Showing posts with label Gen Con. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gen Con. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Gen Con 2020 Online

Gen Con is the biggest board game convention in the United States. It happens every summer in Indianapolis...every summer except for the summer of 2020, of course. Corona virus shut down the physical convention. The organizers decided to shift to an online version, with many of the same presentations, demos, announcements, sales, and game play. The web site was fairly easy to navigate. I decided to attend the online con, getting virtual tickets for several events.

My first event was a lecture on Japanese Folklore and Mythology by Laura Baugh.

Cool interface--picture of woods because that's where lots of folk stories start

She described various stories, myths, and legends from Japan's past with a focus on how they show up in anime, manga, and other media these days. Also, she described how they are often misinterpreted, resulting in confusing and/or wrong impressions about what's going on (at least to Western eyes). Her presentation was very thorough and systematic. I learned a lot and added some stuff to my "to watch" list.

The lecture is available on her Twitch account, though you need to skip ahead about a minute because the sound wasn't working. Here's the link to Japanese Folklore and Mythology.

A great cover, too

I joined the Meeple Land Live Play and Giveaway, where people from Blue Orange played the game Meeple Land. They also gave away five copies of the game, asking some questions during the hour-long presentation. The theme of the game is building a theme park. Players have four round to buy attractions and amenities that they place on their large empty board. Attractions are large or medium tiles; amenities are small tiles. The tiles have various paths leading onto and off of them. Paths need to be matched up so that visitors can make it from one spot to the next. Placing the tiles can be tricky.

Meeple Land in action

Once players are done purchasing, they choose one of the buses full of meeples (it looked like anywhere from four to eight meeples of two colors on each bus) to come to populate their parks. Each attraction accommodates a few meeples of various colors, though some meeples might require that an amenity (like the burger stand or the gift shop) be nearby. The more meeples that make it into the park, the more money a player gets for the next round. If no matching attraction is available, the meeples wait at the park entrance for another round.

After the final round, points are given for how many different attractions are in the park and how many meeples are inside. Points are lost for any meeples that didn't have anywhere to go in the park and for any paths that are dead ends. No points are given for leftover money, so spending it wisely in the last turn is even more important than spending it wisely in other turns. The game looks like a lot of fun and is scheduled for release in September 2020. I did not win a free copy but may try to get it when it comes out.

Another helpful event I attended was a Twitch stream about Tabletopia, an online gaming platform. The site provides a 3D space with game pieces that players can manipulate on their own. The site provides PDFs of rules for games but the interaction is not limited by the rules. While playing chess, a player can move their king to any spot on the board. Tabletopia has a lot of games available and they have all been authorized by the games' publishers (except for obvious stuff like chess, checkers, poker, etc.). 80% of the games are free to play. Tabletopia has a monthly subscription model with two paid levels that grant more access. Users can play games solo, online with others, or in "hot seat" mode where other people in the same room take their individual turns at the same computer. The games have a chat box but the organizers recommend an audio or video third party service like Discord, Skype, or Zoom to get that "across the table" experience. The platform works on iOS and Android devices but is best through a browser.

Tabletopia main page

I joined the Dragomino Live Play and Giveaway hosted by Blue Orange. Dragomino is a kid's version of the popular Kingdomino game. In Dragomino, players put tiles together to get dragon eggs. Matching terrains get one egg drawn from a pile of eggs with the terrain's color. Flip the egg to see if it's an empty shell or a baby dragon. Baby dragons are worth one point at the end of the game; the empty shell means that player takes the mommy dragon token and will go first in the next round. At the end of the game, the mommy dragon token is worth one point. The game goes quickly and looks like fun for a younger crowd (5+ is the recommended age for playing).

Dragomino in action

The players

I watched a Learn Wingspan Live demonstration. The game is very popular in both the gaming community and the birding community because it is both a fun game and accurately depicts the birds and their activities. The game is not too complicated but does have a lot of moving parts. Players take their turns getting new birds, laying eggs, and getting food. All of this slowly builds an engine to get more eggs and more birds. The demonstration was on Tabletopia with the same guy from the previous Tabletopia presentation!

Wingspan on Tabletopia

A demo of Back To the Future: Dice Through Time was my final event. Players pilot DeLoreans from one of the four different timelines (1885, 1955, 1985, 2015), running between timelines to collect items scattered by Biff. Each item needs to go back to its original time and place. Every round starts with drawing event cards which can be good or bad. Some events go on the board, causing time paradoxes that need to be resolved. Other events help the players by giving them bonuses; still other events hamper the players by disabling some ability. After the cards are played, each player rolls four dice and then use the dice to move around the board and resolve the various situations. The dice have various faces, like the flux capacitor that lets the player switch timelines or the fist which knock the timeline's Biff to another location (he blocks players from dealing with problems). When players finish their moves, the Outatime track advances for the timeline with the most paradoxes on it. If players return an item to its proper time and space, they get to move the Outatime tracker back a space and get a bonus fetched by Einstein (Doc Brown's dog). The bonus is a token representing a die face. If players can get all the items back where they belong, the players win the game.

The video feed

A closer look at the board

The components for this game look great. The little DeLoreans have some nice detail and the custom die faces are fun. The graphic design is well done. The cards, DeLoreans, and dice all match whichever timeline they are from. The art is not photos from the movies but drawings that are instantly recognizable to fans of the films. The gameplay looks like fun. The couple hosting the video were funny and clearly knew Back to the Future very well, cracking jokes and using quotes from the movies. This looks like a great cooperative game for families.

While I did enjoy everything I did, I never played any games and I never had any of those fun surprises like running into cool cosplayers or finding a random game that is surprisingly enjoyable. I do have some new leads on good games and various ways to play online.

Friday, September 11, 2015

Saint John the Evangelist Catholic Church, Indianapolis

While at Gen Con, I went to Sunday Mass at Saint John the Evangelist Church which is just across the street from the convention center. It is on Georgia Street, which was the main venue for the food trucks where I had many a yummy meal.

St. John the Evangelist church, seen from Georgia Street

The parish is the oldest Roman Catholic parish in Indianapolis. It was founded in 1837. The first church was built a few blocks away and called the Chapel of the Holy Cross. In 1850, a new church was built at the current location and the name changed to Saint John the Evangelist. A larger church (the current structure) was completed in 1871.

Morning sunshine on the front of the church

I arrived early to Mass and was impressed that a large group was praying the rosary. The service was reverent and filled with lots of good music. The priest said he was a visiting priest. He and three other priest friends come every year to Gen Con and stay at the rectory. The pastor goes on retreat while they are visiting, so it's a win/win situation.

The nave gives a sense of the classical styling of the church. After Mass, I met a fellow who said they had a small fire a few years back. That sparked a renovation and cleaning. They took out the carpets and cleaned all the art, adding some extra items to make it more beautiful than before. Here are the results!

Nave

Main altar

Above the main altar

Side altar to Virgin Mary

Side altar to St. Joseph

Pieta altar

Baptismal font with holy oils behind

They did not use this pulpit

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Canal Walk, Indianapolis

On the final day of Gen Con, the convention closed at 4 p.m. That is, the convention center closed at 4 so everyone who didn't have official business had little to do inside. Since my shuttle to the hotel was scheduled for 7 p.m., I decided to see some of the city. The most interesting feature posted on the helpful little maps downtown is the canal. It wasn't far away so I went for a canal walk.

The Indianapolis Canal Walk

By the NCAA Hall of Champions

View of a Marriott Hotel

The canal was built as part of the early 1800s canal craze sparked by the Erie Canal. The plan for the Indiana Central Canal was to connect the Ohio River to the Wabash and Erie Canal, a distance just under 300 miles. A financial crisis in the 1830s wiped out the funding for the canal, so only parts of it were completed. The Indianapolis part of the canal (about eight miles) eventually became the property of the city. A 1980s project rebuilt the downtown portion of the canal, making a pleasant walking path.

Walkers enjoying a getaway from downtown

Reminds me of Venice

Side view of that Marriott building

Walking isn't the only mode of transport on and around the canal. A boat rental agency has paddle boats, canoes, and kayaks.

Ship merchant

A fountain people went around but not in

Another rental agency rents foot-powered cars, almost like Fred Flintstone!

Foot-mobiles

In action

The walk also includes various works of art. Underneath one bridge is a delightful mural.

Cool and refreshing on one side...

...hot and exciting on the other

A few museums line the canal, providing some more impressive works.

The Eiteljorg Museum

Outside the Indiana State Museum

Indiana Steam Clock (also outside the State Museum)

In the canal is a three-part work of art called the Vessel series. It was made by William Dennisuk in collaboration with the Herron School of Art and Design. Dennis says, "The project draws attention to our relationship with water, and stands as a metaphor for how we might interact with the extended environment. The open-frame structures, together with their reflections, tend to intermingle and mesh with their wider surroundings; suggesting an inter-dependent and more collaborative partnership with our environment." [quoted from signs on the canal walk]

The first part is Pulse, which "refers to the rhythmic fluctuations we find in nature and in ourselves; the recurrence of vibrations, undulations, waves and the simple beat of the heart." [also from the canal walk]

Pulse

The second part is Valence, referring "to the relative capacity of a person or thing to unite, to react with, or affect another in a special way, as by attraction or the facilitation of a function or activity." [from the canal walk]

Valence

Spin is the final part, referring "to a fundamental movement that can be found in nature and ourselves; the spinning planet and angular momentum of elementary particles, the winding of fibers, throwing clay or the dance of the whirling dervish." [from canal walk]

Spin

The canal walk is a very pleasant place to spend a few hours on a sunny day!

Another fountain

Another patriotic bit

Monday, August 24, 2015

Gen Con 2015 Cosplay

There's no way to take a picture of every possible cosplayer at Gen Con because there are far too many. They were so numerous that four sat behind me at 8 a.m. Mass on Sunday! I didn't get their picture, not because I am shy about taking pictures in church but because I thought it would be inappropriate at Mass and I didn't catch them after Mass. Rest assured, they were modestly dressed and would have been totally unnoticeable if Mass had happened to be in 1415 instead of 2015.

Superheroes were the dominant group of cosplayers. By my count, Marvel outnumbered DC which is to be expected considering the movie and television coverage of the respective companies. Not that everyone was dressed like the character from the big and/or little screens.

Black Widow

Two Thors take on a Hydra goon

WWII-era Captain America

Classic Ms. Marvel

Two Steve Rogerses, Tony Stark, and a female Winter Soldier

Classic Spider-man

Steampunk Doctor Octopus

Current day Doc Ock

DC did have a very good showing. Harley Quinn was the most popular costume by far of any character, though I only got one of her incarnations.

One of the many faces of Harley Quinn

There were many Catwomen, but not as many as Harley

Movie version of Bane

Bat-girl and Poison Ivy

Black Manta with the apparent remains of Aquaman

Supergirl, coming to TV this Fall!

Green Lantern and Batman pose with kids

Doctor Who fans were representing in many ways.

Not really cosplay (or in focus) but really cool

One Dalek

Slightly melted Dalek

Star Wars had their fare share of cure robots and people dressed up. Seeing these, I realize I have fallen behind by not watching Clone Wars cartoons. Maybe I'll catch up in December...

An R2 unit

A Jedi

Clone warrior/trooper/whatever

The plural of Jedi is Jedi, right?

Possibly the same R2 unit

Some people dressed as favorite movie characters.

One of three Shaun of the Deads I saw

Couple from Tangled

I think the guy on the left is Chris Pratt's character from Jurassic World

Dread Pirate Roberts with some Star Wars types around him

Sauron has the ring!

TV, video games, and other games had plenty of creative fans.
Carmen Sandiego!

Cookie Monster demos a game

Halo's Master Chief with two others not from Halo

Katamari Damacy!

From the Saga comics I think

This guy's ID badge says he works for Black Mesa, the competition for Aperture Science

Dr. Seuss!

Pathfinder female barbarian whats-her-name

Also from Pathfinder?

And of course there was an assortment of steampunk (who may have been recognizable characters) and other cosplay types who defy easy categorization.

The first...thing...I saw

Technicolor steampunk?

Assorted (perhaps related) characters

More steampunk

This guy must be a character from something?!?

Fantasy outfit

Contest-running steampunk

Tough-looking steampunk

Not steampunk

Check out this amazing Tom Vasel cosplay!

Best Tom Vasel look-a-like ever!