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Tycho

We saw an incredible Craigslist ad when we were getting ready to write the strip, an ad which quickly became the strip we were trying to make.  Another ad went up shortly thereafter, in response.  Also good!

This sort of thing happens in the margins of any con; the first of those, anyway.  The second is more likely to be a PAX-specific phenomenon.  In the periphery of any social gathering, tiny conventions are created and dissolved continuously.  When my anonymity was better preserved, I could wander the halls of the attached hotels and bear witness to the full Venn Diagram of geeks as a people.  I want to emphasize that I’m talking about the whole diagram, here.

I mean the entire diagram.

It turns out that used games are a tremendously controversial issue.  Part of the reason response to the comic and post has been so massive is that (aside from our inflammatory presentation) this conversation has been a long time coming.  The thing for the commentariat to do about this issue typically is to carve out as populist a stance as possible, to cluck and tut tut about it so as to ingratiate themselves to you as much as possible, and then follow up by posting a picture of a belt buckle.  That strikes me as a bit precious.  

Because this is the Internet, every argument was spun in a centrifuge instantly and reduced down into two wholly enraged, radically incompatible contingents, as opposed to the natural gradient which human beings actually occupy.

People who buy used games are not pirates, by definition.  Used games (used everything, really) are and will continue to be a legal and protected form of commerce.  Other industries have done what they can to co-opt, destroy, or harvest those markets, but their existence is settled law.  What I have said is that the end result of that purchase from a developer perspective must be indistinguishable.  Isn’t it?  That is the question I couldn’t answer.  I still can’t answer it.  And because I couldn’t, I had to change the way I invested my leisure dollar.

People want to talk about used cars, or libraries, or any other thing really, but I’m not talking about the universe in general - I’m talking about the tiny part of it I have any control over.  That bit up there is the part I can’t resolve: the moral dimension contained within the purchase.  Yes, I’m giving somebody money when I buy used.  Is that sufficient?  What is the end result, and what systems am I sustaining by doing so?  

I’d rather not think about things like this, believe me.  I’d rather be Mr. Perpetual Good Times, but I’m not built that way.  On the whole, I’d say thinking has been a tremendous inconvenience. 

(CW)TB

please don’t insist

Tycho

The wardrums have already begun to pound, and if you are able to interpret the message encoded deep in their rhythm, you’ll hear a tale of warriors - and their terrible battlegrounds.  The warriors I was referring to are:

1.       Will Atkinson

2.       Noah Callaway

3.       Richard Pastrick

4.       Joseph Berg

5.       Kellyn Wolff

6.       Matthew Senne

7.       Steven Schneider

8.       Andrew Thivyanathan

9.       Kirsten Mitchell

10.   Andrei Krotkov

11.   David Levin

12.   Bryce Patten

13.   Michael Bower

14.   Tom Loughead

15.   Eric Chon

16.   Deborah Davis

17.   Brandon Caroll

18.   Christopher McMahon

19.   Alan Dobler

20.   ???????????

And the blood-soaked battlegrounds being:

Round 1: Zombie Dice

Round 2: Bomberman Live

Round 3: Beautiful Katamari

Round 4: A MUSIC GAME

Round 5: Puzzle Bobble

Final Round: ???

PAX is swiftly approaching - if you have not received your badge yet, to please email pax_questions@paxsite.com and we’ll get you squared away.

(CW)TB

Tycho

We’ve known Jim Zubkavich for a long time, and in a way, you probably know him too - his art is everywhere.  He’s a webcomics pioneer, he did the art for that online Zork, and he works for UDON, so he’s literally up to his ass in iconic works for Capcom.  He’s taking some time to kick out a pulpy, dungeon crawler type comic called Skullkickers, so if you have enjoyed his other work (or if you just hate skulls) you should avail yourself of the prequel issue, which is free online through that Comixology thingy.

(CW)TB  

Tycho

There’s a new Blamimation in town.  Well, there’s a new Blamimation, but there’s also a whole new way to experience them - Blamimation Nights.  Find out what it means to you. 

(CW)TB

Gabe

Here is another of our Star Wars Political Cartoons:

 

-Gabe out