Sunday, July 09, 2023

Books of June 2023

Reading

Here is my updated infographic for the books I've read in 2023 - June Edition.

Stats in June - (Year to Date)

Reading Stats

Books Read - 13 (42)Pages Read - 3495 (17335)

Books Read

Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 20) by Tomohito Oda Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 21) by Tomohito Oda
Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 22) by Tomohito Oda Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 23) by Tomohito Oda
The Heroic Legand of Arslan (Volume 16) by Hiromu Arakawa and Yoshiki Tanaka Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 24) by Tomohito Oda
The Heroic Legand of Arslan (Volume 17) by Hiromu Arakawa and Yoshiki Tanaka Empire of Sand by Tasha Suri
Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 25) by Tomohito Oda To Say Nothing of the Dog by Connie Willis
Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 25) by Charles Todd Murder in an Irish Village by Carlene O'Connor
Magic Bleeds by Ilona Andrews

Collage of the covers of the 13 books listed above. June 2023 Covers

Authors

Adrian Tchaikovsky - (1)Alexander McCall Smith - (2)
Angeline Boulley - (1)Hiromu Arakawa - 2 (2)
Ann Leckie - (2)Brandon Sanderson - (1)
Carlene O'Connor - 1 (1)Charles Todd - 1 (4)
Connie Willis - 1 (2)Dan Moren - (2)
Ed Yong - (1)Elizabeth Bear - (1)
Elle Cosimano - (1)Fatima Ali - (1)
Ilona Andrews - 1 (3)Isaac Asimov - (1)
Jim Butcher - (1)Louise Penny - (1)
N. K. Jemisin - (1)Patrica Briggs - (4)
Robin McKinley - (1)Stephen King - (1)
Rick Riorden - (1)Tasha Suri - 1 (1)
Timothy Zhan - (1)Tomohito Oda - 6 (14)
Yoshiki Tanaka - 2 (2)

A word cloud of all the authors above with Tomohito Oda in the largest size.2023 Author Cloud - June Update

Publishing


Publication Range

Earliest Book - 1997 (1953)Most Recent Book - 2022 (2022)

Publications by Decades

2020s - 8 (27)2010s - 3 (11)
2000s - 1 (9)1990s - 1 (4)
1950s - (1)

Books

Source

Borrowed From Public Library - 5 (32)Borrowed From Friends - (2)
My Audible Library - (1)My libro.fm Library - (1)
My "Kindle" Library - (5)My Kobo Library - 8 (12)

Formats

Audio Book - 3 (25)eBook - 2 (10)
eBook (Comic) - 8 (16)Hardcover - (1)

Saturday, July 08, 2023

Books of May 2023

Reading

Here is my updated infographic for the books I've read in 2023 - May Edition.

Stats in May - (Year to Date)

Reading Stats

Books Read - 11 (39)Pages Read - 2979 (13840)

Books Read

Fairy Tale by Stephen King Savor: A Chef's Hunger for More
Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 13) by Tomohito Oda Magic Strikes by Ilona Andrews
Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 14) by Tomohito Oda Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 15) by Tomohito Oda
Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 16) by Tomohito Oda Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 17) by Tomohito Oda
Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 18) by Tomohito Oda Komi Can't Communicate (Volume 19) by Tomohito Oda
A Duty to the Dead by Charles Todd

Collage of the covers of the 11 books listed above. May 2023 Covers

Authors

Adrian Tchaikovsky - (1)Alexander McCall Smith - (2)
Angeline Boulley - (1)Fatima Ali - 1 (1)
Ann Leckie - (2)Brandon Sanderson - (1)
Charles Todd - 1 (3)Connie Willis - (1)
Dan Moren - (2)Ed Yong - (1)
Elizabeth Bear - (1)Elle Cosimano - (1)
Ilona Andrews - 1 (2)Isaac Asimov - (1)
Jim Butcher - (1)Louise Penny - (1)
N. K. Jemisin - (1)Patrica Briggs - (4)
Robin McKinley - (1)Stephen King - 1 (1)
Rick Riorden - (1)Timothy Zhan - (1)
Tomohito Oda - 7 (8)

A word cloud of all the authors above with Tomohito Oda in the largest size.2023 Author Cloud - May Update

Publishing


Publication Range

Earliest Book - 1953Most Recent Book - 2022

Publications by Decades

2020s - 7 (19)2010s - 3 (8)
2000s - 1 (8)1990s - (3)
1950s - (1)

Books

Source

Borrowed From Public Library - 3 (27)Borrowed From Friends - 1 (2)
My Audible Library - (1)My libro.fm Library - (1)
My "Kindle" Library - 4 (5)My Kobo Library - 4 (4)

Formats

Audio Book - 4 (22)eBook - (8)
eBook (Comic) - 7 (8)Hardcover - (1)

Sunday, June 11, 2023

Video Games of May 2023

Given that I put at least 300 hours into Breath of the Wild, it's probably not a surprise that I pretty much only played Tears of the Kingdom after it came out.

I'm excluding a bunch of dipping into to various Mario games because I needed some extra screen shots to acompany my Mario Memories.


My top five games (by play time) for June were:

  1. Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom - I'm really enjoying Tears of the Kingdom. It has the same density of interest that Breath of the Wild did, but the variety of things to do and the interest of those things is much higher. The game feels more vibrant than its predecessor and it's delightful at practically every moment. Also, rocket shields.
    Screenshot, Link stands on broken and mossy rock projection with ring of glowing green text. He's looking out over the clouds of Hyrule, with a few floating islands scattered and a menacing glow under the clouds off to his right.

  2. Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild - I played this a little bit while waiting for the Tears of the Kingdom release, but also to test out our new portable Switch dock. While I think Tears of the Kingdom is more moment to momefffnt fun, Breath of the Wild still has a beauty all of it's own.
    Screenshot, Link rides through a grassy field towards menacing rock projections that look like bones.

  3. Mario Kart 8 - Vroom vroom.
    Screenshot, Rosalina flys her bike towards the camera in front of a giant autumnal tree.


Here's my total play time chart for June:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Tuesday, May 30, 2023

My Most Memorable Mario Levels ... Mlevels?

 This is a weird question, but what’s the level you remember best from a Mario game?

This started kicking around my head when I thought about writing about what my favourite Mario levels would be, and realized that there are some levels I remember really well, some that I remember when I see them again and some that I’m surprised by every time I see them.

I might still write that post about favourites, but the more I thought about it the more interesting the levels I remembered seemed. One thing I think is interesting about is that I don’t necessarily think there’s a link between how much I like a level and how much I remember it, although maybe when I write that other post some helpful insight will come to me.

How much you remember a level is also a bit of a squishy question, because unless I accost you in the street and ask while you’re thinking about something else, your answer is going to change. The more you think about Mario levels the more you’re going to remember. I also started playing some while I was thinking about this to get pictures and that has also warped my own “pure” memories.

So, before I totally lose the thread of my own thoughts, what Mario level do I remember the best?

I think the level I remember best is world 1-2 from Super Mario Bros. (There, short post.)

If I were to go on, which I seem to be doing, I’d say that when someone says Mario, the “Denim denim denim” of the the music starts in my mind and I think about falling into the level, trying to squish both goombas, get the fireflower, fall into that space and hit the coin block, find the star and bash trough the wall, or slide under, or get up top, go into the bonus area, ride the elevator, go into the pipe or ride up and sneak around the back to the warp zone.

I think I remember 1-2 as well as I do because as the younger brother that’s where I got to jump in. I think it’s also more memorable because it’s the first space where you can really try to do different and interesting things. Level 1-1 is noted as a great tutorial level for people who have never played games before and I think that makes it *just* that little bit less interesting, especially when you view it looking back from today.

Overall, with Mario games, I tend to remember early levels better. Those are the ones that I regularly revisited and often have interesting, or unique, spaces or actions.

If I were to go on, which I still seem to be doing, which levels do I remember the best from other Mario games (or at least the ones I remember remembering)?


  • Mario Brothers: It only has one level, and I remember it. I spent quite a lot of time playing this on the Atari and a bit Super Mario Bros 3. Mostly, I remember chasing rotating squares around the edges of the world.
    An Atari screen shot of the original Mario Brothers. Mario is in the middle of the screen facing a liquorice allsort while a turtle menaces from above.
    (Via jimfish on GameFaqs)

  • Super Mario Bros: Other than 1-2 and 1-1, 2-2 is memorable as the first level which really changes how you play when it drops you in the water and its harder to handle the squids than any other enemy you’ve seen before. 2-3 is also memorable in that relief that you’re free of the fish until they start jumping up at you.
    NES-NSO screen shot of Super Mario Bros., level 1-2. Mario is standing under a mustash of dark grey blocks.
  • Super Mario Bros. 2 (USA): I remember level 1-1 and getting dropped down in to the world and navigating vertically rather than horizontally for the first time. It’s the original Mario Bros game I played the least, so it’s not one I have a lot of memories of at all.
    NES-NSO screen shot of Super Mario Bros. 2. It is black except for a door hovering in space, Mario and two clouds.
  • Super Mario Bros. 3: World 1-5, sliding down that hill was pretty mind blowing the first time. The Airship was also pretty cool, but mostly from the music perspective. (Which could probably be another discussion all on its own.)
    NES-NSO screen shot from Suepr Mario Bros. 3. Mario is sitting down sliding down a curved white hill.
  • Super Mario World: This was the game that came with my SNES and I’ve played it so much the whole game lives in my head. That being said the colours and brightness of Yoshi’s house as you start your journey sticks with me. Mechanically, The Yellow Switch Palace, Donut Ghost House and Bowser’s Castle are all things that come to my mind right away.
    SNES-NSO screen shot of Super Mario World. Mario is standing in Yoshi's house (which you can tell because Yoshi's name is on the mailbox. There's a small fire in the fireplace and the roof is a lush mat of trees with bright red fruit. Red, green, yellow and blue birds sit on the roof.
  • Super Mario 64: Hub worlds are going to be a theme as soon as they’re introduced, so don’t be surprised that Peach’s Castle is probably the bit I remember the best. In terms of “real” levels Bob-omb Battlefield sticks in my mind as does Whomp’s Fortress. This post came to mind when I started thinking about how many levels in this game I’m surprised to see on a revisit.
    Super Mario 3D All Stars screen shot - Mario runs across Princess Peach's castle foyer. The floor is grey and white checks and the walls are a mural of trees on a blue sky with clouds.
  • Super Mario Sunshine: Again, the world I remember the best is the hub world. Delfino Plaza is bright and fun and much like the game as a whole, really lets you explore all the weird motion that you didn’t have before. I don’t remember nearly as much about the individual levels, other than maybe the rollercoaster rocket shooting in the amusement park and the introduction to cleaning up gunk in Bianca Hills.
    Super Mario 3D All Stars screen shot - Mario is standing in a fruit market in Delphino Plaza, a pianta plays ukelele while other sell fruit and others wander around.
  • Super Mario Galaxy: There’s something about the Wii that really conjures cosy nights and Galaxy certainly fit into that. I think the level that sticks with me is the intro tutorial area (Gateway Galaxy), where you play tag with the Star Bunnies and then climb a terrace to meet Rosalina. The Comet Observatory Hub also sticks with me, but again the actual levels haven’t really stayed in my head.
    Super Mario 3D All Stars screen shot - Mario jumps down onto a grassy area by a grassy green dome. A purple luma holding coins on sticks looks on. Behind other parts of the space ship, such as the second floor curtains can be seen.
  • Super Mario Galaxy 2: I remember something about Yoshi falling off a vertical wall because I missed getting a berry, and something about penguins in a hemisphere of water. I guess I also remember the hub world … head world? … but, for as well designed the levels are, I think this is game I remember the least about. It doesn’t help that I really struggle to remember which levels are in Galaxy and which are in Galaxy 2.
  • Super Mario 3D World: The world that I remember Sprawling Savanna, partly because it’s the one time the game opens up and really gives you a feeling of space. I like 3D World, but wanted it to be more all the time and this really resonated.
    Super Mario 3D World - Princess Peach dashes across a wide grassy plain, while dressed as a cat. The sun sets a deep orange in the background.
  • + Bowser’s Fury: Rolling Roller Isle is definitely the first thing that comes to mind for this game. Since it may be the hardest bit of the game (maybe) I guess it’s a place I returned to a lot.
    Super Mario 3D World - Mario sits on a platform, dressed as a cat, looking at two large mechanical rollers, one of which is covered in lava.
  • Super Mario Odyssey: The big worlds make the game feel much more memorable overall, but I think my strongest memories are of Bonneton, which is the first area you end up in and New Donk City, which really feels like the pinnacle of the game, even if it’s not near the end.
    Super Mario Odyssey screen shot - Mario stands on a grey hill looking over a town made of hat shapped buildings, including a large hat on a tower. The moon rises bright and yellow behind the tower.


If nothing else, I’m happy that I can stop thinking about this now that I’ve written it. I might come back around and write that favourite levels piece at some point, but I’m glad I’ve recorded my most memorable Mario levels (at least as of May 2023). It’s been interesting to start playing “Tears of the Kingdom” and trying to figure which things have moved in the world and which just aren’t where I remember them being. 



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