for an Esports League.
The most annoying thing about being famous is having to tell everyone how famous you are.
I just spent the last 3-4 months working on a deep dive video essay on the 2005 movie Hoodwinked and I’m about to upload it to the YouTube channel for an Esports League.
As for the Lemmy aspect, this sub is often just a bot auto-posting articles from popular news sources on gaming. So if it’s from this community it might not actually be real buzz on Lemmy.
Meat-tea
The comic doesn’t mention how MANY plants they can identify… Just that it’s multiple…
“Yes… This is grass alright… And this one? Tree…”
Maybe even hit them with the classic “you can tell it’s an aspin because of the way it is”
No low balling. I know what I have.
Joe Manager (like Joe Momma)
Don’t worry, he’s alive: His wiki page
This specific one is from Flanimals
I know someone who plays the Ace Attorney games and long text based RPG games actively and this is a very targeted post.
This is a screenshot from a social media app. I haven’t quite figured out which one since I don’t use it but a friend of mine posts these all the time.
Why should any game (a piece of art with thousands of hours of work from developers and artists) have to ever vanish… Literally ever… I can’t think of a single reason no matter what the game is. It doesn’t matter if it was a big success or a small game on itch.
Art matters and should be preserved.
I want to point out that the reason The Crew is being pointed out and focused specifically is because it was a large game sold to 12m people and it’s a game from France, a country with fantastic consumer protection laws.
It’s being focused because it’s the game with the best shot of having legal action success NOT because it’s the most loved game of all time.
I considered titling it something like “I found a classic” but I figured there’s always people who haven’t ever seen it and I’d like them to get the same experience as others who got to see it the first time.
I’ve actually seen Big Money Hustlas (the things you do for love…) and so I CAN talk about the quality of the ICP movies.
The entire movie feels like a group of friends got together and just started recording. Outside of the fact that the character Baby Bear keeps rhyming everything, nothing else feels scripted or rehearsed at all. It really just feels like they had a story idea and recorded every scene improv style.
The movie itself is a tribute to Rudy Ray Moore, the Dolemite movies, and blaxsploitation in general… all things that I am actually a massive fan of. However, the world of ICP seems to lack a lot of black people… So while it’s definitely intended as a love letter to these movies (ICP clearly loves the source material and was trying to show that) the movie definitely can come off a lot closer to appropriation than anything at times. Especially with ICP calling everyone “my ninja” which never feels good to watch.
Overall it’s a movie that I can’t say I regret watching as it showcases all of what I love about a genre that I love but if you don’t care about blaxsploitation or Dolemite then it’ll probably just be the negatives with none of those elements of love showing through.
The movie is a massive allegory for being trans.
Meirl
Well, the video will be public as soon as YouTube stops claiming the video because I play the Kieth section.