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Clone Troopers vs Stormtroopers

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In an interview with Dave Filoni, the difference between Clone Troopers and Storm Troopers was laid
out...
In my opinion, having made The Clone Wars and now working with Stormtroopers, I would say that a Clone trooper could outgun a Stormtrooper rather easily. A Clone trooper was bred, born, raised to be a soldier. Lucky for them, the Jedi gave them a lot of personality, but they were very dedicated soldiers. Stormtroopers are drafted into service; you can join through academies. If you watch A New Hope they stand around and say, ‘Hey, you seen the new BT-16?’ They seem interested in their job but you question their dedication. They’re treated as expendable by the Empire, and they definitely can’t shoot anything. 
When Obi Wan says, ‘Only Imperial Stormtroopers are so precise’, I think he’s making that up on the fact that he used to fight with clones, so he assumes that a Stormtrooper is really good. Much to his shock those guys can’t hit an R2 unit in a naked hallway, let alone be precise. So I like Stormtroopers, I find them very interesting. The Stormtroopers have better gear, better weapons in a lot of ways but it’s just a different war they are fighting than the Clone troopers’ was.
link to the whole interview 

Agent Carter

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Another SHIELD show is coming!
“Marvel’s Agent Carter,” starring Captain America’s Hayley Atwell follows the story of Peggy Carter. It’s 1946, and peace has dealt Peggy Carter a serious blow as she finds herself marginalized when the men return home from fighting abroad. Working for the covert SSR (Strategic Scientific Reserve), Peggy must balance doing administrative work and going on secret missions for Howard Stark all while trying to navigate life as a single woman in America, in the wake of losing the love of her life–Steve Rogers. Inspired by the feature films “Captain America: The First Avenger” and “Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” along with the short “Marvel One-Shot: Agent Carter.” 
Starring Hayley Atwell as Agent Peggy Carter, “Marvel’s Agent Carter” is executive produced by Christopher Markus, Steve McFeely, Tara Butters, Michele Fazekas, Kevin Feige, Louis D’Esposito, Jeph Loeb.
link


Lady cosplay by Meevers Desu

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Meevers Desu knocks another one out of the park. This is her rendition of Lady from Devil May Cry.






  





John Carter 2 would have been awesome

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It's too bad this isn't a thing. Taylor Kitsch said the sequel would have been awesome.
John Carter of Mars by ReillyBrown

Was the bad press over “John Carter” hard for you? I mean, look man, it wasn’t an uplifting experience. My biggest regret would have been if I didn’t do enough personally. If I didn’t give it everything I had. If I hadn’t prepped enough. I don’t have that regret, so that allows me to let go. I still talk to Lynn Collins almost daily. Those relationships that were born won’t be broken by people we never met.
Do you wish there would have been a sequel?I miss the family. I miss Andrew Stanton. I know the second script was fucking awesome. We had to plant a grounding, so we could really take off in the second one. The second one was even more emotionally taxing, which was awesome.
link 

Out of the Silent Planet art

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Artwork portraying the three sophant beings of Malacandra from C. S. Lewis' Space Trilogy- Out of the Silent Planet

This work is from Deimos-Remus who has done Space Trilogy art before, but this is his most recent update.




The Dragon and the Girl by Joel Jurion

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Joel Jurion is a French artist on DeviantArt. His gallery is excellent. Among his amazing artwork appears a thread of a story that I've attempted to piece together in a somewhat coherent sequence. Some of the art is labelled Heroic Space Opera. We can see bits of How to Train Your Dragon, some DragonRiders of Pern, and I believe a little bit of Nausicaa in this concept. Hopefully, someday this will develop into a truly epic space opera.














Space Story by Joel Jurion

Spinward Traveller

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The Traveller movie.

There is a Kickstarter going, trying to fund a television pilot episode set in the Traveller universe.




"This is Free Trader Beowulf,
calling anyone . . .
Mayday, Mayday . . . we are under attack . . .
main drive is gone . . .
turret number one not responding
Mayday . . . losing cabin pressure fast
calling anyone . . . please help . . .
This is Free Trader Beowulf . . .
Mayday . . ."



Korra book 3

BBC Designer

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My most recent Amazon.com purchase, both items must have been designed by the same guy at BBC.

 

ALIEN Egg Chamber toy

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Here is a cool toy playset that I probably won't be getting for the kiddos.







Star Command

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I've become obsessed with a video game. I purchased it a while ago for my phone to find that it was too much for the poor phone to run. I recently bought a Nook and found my purchase was still good and the game runs fine on that.

What a cool little game. A simple and not serious Star Trek clone. My son enjoys watching, but it is a little much for him to control at this point. The setting is light hearted, but cool enough that it makes me want to run a paper and pencil RPG in the Star Command setting. Perhaps Vortex or convert Edge of the Empire.








Lessons Learned by Toby Fraud

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Yes. That Toby!

 


The baby from Labyrinth grew up to be a film maker.


Toby Froud’s New Puppet Film Returns Us to the Magical World of ‘Labyrinth’ and ‘The Dark Crystal’

The baby from ‘Labyrinth’ grew up to make his own fantasy film, and if the sold-out world premiere is any indication, audiences are ready to return to the enchanting realm of puppet goblins, faeries, and imagination.
Published Jun 23, 2014, 2:32pm
By Aaron Scott
Image: Handmade Puppet DreamsThe cast of puppets from Toby Froud's 'Lessons Learned'
In case you missed it last week, Toby Froud, the baby in the striped PJs from the movie Labyrinth, grew up, moved to Portland for a job at LAIKA, and premiered his own fantasy puppet film on Saturday in collaboration with Jim Henson’s daughter, Heather. He might not have been raised by Goblin King Jareth (a.k.a. David Bowie in an explosion of lace and locks) and his goblin hordes in real life, but he came as close to it as possible, growing up the son of Brian and Wendy Froud, the reigning artistic royalty behind The Dark Crystal, Labyrinth, and an entire illustrated world of faeries and goblins with an international following.

In the few days before the screening of Toby’sLessons Learned, the buzz grew so deafening that I think it’s worthy of its own phrase: the Froud Frenomenon. Our interview with himwracked up 100,000 visits in the first two hours, and has gone on to some 300,000. (For those who are interested, in our poll of favorite songs, “Magic Dance” is squeaking out “As the World Falls Down” by 3 percent, 38 percent to 35, after nearly 5000 votes from 45 countries and all 50 states.) 
The screening itself was an event: folks dressed in faerie horns flying kites on the sidewalk, people of all ages flooding the lobby, tickets so oversold that the Hollywood opened the upstairs theater for a second simultaneous screening, and at the center of it, Toby with both his parents holding court in front of the film’s spectacular cast of puppets.
In other words, just as Toby has embraced the Froudian legacy of his parents, so too have the people embraced him as the goblin heir, with the hope that the wondrous world the Frouds created might once again grace theaters and imaginations. Call it 80’s nostalgia or a backlash to soulless CGI, but hand-made, hand-operated puppets still possess the magic to enchant like nothing else.
Image: Aaron ScottBrian, Toby, and Wendy Froud
Lessons Learned screened as part of three puppet shorts produced by Heather Henson’s company, Ibex Puppetry, for its Handmade Puppet Dreams film series. It’s worth noting that the second short, “Melvin the Birder,” was a charming paper cutout work also created by Portlanders, Beady Little Eyes Productions, about a birder’s quest to photograph the elusive Mustard Billed Wood-pecking Belly Wiggler.
But the centerpiece was Lessons Learned, a 15-minute tale about a boy whose grandfather gives him a “lessons learned” box, a physical receptacle of sorts to collect all the things he learns in his life. The curious boy can’t help but look inside his grandfather’s box (now a trunk), only to be pulled into a musty storage room where his grandfather’s lessons (e.g. “when it rains, it pours”) are catalogued in boxes that come alive when the boy reads them. The boy eventually ends up in another world of stone spires and swirling mists, where he confronts King Time and Granny Fate as embodied by an old grey man and a female spider who is knitting the course of time, respectively, before his grandfather pulls him out.
Image: Aaron ScottKing Time and Granny Fate from Toby Froud's 'Lessons Learned'
Toby’s puppets pick up right where his parents’ creations left off (which is not surprising, given his father helped with their design and fabrication). They are fantasy made foam-flesh: pointed ears twitch, elfin eyes blink, our spider lady sports stacked spectacles for her eight eyes. The production values, too, are exceptional. No doubt thanks to the many LAIKA professionals who lent their skills, the camera work, editing, and sound design coalesce to create an expansive world that feels just as mystical and captivating as The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth.
More than anything, it felt like an exhilerating beginning. The short is more of a teaser for a bigger story than a narrative complete in itself, but it’s a story and a world for which audiences seem ravenous. We can only hope that Lessons Learned signals a new Froudian/Henson collaboration, where new tales will immerse us, and a new generation of fans, in the fantastical world of Froud.
link


Star Wars Rebels extended trailer

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I'm sure you'll see this everywhere. Sorry. I'm just so excited!


On Basilisk Station


more Rebels preview

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looking more and more amazing! Luminara, 3PO, and R2!

Fury Road trailer

Roleplaying Game Publisher shows more compassion than most Christians

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A transgender blogger is shown compassion from the Pathfinder RPG publisher with gifts. Here is the blog post that records Paizo's Wes Schneider's act of loving kindness.
Paizo, You’re Just The Best!
So a little while ago I made a post about coming out as Transgender, and the issues that came with that regarding my family and my friends.
Wes Schneider (I’m a tumblr noob and have no idea how to make that into a link to his tumblr), of Paizo Publishing sent me a message, and asked if he and his people could send some swag to make a hard time easier.
Well. It arrived.
That gesture in itself was amazing, but inside the cover of the Inner Sea Gods hardcover was this.

Annnnd! On the inside cover of Chronicle of the Righteous was this.

From Wes himself!~ And I’ll even show you the pages he marked off as things that might be of particular interest to me.
One of the Empyreal Lords in Chronicles of the Righteous called “Arshea”

Who embodies both and neither gender, and “Worshipers believe that one’s gender and role in society are not tied to one’s physical form.”
The second marked page was in “The Worldwound Incursion” and it was for a character named “Anevia Tirabade”

Who’s very opening line is “Born a man and originally named Anvenn”.
A deep, and.. just, I don’t really know how to put into words, amazing thank you to Wes and to Paizo. Not only did they think of me, and send me these awesome things! But personal thought was put into every little gesture.
It.. Yeah, I don’t know how to express how grateful I am for just a kind gesture in a difficult time for me. It wasn’t something that HAD to be done, it was something they chose to do. As an absolute fan of their work in general, I can’t begin to explain what it means.
Thank you Wes, and thank you Paizo.
Link

Why can't Christians show the love of Christ like gamer geeks can?

Hats off to you, Wes and Paizo. God bless.

OneDice Universal

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Discovered a new generic universal RPG system. OneDice Universal has recently been released from Cakebread & Walton (the best publisher name ever). This one is light, simple, and kind of targets kids...
Cakebread & Walton, award-winning RPG designers of Abney Park’s Airship Pirates, Clockwork & Chivalry, Renaissance, Dark Streetsand Pirates & Dragons, are proud to announce a new product line for 2014 – the OneDice system. 
There are times when you’ve got a really cool idea for a role-playing session, but can’t quite find the system to fit the bill. You want something quick and easy, that you can put together on the back on an envelope. Or perhaps you’ve got an epic idea for a multi-genre campaign involving cyber-cowboys and a flying city inhabited by ninja dwarves and steampunk woodland animals. (Well, you might!). Or you’ve promised to run a game, only have half any hour to prepare and have no ideas 
This is where OneDice comes in. OneDice is a quick and easy role-playing game for any genre. Our first release, OneDice Universal, is a compact, art-free, rulebook designed to let you create and run characters in any setting. It comes with three ready-made “skins” – brief extra rules – for fantasy (including magic), superheroes (including powers and weaknesses) and space (including starship combat). And all this is crammed into 56 pages, for the pocket-money price of $7.99! 
We’ll be following this up with a series of “genrebooks” and “worldbooks” Genrebooks will each cover rules for a different genre; Steampunk is already in the works, withCyberpunk on its heels. Each small book will include the core rules, adapted for the genre, together with some ready-made campaign background skins and adventure seeds. Worldbooks will develop a particular setting; a OneDice version of our Pirates & Dragons RPG is in the pipeline, together with Floodland, barbarian adventures in post-apocalypse Britain. All will contain some art, and some worldbooks will be in colour. Again, they will contain the core rules, so that each book stands alone. And again, they’ll be small books at pocket-money prices. Pick one up and you’ve got enough to run a game in no time – pick up a few, and you’ll soon be mixing genres and coming up with weird and wonderful ideas which might never otherwise have occurred to you. 
How does the system work? Characters have three attributes: Strong, Clever and Quick. Some might also have Magic. They also have a bunch of skills. Add together attribute and skill, roll a D6, add that, and try and beat the target number or the opponent’s roll. The rest is just variations on the theme. Character generation takes about five minutes. 
The game books are suitable for age 10+, so there’s no better time to get your kids into role-playing!
And at the time of this posting, it isn't even $7.99. Just $5.00!

It appears this OneDice system aims to be the simple, light, entry level generic system along the likes of GURPS, Savage Worlds, True20, etc. Perhaps most like True20 as that used on single d20 and OneDice uses one single d6.

I look forward to the genre books and the world books. We'll see how it fares.

With no formal forums (at least not yet), I've set up a Google+ for a collected point for discussion if that develops.

OneDice Unversal G+

another Rebels preview - over 7 minutes!

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a little stiff, but wow I was sucked right in!
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