Military Historian

Kuan Yida, active pilot for the Tribal Liberation Force, has also been assigned the duties of maintaining a historical archive for his militia corporation Huang Yinglong.

So far, most of his entries of been of his fellow corporation members’ contributions to the war effort, understandably so, as well as sharing some tasty looking recipes (they say imitation is the best form of flattery).

Recently, Kuan has taken this one step further, and has started expanding his military records to encompass all notable contributions to the Tribal Liberation Force since the accursed war began.

First on his list of dramatis personnae? Matar Colonel Roc Wieler. READ MORE

Optimism

So I mentioned to a pilot on my squad, “Hey, it’s a new record. My good mood didn’t get sullied until 1 PM Monday.”

They replied saying I am so very negative and bitter.

I retorted, “Not at all. Last week my mood was ruined by 10 AM, so I’m making positive progress. Next week hopefully it will last even longer!”

See? I am an optimist at heart.

OOC: Delays & Progress

It is said experience is what you get when you don’t get what you want. I’m gaining lots of experience lately.

The digital submission of Bio was rejected. Why? Boontard here didn’t code it in the correct format. You would think my distributor might have thought to inform me, but no; I had to inquire myself after anxiously awaiting its appearance on iTunes for over a month.

Not their fault. I messed it up. Will submit again this week, in the proper format.

Also struggling getting my Autotune VST plugin working and may have to resort to 80s style robot voice unless one of my readers can offer an assist.

On the plus side, PyjamaSam, a longtime fan of club music, made the effort to listen to a selection of tracks from the two and a half hours I have recorded thus far for Mendre.

His valuable feedback was definitely welcome, and while of praise (and surprise I think), also offered some critical exposure of weaknesses that reveal my lack of experience with this genre.

Sam also had an interesting idea and offer that I just might take him up on.

So thanks, Sam, for helping me strive towards a better end product for my fans.

Of other note, training for my half marathon is coming along quite well, but between training and being overwhelmingly busy at work, I’m finding it a challenge to login to Eve for any substantial amount of time, pursue my artistic endeavours in 3D, or to write epic epics of epicness on this blog.

But there is a light at the end of the tunnel, so as always I draw strength, and am thankful for, the patience and support of my readers, fans and friends.

With summer coming to an end, I hope you all had some good parties, enjoying the warm weather, listening to One Night of Roc (if you haven’t bought it yet just go spend the $10 and do so right now, seriously).

Roc on

More protein bars

“Well sir, we’ve got peanut butter, honey, and crispy treats; unless you want to eat protein powder that is…”

I smiled.

5 minute PB Protein Bars


INGREDIENTS:

  • 3/4 cup of natural honey
  • 1 1/2 cup of natural peanut butter
  • box of crispy treats
  • 364 grams whey protein (12 scoops roughly)

METHOD:

  • combine honey, peanut butter and protein in a bowl.
  • fold in crispy treats.
  • roll into individual bars and freeze overnight.

NUTRITIONAL VALUE:

Each bar contains roughly 200 – 300 calories and 40 – 60 grams of protein.

ALTERNATIVES:

  • cocoa, honey and coconut

Blog Banter #20 Spoiled Children

Welcome to the twentieth installment of the EVE Blog Banter, the monthly EVE Online blogging extravaganza created by CrazyKinux. The EVE Blog Banter involves an enthusiastic group of gaming bloggers, a common topic within the realm of EVE Online, and a week to post articles pertaining to the said topic. The resulting articles can either be short or quite extensive, either funny or dead serious, but are always a great fun to read! Any questions about the EVE Blog Banter should be directed to crazykinux@gmail.com. Check out other EVE Blog Banter articles at the bottom of this post!

With the recent completion of the 3rd installment of the Hulkageddon last month, @CyberinEVE, author of Hands Off, My Loots!, asks: “Griefing is a very big part of EVE.  Ninja Salvaging, Suicide Ganking, Trolling, and Scamming are all a very large part of the game.  What do you think about all these things?  You can talk about one, or all…but just let us know your overall opinion on Griefing, and any recommendations you may have to change it if you think it’s needed.”

Immortals. Respected, revered gods of infinite space. Masters of destiny, commanders of ships that are beyond comprehension to mere man. Shapers of the universe, that is how we like to see ourselves.

Closer to the truth is that we are privileged and spoiled children, rich kids who balk when every little thing doesn’t goes our way. Yes, that titan class ship cost several billion isk – that same isk that could’ve sustained an entire region’s civilization for at least a decade; too bad for you, pilot.

But I was griefed, Roc; that’s not fair! Who said anything about life having to be fair? Get over it.

Most capsuleers don’t fly solo; they prefer the safety that comes from hunting in packs. Why target something that could actually fight back when you can just blob things? Prey on the weak, the defenseless, that should be the slogan of the pod pilot.

It isn’t as if you aren’t given recourse. You can have your revenge, without CONCORD interference, for up to thirty days after the incident. I know, space is big, and it’s nearly impossible to find a single ship in its vastness.

You could also put a bounty on another pilot; make it high enough and someone might actually hunt them down for you and serve up that revenge cold, just the way papa likes it.

It’s a harsh universe out there. Man up.

As a player, my view is opposite that of my character. I prefer the Jay and Silent Bob approach. The anonymity of the internet does nothing but enable poor behaviour when it comes to video games. I’ve been taunted by 10 year olds on XBox Live, as they squat on my corpse in Halo 3, reminding me how badly I suck. I’ve been ganked in EVE by multiple wing fleets, as they squat on my corpse, reminding me how badly I suck… wait, well, you get the idea.

Regardless of real age, many players abuse anonymity, resorting to being spoiled children who will never know consequence. Flawed mechanics? Maybe.

But man, there are times when I want to just reach through the screen to one of those grinning asshats on the other side that derives some sense of real life toughness and accomplishment from a victory in a video game and punch them in the face … hard.

It sounds silly on their end when you think about it; real self worth through virtual means. Get a life.

It sounds silly on my end when you think about it; letting a game get me so angry that I wish physical violence upon a human being I’ve never even met. Get a life.

Man, I’m on a good ramble now. What the hell is my point here?

I think ultimately I’m trying to say that a game is just a game; it’s meant to entertain. If you don’t like the particular game you’re playing, for ANY reason:

  • griefing
  • poor support
  • flimsy development
  • lack of interesting things to do
  • unusable stability on MAC
  • etc, etc

Then you need to remember that  ultimately it is just a game. You can put it down and walk away. You can go for a leisurely stroll or run, maybe even a bike ride; feel some real life sunshine on your face, maybe a breeze through your hair.

Never lose perspective on why we play games in the first place.