6 posts tagged “coolstuff”
For the past couple of months my default, “let’s kill 20 minutes” game has been 2D Boy’s World of Goo.
WoG, for the uninitiated, is a physics based puzzle game involving little blobs of goo. The object is to get as many goo balls as possible into a feeder pipe that takes them all away. Of course, getting the goo balls to these pipes is something of a challenge. The player must use the goo balls to build bridges, towers, chains, etc. all while trying to get a minimum number of goo balls to the pipe in order to complete a level.
Along the way, new forms of goo balls are introduced including red, explosive ones, clear, water-like ones that always hang down in drips, and green, “connector” goo balls that can be re-used several times. Many of the puzzles and challenges involve using a specific type of goo ball to reach the pipe.
There is a story too, but it is secondary to the main action of playing the game. It mainly unfolds in the cut scenes at the end of a level or between stages, although there are signs left by “The Signpainter” in all the worlds that offer bits of philosophy, warnings, or just observations.
World of Goo is a beautiful game. The design of the goo balls and the worlds they inhabit is just spectacular. The artists and designers found the sweet spot between cartoonish and childish that brings back reminiscences of Saturday mornings and sugary cereal. Further, the soundtrack is equally beautiful. The designers at 2D Boy created several loops that blend together and play back in almost transcendent harmonies and pieces that are so good, the soundtrack by itself is almost as much fun as the game.
WoG is available for Mac, PC, Linux, and Wii and costs 15 to 20 bucks. It's worth every penny.
Other reviews:
The line between art and prank can sometimes be a really fine one, but when the outcome is as cool as this, who cares?
This is cool; I want to learn to play this piece.
The best thing about YouTube? I think it has to be the fact that I can call up Nostalgia with a quick search. Any music video, any t.v. show, damn near any song, any movie...just one quick search and there it is. Like this video, Ana Ng, by They Might Be Giants, which is the first time I had heard the band.
I can remember sitting on the sofa in my living room talking on the phone to a girl I liked. (This is way back in the day kids. No cellies, not even pagers. Not yet.) She told me to turn on Mtv and I did. The video was just starting and we sat there on the phone, not speaking, just connected via wires and the sounds of mutual breathing. Existing, each in our own houses, each in our own spaces, yet still connected so we could watch videos together.
Somedays, I miss that. And when I do, well, here you go:
Reactions were varied, of course, but when we compiled our data we learned one thing: Men love this movie, women think it's cute. Men think this movie represents everything that was best about childhood, friendship, overcoming adversity, the triumph of imagination, and baseball. Women think it's about a bunch of boys playing baseball.
Conclusion? The Sandlot is the greatest guys' movie of all time.
And it's finally on DVD.
My sister, who understands me, even if she doesn't always get me, sent me a copy for my birthday. My wife, who gets me, even if she doesn't always understand me, sat down with me last night to watch the movie.
She thought it was cute; it was a nice movie about little boys and baseball. I laughed until I couldn't breathe, and then I laughed some more, thinking about the movie, and about where I grew up and about my friends, back then and now, and the things we bond over and the idiot things we do in the name of adventure.