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Tycho

Mass Effect 2 is finally in the bag after perhaps thirty hours of interstellar ramblin’, and I’ll be God Damned if they haven’t ended up with something like a new genre.  Bioware’s unsparing assessment of their first go-round has resulted in a taut-ass sky-journey that spends hour after hour cinching itself around your throat.

I suggested a few days ago that the conversations ME2 engenders - conversations which might unfold during wholly spontaneous confabs - recommend the experience and reinforce how distinct different playthroughs can be.  You run into trouble around the sixty or seventy percent complete mark, though, when it rapidly becomes clear that everyone has completed a different sixty or seventy percent.  The formerly vigorous exchange tends to get (shall we say) distilled somewhat.

Sometime over the weekend, my Nook shifted from gadget to device.

For me, “gadget” is an almost pejorative term, reserved for quasi-useful technofetishist totems. If you like phones or whatever, I’m not judging your lifestyle.  I work not three feet from someone whose body slips into some panting, carnal gear while taking in a high-res unboxing video.  What I’m saying is that it’s not my religion, and so its hymns never cross my lips.

The Kindle and the Nook are simply custom shells for a cellular modem attached to an E Ink display, the actual technology that forms the core of your experience with each.  I suspect I’d be perfectly satisfied with a Kindle, or with whatever imminent Korean knockoff rhymes with either.

The Nook has a section called “The Daily” which features new articles every weekday - one relatively upmarket humor piece, alongside a literate assessment of today’s date.  I’ve found these things interesting, useful, worthy of perusal, but more than anything else it introduced the habit: fashioning a place for itself in the day’s continuum.  The sight of it near a bowl of cereal, the front flap folded delicately beneath it, should serve ably as a portrait.  It is my companion.  We are no longer strangers to each other.

I met someone who described themselves as a Kindle stalwart a few days ago who asked me to express what made the Nook superior - I couldn’t really do that.  At the same time, I could tell that he’d had experiences like mine - curiosity and discovery in equal measure - and for him, such moments are indelibly linked with Amazon’s literature machine.  I’m not there myself, not yet, but I get it.  These things are hooked directly into some incredibly human drives.  

(CW)TB out.

say nice things about me

Gabe

Our new book, The Splendid Magic of Penny Arcade: The 11½ Anniversary Edition AKA “Nearly Twelve Years of Bullshit” will be coming out on February 23rd. This is a huge hardcover book full of great stuff including a history of the comic, Stories about PAX and Child’s Play, Interviews, photos, an Art Gallery, A selection of our favorite comics from the past 11 years, and some of our best story-lines. I’m really proud of this book and in order to celebrate its release, Tycho and I will be kicking off a cross country book tour.  Here is the full list of where we’ll be and when we’ll be there.

Penny Arcade Book Tour Schedule

FEBRUARY 23 – SEATTLE
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE – 7 PM
4326 University Way Northeast
Seattle, WA

FEBRUARY 24 – SAN MATEO
BELMONT LIBRARY – 7 PM
1110 Alameda De Las Pulgas
Belmont, CA

FEBRUARY 25 – HUNTINGTON BEACH
BARNES & NOBLE – 7 PM
7881 Edinger Ave #110
Huntington Beach, CA

FEBRUARY 26 – LOS ANGELES
MELTDOWN COMICS – 7 PM
7522 Sunset Blvd
Los Angeles, CA

MARCH 26-28 – BOSTON
PAX EAST 2010
*Signing March 28 @ 1:30 PM*
Hynes Convention Center
900 Boylston St
Boston, MA
www.paxsite.com

MARCH 30 – NEW YORK
KINOKUNIYA – 5:30 PM
1073 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY

MARCH 31 – ST. LOUIS
MAD ART GALLERY – 7 PM
2727 South 12th St
St. Louis, MO

-Gabe out

Gabe

I forgot to mention it on Friday, but the latest episode of PATV went up. This is the first of two parts detailing our incredible ping-pong victory over Bungie.

-Gabe out