Tuesday, October 1, 2024

For the Master- Sifu Review

 





 This game- Sifu, and IP that was released originally on PC and PS4, I did not expect to make it to the Nintendo Switch.  It was developed by Sloclap originally in 2022. Like WarFrame and other PC games, it receives the usual idiotic designation of unplayable on the handheld. It consistently annoys me hearing this label thrown around because of people's fixation on the 90's era of handheld gaming. As I've said many times, no matter how powerful handhelds become, people in general will still expect, and accept no more than incomplete minigames on the platform.

  This story follows a protagonist, who's master was murdered by a rogue student. This student has a large following of gangs, spreading across a corporation that has amassed large wealth. The rogue student- Yang, led an attack on the dojo after being disgraced and ends up taking out the sifu and the protagonist, who is just a child at the time. A talisman heals him just in time, and imbues him with the power to survive fatal attacks at the cost of many years to his life. He vows revenge, and goes after the henchmen, gaining information to track down Yang and avenge the sifu.



  This game uses a button sequence combo system similar to what Shenmue 3 attempted with directional input. It does this very well and has a very clever counter system and defensive options, which I always say is essential in group brawlers. So many games miss this mark and end up being mashers with no strategy, or just unfair enemy oppression with no defensive options. This game also has a takedown feature that you can used on stunned enemies that many of you might recognize from games in the early 2000's. It is not able to be abused, as enemies will read it and power up while reversing it, gaining health, if you do it too much. I loved that addition. You also have a very nuanced dodging mechanic that is the heart of your defense in later levels of the game, as just blocking will not be enough. In fact, you have an integrity meter that can be broken if you block excessively. It is similar in that way to Nioh, where you have to vary your style and approach. There is some exploration, but really it's to find secrets to open areas. Finding keys allows you to unlock doors and shortcuts in earlier levels which you need to a degree. When you reach the later point of levels and the game, you will earn, through unlockables, the ability to fast track to or near the boss of the stage.


 On the matter of bosses, this deserves its own discussion. I am a very big snob with bosses in games, for a reason. They make or break a title, and sometimes, being too easy, too few or simplistic in design, can bring down an otherwise amazing game. I remember playing Wind Waker for the Gamecube and shaking my head to how a great game had such an underwhelming final boss. I used to praise Monster Hunter for its bosses, but honestly, some of the games in the series can tend to have very repetitive and easy bosses that only get slightly annoying when they rage, due to the speed and health buffs. I think Sifu does and awesome job meeting this balance. I watched a streamer play Elden Ring, which I think sets the benchmark for what boss design should be in games. Many of the Souls games meet this mark. These are bosses that adapt and change, and force you to use your entire arsenal of skills and knowledge. Nioh did this as well. Sifu executes this very well. However, the curve for learning the early boss patterns was very steep, and it wasn't until near the end of the game that I began to get the ability to fight through the stages and bosses with some repetition. The girl with the staff and old woman boss with the whip were highly annoying, but in an overall good way. You had to use your directional dodges, which called for utilization of reflexes. It was always extremely satisfying to beat a boss in that game, and even some mid bosses, who could be tough.



  The final boss, Yang, had  several forms and is a very defensive fighter. You can't wail on him like you usually can at first with last bosses. It brought back memories of the last boss in Earth Wars, where he was hard from the very beginning, and had you wondering how you would make it to his other forms. You have to use every skill in your arsenal. I really marveled at the way they make you have to both block, and parry in this fight. You can't lean on any one skill. You will also be directional dodging. You do not have takedowns available to you in this fight in the conventional sense, but you can access pivotal takedown maneuvers by ultimately breaking his countenance, which is essentially the goal of that fight. You are given a way of sparing him, which I thought about during the fight, as he tries to reason with the hero, saying that he has spent the last decades since his assault on the dojo atoning for his wrongdoings. However, the fight was so hard I didn't even think to try it. You  would have to break his countenance twice, letting him reset twice, in  his final form. I had no intention of tackling that. It has a satisfying ending, and you unlock some great extras and missions that have meaning, and are more than fluff. I found myself playing those missions, in order to unlock different outfits. I would also welcome playing this game on the harder difficulties in the future. 


  It was quite the ride, and was quite poetic in nature. I am a longtime practitioner and appreciator of martial arts, and this game pays good homage to the arts, and has an extensive movelist and techniques. It focuses more on the story than it does the principles of martial arts, but it pays more tribue than Shenmue 3 did. I would actually say I love the game. I had a concept for a martial arts movie based on a real argument of principles I had with my own master years ago, which ends similar to this game, where the villain is not so obviously a villain. I thought of it when I got to the end of this game. This is tribute to you, master. 9/10

Sunday, September 8, 2024

2 New Albums- The Opera and Ever Full

 I've dropped 2 new albums. One is from a 2010 opera that I have not yet completed, titled, "The Ink in Me." This was a project I ended up stretching out over a few subsequent albums including the Magnum Opus series. I rerecorded a few takes, but this album contains all of the original takes and dialogue. The new album is "To Be Ever Full." This is a passionate project I have contemplated for the past year, as I completed my schooling and my Computer Science degree, wondering if I had it in me to rise again with an experimental album, returning to drums. I was very aprehensive, but did get the job done, I'm proud to say. Here they are. Look the works up on Spotify or ITunes.







Friday, August 2, 2024

Cyber Security Case Study 2

 New Scam Tactics



Here is another update of Social Engineering techniques used by people using Door dash. There have been several scams on the app over the past year, but I encountered a new one while dashing the other night after a long shift of work.


  I would be remised to skip the back story in this event. I have just had a whirlwind of a year, with several housing changes and employment surprises, having started travel agency work late in 2023, and had a contract ended suddenly by a company due to discrimination reasons in North Carolina, while in the process of trying to financially recover. This spawned the opening of an EEOC case that would not be heard for another 6 months. In the meantime, I was in an employment gap, that thankfully, my agency was able to lessen and get me reassigned, prematurely albeit to the North East region. As you already know, travel and re-establishment of housing is in itself a huge expense. I took this on in the middle of financial crisis and relocated for the impromptu assignment. I  was needless to say, behind behind the 8 ball. Being that there is a delay before getting the first payment of your assignment naturally, the recurring bills I have piled up to the sky in the process, to the point where side jobs and gigging became necessary to provide daily food needs and get by. I had a few contracts come up with my business, but they were from contacts still assuming I was in the NC area, so I had to decline. At that point, the first check would probably not get me ahead at all, or even on track, but just close the gap. I turned, during this time to the Dash app, having no idea what I was in store for.....


I have to start paying more attention to the texts and the orders themselves. There's a lot of dialogue and text on the screen to unpack, and I tend to do this while multitasking at my main job. I have found a new scam which was embarrassing for me because I am cyber security. Apparently, door dash knows about it and puts the exclaimer in the authentication text then send, but if you are flying around like I was, you likely won't read it. These people put in an order, watch for when you arrive, and call you from a number listed as Door Dash. When you answer the phone, you are asked several authentication questions, to verify your account. Right there, because this is common practice when you call Door Dash, it is the first concealed flag. After taking this information, they confirm that you will get paid for the canceled dash, and to confirm the last 8 digits of your dasher direct card. They carefully craft the dialogue they use, because if they asked slightly more or less, even though flustered and busy, I likely would have caught them.

 They generate a few codes to be sent to authenticate your account, and ask that you read the code to them, another thing that many companies do in fact do. After this, they tell you to check the app and that the balance should have increased to reflect pay for the canceled job. It doesn't show anything, and then they say to proceed, and that the change should reflect within the next few minutes. At this point, it is highly likely that you have not read the messages in full yet. And then there are the people that were under attack before Door Dash caught it.

 Honestly, these kinds of issues can be further mitigated with self-authentication on the client side. Your token should be self-generated and acknowledged on your device. This can eliminate the need to differentiate the devices and ensure they are the actual user. A phone number is its own token and points to the holder of the authentic device. You should never be in scenarios at all where you are asked for authentication information at any point. And by conditioning users to do this on occasion, you lower their guard. Now it seems like a legitimate approach. I've always had an issue with this in general because it's sloppy protocol.

  One thing I noted was that when I called customer support after I was very suspicious at the call, the call intakes mirrored each other, and I noted this to the agent. I commend the fact that they released messages to alert the scam activity, but there should be protocol changes made. A few months ago, a woman was murdered because the Dash app did not protect from a malicious user who set her up to be shot trying to retrieve money from a customer for a ransom. She was in the dark, and the scam artist was effectively in the dark themself. All they do is use the app as a customer and use that to launch the scam. You should not be able to authenticate absent the phone device that you use. That is your token. And it is a good idea to implement mandatory biometrics. It would be all too possible in the near future to intercept key information and authenticate on another device. If a phone number is used as a tag, a connection should be established between the phone device to complete authentication. With that strategy alone, the attack I fell victim to would have never worked.

 Going forward, I personally will, and encourage others to always read the dialogue of any message carefully, no matter how long it takes. Consider all information you are asked for as sensitive. Many companies will act irritated with you for doing due diligence, but that is because they are ignorant to the cyber security dangers. Ignore that and slow it down. Your money, and even life can be at risk.

Saturday, July 20, 2024

Experts

 




 I'm just mindblown right now at what has become of the world today. I was watching a youtube video just recently, and it brought me back to a topic I discussed on my Magnum Opus series. It regards what an expert is in essence. On the record, I talk about how people who are considered connoisseurs on a subject, in the times we live in, don't even talk in depth about that very thing. This album was completed in 2014.

 Fast forward to 2024, I'm watching a video of a youtuber I admire, who has someone on as a guest who is considered a calisthenics guru. Now, I have been heavily into both weight training and calisthenics throughout my life. I have trained people at times, and have trained at a very high level. But due to my "status", I get no respect as anything near a guru. That's besides the point. Calisthenics is the art of using body mechanics and weight to train the body from head to toe. You master how you can get the most out of your body and maximize its potential using only resistance and body weight. I've done countless maneuvers and created some of my own. I'm literally watching this proclaimed diety of the discipline talk about how one of the secrets to doing impressive upper body movements is that they don't work legs to keep their weight low. He then stumbles through each lower body workout looking like a fool. So what this idiot is referring to are the videos they desperately put up across the web for your clicks and likes, that show them doing flag poles, handstands, v-sits and other gravity defying moves. They want to generate a wow from you and get revenue. The last thing they actually care about is creating a maximized body, and because they attach themselves to the discipline of calisthenics and have your respect, that equals mastery and supremacy of the discipline. Wow!

  I have a program, one of the many I created, called "Road Work" which entails jumping jacks, burpees, and mountain climbers. There are 3 other moves in the workout, but the last three I listed are core calisthenic maneuvers. When the heck did body weight movements only entail working your arms and back and nothing else? That's because these "gurus" lock in on the simplistic stuff that catches your eye, and choose to call that the entire essence of calisthenics. This is disgusting. There is a word called comprehensive. A big bro of mine posts instagram shorts of boxing, medicine ball workouts, and other full body moves. We used to train together years ago at work. What we do is calisthenics. But beyond just this topic, this is what has happened to society today. Every single thing has become watered down. If you just google any topic or subject right now. The exhaustive list will show you the most superficial and basic approach to it compared with what used to be available several years ago. A colleague of mine said that this could be due to the deep dive into AI and preparing the net and the infrastructure for that to be the authority on information in the near future. Either way, this is very bleak. People have been conditioned to think very shallow on every single topic or not at  all, and avoid depth in all forms.


  A somebody who craves depth when I get into something, this makes me very put off by new ventures. I find that I just do a lot of digging in the crates and look backs at old works, because if not, you can actually start to forget how to do a deep dive into studying something. That is very scary, but necessary to mention. I think I might start to cover deep dives on topics as a series on one of my outlets or host it myself. You see, another issue I have is that in this age of censorship, the internet and its algorithm constantly search for ways to block out and cancel the uninitiated. I've seen celebrity content creators post some very questionable material that is left online and called educational, yet when I do a music video for black history month depicting the history of African Americans and how it is celebrating their victory and creating what I call "Day of the Free," Youtube takes it down and calls it offensive. They do the same thing with an instrumental jazz jam session I did in the same vein. We've gone from the Information Age to the Age of Suppression. They don't want to hear that, but it's true.

 My next wave of initiatives is going to be creating a way to host content on a new and less enterprise level. Perhaps it will catch on, and become something, but I don't like the idea of slowly being indoctrinated and silenced. Also, after the longest drought of my career, the next record is finally in production. I feel like the forces of the world did not want me to make another album. Every time I was inspired to the point of waking up with concepts, several things would happen that would kill any chance at a recording session or even laying down tracks. Now, I forced it, and once I get the process started, it's only a matter of time. It usually takes getting 2 tracks for the album done to solidify the record happening, and that has just about happened, so haters, stay tuned. LOL.

Monday, May 6, 2024

Inspiration

 






   "Be not afeard; the isle is full of noises, sounds, and sweet airs, that give delight, and hurt not. Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments will hum about mine ears; and sometimes voices, that, if I then had waked after long sleep, will make me sleep again; and then in dreaming, the clouds, methought would open, and show riches ready to drop upon me, that when I waked I cried to dream again."


  I have so many thoughts to unravel... I don't remember what I was going to write here but this is quote from "The Idiot" which I have yet to finish. Long book.

New Works

 


NEW WORKS




 Greetings All. As the time unfolds, I am finally nearing school's completion. I hope to work towards expanding the IT services and the applications that I am developing. I have been working with the band and gigging over the past few months, so I haven't really don't much recording, but the writing and recording bug have been biting, just in many directions. I am currently working on finishing the autobiography and perhaps I will begin work on a new Sci-Fi novel TBA. I have more than enough essays written to facilitate the beginning of that project. And perhaps a new album at some point as well. I usually end a music project with at least a fraction of work for the next one done just in case. But the biggest bug that's been biting me is the fact that I haven't painted in so long. It feels alien at this point, and so I put together this brief reintroduction piece that I pretty much abandoned after short time, as I ran out of ideas. But at least I'm getting the reps back in. This piece was inspired by a picture I took from an interview recently of the UFC President Mr. Dana White. Anyways, stay tuned, as I know the essays have been very scant on this blog, but they will be coming back out soon.

Thursday, March 7, 2024

Cyber Fraud Case Study 1

 Here I will educate on how deceptive cyber criminals are and what you can look out for. I've encountered many scams over the years that used various forms of social engineering, but in recent times, you will be floored to see the methods used. Tenacity is their main weapon. I have spoken in the past about prior attempts I encountered in my experimentation, and as a client. The world of Cybersecurity is said to be wide open for employment opportunities. I haven't see this personally, as I only get job rejections and see rare postings, but in honesty, the field has to be wide open, because the criminals are more psychotic and maniacal than ever. The level of robotic sociopathic behavior they will exhibit will blow you away, to the point you actually refuse to believe


 Recently, I was contacted on What'sApp by an individual proposing a part time and full-time opportunity. I had never heard of the person, and no clear entity was given at first. Being that I've been searching for remote work for some time, I decided to look into it. I recently encountered a few fools on Facebook pretending to sell trailers and cars to loop people into account stealing scams. I could go on for hours about the many scams I confronted people on. What you will find interesting is how dogmatic and forceful they are. They will argue about the merit and legitimacy of the business, even attacking you, for hours or even days, simply hoping that you break down eventually and take the bait.

  I was told I would get contact from a superior afterward with details about the job. I always tell companies, including the lender I used for my trailer, that legitimate companies have to take care to have very good ethical compliance when dealing with customer information and transactions, so as not to mirror the behavior of cyber criminals. I said the same thing to these people. I found out  that the company is BandCamp music apparently, and I didn't see much in the way of research. I was told I submit tasks for increasing visibility of music for artists. Oddly, the page I was directed to had a balance already in an account, and you clicked a button to assign the task, then you get a fraction of the amount generated. It was just as convoluted as it sounds. The records that showed were old pop records that had their play almost a decade ago from artists like John Legend and Adele. It looked very suspicious.

I made a login, and then for some reason, my trainer had me log into their account to complete their tasks. I then asked about training, and was told it isn't needed, which was odd because I thought that's what we were doing according to the instructions given at the outset. I was then ordered to go back to my account and complete the same kinds of tasks. After I was done, I was said to have accumulated money that I could extract to my account. This is where I got really interested, and as you can see in the dialogue I captured, I began to question to see if they would quit while they were ahead. I explained my knowledge of cyber security, and the comical condescending tone that she took was breathtaking. You can see by her dialogue, that no matter what red flags I exposed, until she was in handcuffs, I was nothing but a stupid fool and potential victim to her, regardless of the awareness I clearly showed to her. That's when I became really aware of the sociopath personality these people have. They are trained to be like pit bulls that bite and scratch until they succeed. All humanity stripped away.

 They stated that for security, they used crypto currency. I was then instructed to provide my crypto address. This required me to open a new crypto wallet, as PayPal's is now down due to a merge issue with Europe. I set up my account and linked the address, but was required to do more tasks. Below, you can see screenshots of the experience. You'll notice a staff level next to your icon. Apparently, this raises as you complete these tasks of pressing a green button that assigns a song to a list. The person guiding me was apparently from Germany, according to them. If you look at the layout, it makes no sense. And what I found interesting is that my trainer/manager, or whatever she was, thanked me for helping her complete her tasks, when I completed the training that wasn't training. After I had exhausted my tasks, I tried to get more, and was told that I have to deposit at least 100USD in order to reset my task counter on my portal so I could click the green button more to earn cash. I was instructed to contact Customer Service each time I needed to do this reset, which itself is a huge red flag and quite stupid. I'm reasoning the entire time with this person, explaining to her that it only made things more odd with her denying how bad the layout and protocol looked to an observer. Take a look at the captures below and study them.











I really wanted to cut off and block the person, but for studying purposes, I resisted, because I really wanted to see how far they were willing to go. The site itself is not very impressive. You can put together those pages and layouts today in minutes with the templates that exist out there. What was impressive is the slide show that she was willing to fabricate and lie through for hours. This made the clown who pretended to be a house wife looking to sell me a car on Facebook for over a day, look like child's play. They have carefully written scripts typing confidently about percentages of return and remuneration etc. It's designed to intimidate and confuse. By the time they ramble on for hours, you will be convinced that it is lunacy for it to be a scam at that point. And that's exactly what they want you to think. When I pointed out the factors that made it a scam and put them before her, she went on for over an hour, livid at the claim and acting as if I was crazy, even stating that she was well aware of the penalties of cyber criminal activity and would never be so stupid as to participate. This is how disrespectful these clowns are. Until you lock them up, you are nothing but a stupid clown to them.


  Eventually, the punchline I kept asking for came. I was told that each account needs to have a 100USD balance - which is a crypto equivalent, in order to be reset with tasks. This amount was the responsibility of the worker, who would then receive that money on the back end as revenue when they submit tasks going forward. So basically, you are paying to work, and they promise you'll get money on the back end. That's the point where I had enough intel, and I could assess and display how these criminals have advanced over the past decade. They are constantly finding new ways to drop the guards of their victims, even if it means running a marathon in the other direction. Even robbing you for a penny is worth it to these idiots, because they do it for the thrill and the bigger picture. I was chased for months by QuickStar Productions to scam me for $75 with a campaign for a fraudulent music release that did not exist out of a Maryland office that did not exist. Today, they are willing to make their efforts more elaborate and diligent, even trying to use some legitimate sources in the process. Be on the aler to the individuals.


  Many of these idiot companies overlook my resume, shred it, send me a rejection letter, and hire trained monkeys to pick up their phones and drool on their keyboards. But if people were really about security and awareness, they would be looking for who can uncover attacks like this and save potentially millions of dollars. Let this be a lesson. Who of your applicants is putting together a knowledge base like this on their own, due to having a passion for the field? Jokatech



Tuesday, January 9, 2024

Leaving Mainstream Gaming Platforms

 Finished with Mainstream Gaming Consoles



 I've been an avid handheld gamer for over 3 decades, and I've always loved being able to game on the go. Since the early 90's, I was a supporter of every major and minor company in the handheld space. I had almost every Gameboy iteration, briefly a few Sega handhelds, and of course Sony's handhelds, which is a key part of this discussion later on. When it comes to home consoles, I still own and play them, and I've seen the shift in era of updates, which I've come to accept. However, there is a line I have to draw.

  Nintendo has always been a very principled company that will go against the grain to do what they feel is morally right. And that's one of the reasons I've always stood behind them. Many of their unpopular choices have gone on to be mimicked, or gain popularity over time, such as embracing Indie games as a main focus. 

 I was online the other day and saw a very stupid comment by some idiot in a forum. He decried the notion that what gaming companies are doing right with updates is akin to the Don Mattrick doomsday scenario. He went on to normalize the practice as if it is a legitimate security measure. And he was so smug it annoyed me because he has no idea how stupid he is. When updates started heavily back in the early 2000's, needed features were presented as the software or platform matured. I'm not going to reiterate the history that I've already broken down in a past post here. However, as I stated, I was very skeptical about how updates became a forced norm in all tech industries. No one seemed to blink, like the bots most people are. However, now, at this point every company has bought in.

  I have a Nintendo Switch that has been offline for the past 5 months completely. I've played it a bit over the time, but have not really gotten into any games, so it sat for quite a while, as I was moving several times. Earlier in the morning, I go to play Ring Fit Adventure, and I'm stopped by an update notification. I am not in an active network at the time, so I elect to skip the notification and play my game. I get a message that until I update, I will not be able to play most of my games. This struck me as very odd, because my system wasn't even online at all since shortly after the last update, so how would it know that a new one was needed, with no reference to a network attached server. That's when it hit me. I realized that the update blocks that we get are actually initiated by counters that are placed inside of the last update script on your system. The counter expires at a certain point, which they plan on having a new system update out by. This is specifically applicable to system firmware updates.


  So you don't have to be online at all. If the company failed to put out an update, which would likely never happen, there would be a sea of bricked systems that popped up periodically due to this disgusting practice. That's why when you see most updates, they are empty downloads with no noticeable changes at all. This is because it is simply patching a counter onto your system to keep you on a leash. This goes back to the old argument that some conservative gamers have made about the new age concept  of not actually owning any of your games. There is a great deal of truth to that at this point. If I was not able to establish a network connection somehow, which I barely did, there was no workaround to allow me to play a game that I paid money for and supposedly own. And this is also a physical copy by the way


 The poster on the forum acted as if it was a needed security measure. The truth is that there are other ways to protect a system. If the concern is homebrew software touching the system's precious network, you can simply create a hash screener that will block online interaction without the recognized hash from the latest update patch. It is easy to isolate units to offline only. They're not trying to protect your system or their network. They are trying to play police and bully everyone to punish the few. That stupid update practice literally only serves to block you from your own content.

 Now that I have experienced this, my love for Nintendo, or any mainstream systems has faded largely. I will be transitioning to only homebrew systems in the future. I don't mind playing online, or even going online, but the fun is ripped out of gaming when I'm facing looking at a bricked system if I don't periodically check in with the principle. That is not ownership. That's borrowing. If that's the case, I should be able to get the thousands of dollars I've paid in game purchases back at any time. Can I? NO! This is why I'm happy to have modded my Sony systems. I don't collect games to simply be borrowing them in actuality.

 Like some Youtube Collectors have stated, the days where you had a Super Nintendo, Playstation, or Dreamcast were so much better simply for the fact that you had your games and they were yours to collect and use as you wish. With Systems I'll tolerate the update culture, because they are stationary for the most part. But with handhelds, I will not tolerate being in chains.

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Intro to the Placebo Effect

 Placebo Effect


So many healings to our ailments are in the control of our minds. New album coming very soon.


Here is a new painting after over a year of inactivity.



Tuesday, June 6, 2023

The Twisted Chain- Astral Chain - Game Review

 

ASTRAL CHAIN- Review







  Next up in the review box, is a game that lived up to the hype that it should have received. It also got in its own way in certain aspects. This is Astral Chain, developed by Platinum games, yet surprisingly published by Nintendo. It was advertised as a very left field game for the Nintendo Switch, where you have to master odd controls as you maneuver your character along with the Legion companions that you partner with. The game is another dystopian game in a futuristic setting, similar to Earth Wars, where humanity has been all but eliminated, save a few colonies protected by a brillian scientist and his initiative. His name is Yoseph, and from the very start, he has a very sinister nature and aggressive drive to maximize the potential of the Legion physiology and genetics. The Legions are the invading creatures responsible for the destruction in the world, but they also hold a great deal of powerful assets, and Yosef has managed to find a way to control and harness their power. A rogue accomplice of his, named Jena is on the loose wreaking destruction with the Legion army at her disposal, and you are tasked with finding and taking her down. In this game, you are a police officer, so you spend a great deal of the game completing various tasks in everyday life, such as finding parents, catching fleeing criminals and protecting the public. It is actually very rewarding. There is a merit system attached to all jobs that gets your rank and power increased. I didn't do a tremendous amount of them on the first playthrough.

  In the game, you do have a vehicle, but it isn't something you ride often or on command. I wish you did, as the action bike levels were very intense and fun. They were very challenging. The movement mechanics have you click the left analog stick to sprint and you have a dodge button with A while the right trigger is you attack button. Your Right bumper unleashes your Legion and your left one retrieves them. They each have different abilities and combat skills that they can learn and use to help you on your mission such as the bulk Legion who can lift heavy objects and the sword legion that can cut wires. These skills will help you often in missions and in combat. You have an Iris machine that you can activate with the start button that gives a grid allowing you to visualize information about your surroundings. As you combat enemies, you will have the same standard weapon types. You have a heavy sword, a baton, and a small pistol. You can upgrade and get better versions of these. I did not upgrade very much in this game, and improved my Legions rather late in the game. There is an item system, where many different foods you can buy from vending machines and find in the world will increase defense, offense, or recharge of your special meter with various sacrifices. As you destroy enemy legions you gather healing energy orbs, which made combat enjoyable. Up until the end of the game, boss battles felt more tiring than difficult. 



  The level design was very good, and the missions were good, but had auto save, and never felt too long. You had puzzles at times that took a bit of time to figure out. There were always hidden side missions and levels that fleshed out more of the story. You are the twin to a sister who were created in some kind of mysterious sense, and children of Captain Howard. While on a mission early in the game, he has to sacrifice himself to save both twins, and your twin has a hard time getting past the loss. Often times, they run off to be heroic, and eventually get gravely injured on a mission, losing their life briefly. They are in a coma for a long time, and you eventually get them back due to some of Yosef's scientific miracles. You come to find that it was at a price. The Jena that you chase for much of the game reveals that she actually wants to foil wicked plans of Yosef, and provides convincing evidence before her demise.


 What I wanted to focus on was the convoluted menus and game interface. They are extremely annoying at times, and make action levels and combat very impossible at times. There is platforming in the game, but it isn't too much of an issue. In boss fights and when facing hordes, such as when fighting the clones in the later game, which I won't spoil, it is too clunky trying to change Legions effectively and use items. Many times, while doing this, the game doesn't pause, but just slows down. Where the idiocy of the controls really shines is in the last boss fight. It was memorable to say the least. Thankfully, in this game you have an AED item, which gives you a maximum of 7 lives or as few as 3 if you have some in stock. I didn't stock up on them alot, but I had a few, and they can be game breakers to be honest, because as you're gettting clapped by the enemies in the later game, you get several do-overs. The last boss tested this to the max. You face Yosef in the end, who is a very memorable boss. He has over 4 forms. He is also extremely fast. There is a hyper mode that you unlock with your legion in the later part of the game that give you a fusion with your legion with increased strength, speed, and health. It lasts for a limited time, and needs a meter to be built. Building the meter is extremely hard, as you have to perform perfect link attacks and counters. I blew my fusion mode on the sub boss like an idiot.



   Noah, as the last boss calls himself, fuses with all of the clones that he created. After fighting him on a rooftop, you face his energy orb, and then you face him in a hyper state, and then you face his critical hyper state. I shudder to think how he would be on hard mode, but the fight was robbed of fun factor by the clunky nature of trying to switch legions as he took them down, and cycle in items to my wheel in order to heal. I also got caught in executing combo strings and being open, because it's not easy to buffer your combos in the game. Everything you do takes so much freaking time, that he's already blasting you by the time you turn around. And he is equipped with several instant kill laser beams and bombs. Even with the AED, I lost to him a lot of times, and almost broke my system in rage. But it was also refreshing to see such a well done Last Boss. It was very tense when you do beat him, because you will be on your last legs as you do. I was afraid he would have another form. But he did finally fall.




  The ending saw your twin appear to sacrifice themself to hold off Noah as you finish him. However, one of their clones is preserved and seems to be the twin, although stripped of memory. You take over the colony as Yosef did and his secretary becomes the acting director in his old position. There isn't a ton of closure in the game, as you have more missions to continue, and the game essentially goes on from there. It gives it a great deal of replayability, but I would like to have seen more back story and information on new threats. I will enjoy getting into it further, on a harder difficulty. It was a great game, and in a twisted way, Awesome!  9/10

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Life Mission

 Life Missions



I've had a lot of experiences and ideas in the recent past. Leading up to my last album, and afterward, I've gone through a great deal of transformation and growth. I even thought of doing a stand-up comedy special. I recorded a brief skit a while back on my computer that I have to track down, but it's more of a side thought right now. School has been very rigorous and work, dealing with new clients and trying to expand my business.

  I'm currently almost half-way through my Computer Science degree. It's quite an accomplishment in itself, as this was the degree that I sought back in high school, but put on hold to pursue a trade that turned into a career. Now, all these years later, I have multiple IT certifications and half of a computer science degree all from my ambition to get there. 

  After the release of my latest album "Never", I got so busy with my business and education that I've completely gotten sidetracked from some art projects and even practicing in general. That always feels very odd to me. I actually, as is the custom, had some portion of writing materials completed for the possibility of a future album shortly after "Never's" release. And I have several literary works and poems to compile from that project, in the form of the many poems you heard that made the songs on Never. I then had a song I was conceptualizing after that, which I haven't produced yet. And there are a few tracks that I have somewhat composed and played with after the release. But I'm not sure when I'll get to it, as I have so many goals that I'm trying to finish off. I haven't even touched my backlog of games to play and review. That and sports news that I've wanted to touch on, I've been not getting to.


  I really want to work on some more poetry, an art piece or two, some trumpet compositions, and another sci-fi novel. That is alot to bite off, and I'm not sure when I'll get the time to tackle all of that. But I do realize that it's up to me to make the time. It's there. I just have to prioritize better. I didn't get Never reviewed yet, and I did want to get around to that as well, but I stopped really caring about reviews, as I don't think there are really deep listeners left in the world. I don't recall the last time I've had a deep discussion with anyone indepth about the arts at all. It would be very refreshing for that to change. In fact, I'm going to attend some meetup events for poetry and art workshops to air out some of my work, and perhaps just have some good discussions on art. It feels like a big missing piece in day to day life.


 I am starting to get some work in on the horn, and I'll be doing DJ streams again soon to work on new material. Stay tuned. It's a pivotal time. I also wanted to do another top 10 athlete list, perhaps with NBA athletes, and why I feel Lebron is clearly number one. But I'll get to that all soon.

Saturday, September 24, 2022

To Exist

 




    INTENT


  It's been quite a while since I've written here on this blog, but a topic worth writing came to mind. It regards observations that I feel are very profound in the world. The other day, when speaking to a neighbor, he stated to me and a friend that it's difficult to build reliance on many scriptural prophecies that can't be confirmed with secular evidence and documents. I expressed to him that I too struggled with that for some time in the past. But over time, what built up my faith in those accounts, was not only the events that can be confirmed in secular writings and historical findings today, and the fact that the writings of the scriptures themselves are cohesive, but also the observance in the world itself, and how the scriptures lay that out.


     There are many who are either lost in, or confused with the notion that good and evil are two equal and opposite forces. But there is actually enough evidence in the universe to disprove that. A theory that I like to propose to people confused about the counter approach to an argument, is to play it out, and project it over a vast period of time, and see where it lays. If you look at the stars and the celestial composition, there are countless cycles of breakdown and rebuilding that take place. Yet, with that considered, the cycle is based on creation. The inverse would be a process of annihilation. Don't confuse the two. It's just like the process of building muscle. You have a destructive process which results in the loss of and death of muscle ultimately, and you have the priming process which includes a preliminary breakdown, followed by an anabolic growth. 

  The forces of evil that stand in opposition to good, work on that inverse. If you projected the intent of that spectrum, you would ultimately have a universe that would have either never existed, or that would have long combusted upon itself. That's why the scriptures say to observe creation to perceived God's glory. The very designs you witness, fundamentally could not be conceived by a destructive mind, nor can they be overcome by one.


   When I transpose this theory to human relations, it's interesting to observe. I have a saying I developed over the years, "You will never find a proud demon." What that essentially means is that no matter how wicked the individual or even demons and evil forces, there is always a turning or justification that takes place at the tail end. It's interesting to see that ever present sense of justice. No matter how much there is an attempt to hide it, it's always there. There is another saying that people have used for many ages too, "No rest for the wicked." This is meant in a more general sense, that since we are all imperfect, and essentially wicked, our present state makes it impossible to have rest. While there is truth in that saying, it fundamentally goes even deeper than that.

 While everyone imperfect falls short and is "wicked", there are those who desire peace and those who desire war to put it in a grand sense. While there is a selfish nature within all humans and creatures that seeks advantage and comfort, there are those that conscienciously choose destruction in some form. And they try to convince themselves that the course has every bit the viable chance for success as does seeking peace. But even they will never completely believe that. This scales from the bully at a school to the tyrannical dictator. It is never enough. If you take a willing evildoer and a person devoid of that desire and placed them each in isolated environments, the evildoer would self destruct first in every instance. Now the term evildoer can be confusing because it would seem that it's subjectively associating a typecast with a label that is universal, but it's not being used here in its usual general sense. It doesn't mean a sinner or imperfect person. It means an individual who chooses to destroy as a path of life or approaches situations and others with malintent. And malintent can be open malice or simply the absence of good intent, where it becomes its most insidious. In cases of the latter, these individuals may honestly not see the path they're on. But the fundamental question has to be asked in all situations, "Why am I really doing this?" We tend not to ask ourselves this enough in life. 

  When one is an evil-doer in this sense, they won't have any peace, only a slow self-destruction. And it leaves them in a state where in a desperate attempt to find daily balance, a new victim must be consumed. There is the constant need to attempt to hurl the negative feelings of their path at an object or person, like hurling water out of a sinking boat- for survival. But the fight for survival is within. They are incapable of just existing within themselves. This mirrors the celestial example earlier. If the universe were founded on that principle, or if it was a principle that was even equal in power, all things would either not exist, or exist differently altogether. It's difficult to imagine.

 But then something magical happens that proves the whole theory. Something at the end of the process, which sums all of this up. That negative energy that is needed to sustain it all, has to be met with its equivalent to recharge and continue to thrive. It'll seek it out in increasing desperation. But when it can't find it, it begins to die off. If you can imagine an atomic reaction or relationship, it's as this:




  An unstable molecule seeks to maintain an unstable state. It finds other energy that is equivalent in a molecule. If the molecule is stable, it will destabilize it, to create the native environment where it can say to itself on a chemical level, "I have to be unstable, as my surrounding is unstable." If the molecule it attaches to won't destabilize, it has to find another that will, over time, or risk stabilizing itself.


   In social relationships it goes back to a proverb we all know well as kids. Our mothers and teachers would tell us if you ignore the bully, he'll go away. It's very simply stated, but essentially it covers this principle. Without the return of energy, the bully has nothing to bounce off of to justify the perpetual existence of being a bully. Over time, he is forced to stabilize, if he can't create conflict.  How bad they are determined to exist in instability is the difference between whether they allow themselves to stabilize or choose not to exist. The latter requires some kind of detachment from human nature. It happens at various stages. Goading and prodding for reaction, to blaming and incriminating the child, to even slandering them in hopes of fueling the need and justification to be the bully by enticing some return of energy. Notice that the serpent had to dress up the rebellion in Eden to look Just, before selling it to Eve. This is because wickedness is never naturally palatable, even to the wicked.

   Some people take pathetic and mundane disdain and politics, and hold them up like a chalice of eternal power, when in reality it is the most useless way you can possibly exist in the infinitesimal moment you possess. 

  But to get back to the initial subject, these are the things that actually build my faith and resolve. In school, I always had to see the practical application of a principle to appreciate it, and that's what the universe does. As I see prophecy outline and show complete accuracy, it builds on my confidence that the rest of it will play out in time. It also gives me perspective on how small the petty mundane world is in reality as well. All things today are just a blink in time.

Monday, May 2, 2022

End of a Long Road

 

    

           Yes, this is NOT the album cover. 😄But it is an alternate cover that almost made the project coming out on 5/18/22. I'll let you see the cover when it releases. This album is titled, "READ ABOVE." Seriously, this is probably literally the last project I will do, at least as a solo artist. And it is not due to the same reasons I always retire. This is a composite of several very big factors, including time, resources, and accomplishments.

  I thought I would complete my last project as its own venture, and while this is definitely its own animal as a record, it is the 4th and final part of "The People vs. J. Addae" album series. THE PEOPLE VS. J. ADDAE- NEW YORK TIMES. This one was a return home to New York, and I wanted to include everything I could in one project. I was originally taking a lazy approach to the record as far as I'm concerned now. I was going to do about 7 or 8 tracks, with some avante garde work and a couple of vamps and be done. It was more so piggy backing off of the third album in the series, "This Man is an Island." I was also in part, running out of ideas. Then I got a boost of help. Thanks, and shout out to Zach, my bassist, who came together on this one and offered some bass and flute work on the project. We both added some flute actually, and after it's released, I'll do a deeper dive into the creative process and themes behind each track.

  The record has more ballads than I've ever put on a single record- 4. Also, it has more piano performances than ever - 3 of them. There is some scatting on here as well, which I don't do often. I opened up some new drum kits to expand the sound palette, and did  more free drum loops, and full drum tracks, which was very difficult for me. There is one or 2 songs on here with Dave Brubeck-like, odd time signatures. I love doing those kind of tunes, and usually I did them more on some of my earler jazz records. Of the 3 Avante Garde pieces, 2 of them harken back to Standing Still Symphony X, and Native Son, and have a dark, powerful and compelling presence. I'm really proud of those pieces, because they are the hardest to make, but also the heart of this record. The last several albums of my career have been about showcasing the freedom and ultimate power of experimental music or the Avante Garde. I started with SSSX, and continued from there. This album wouldn't have happened without that drive, and you'll feel how the energy of those tracks takes the album back over when they play. It goes from the to easy-to-follow flow of more conventional tracks, to the fluctuating, yet methodical explosions that force you to give in. The album starts with the Western tune, and goes right into the first Avante Garde Piece. The second one follows right after, and the last one is after the mid-point. I was concerned about the continuity of the album, but in the end it reads like a soundtrack.

  Towards the end of the project, I really thought it appropriate to include tracks that were dedicated to my parents and my siblings, since it is a homecoming album, and I haven't really done any tracks like that before. The album closes with those records. And I wanted to do a Western track, which has eluded me, and I open the album with this one, which I think you'll like a lot. The record is full of a huge amount of compositions and soundtrack-like motifs. I was surprised how many songs are memorable to the point of singing and humming them throughout the day. In fact, I think this album is more like that than any other that I've done, and that was very unexpected. What I didn't quite get nailed down, was a Full Fledged Flamenco song. Flamenco is such a hard musical form for me right now. I understand how to maneuver in the chords, but I just have such a hard time capturing the rhythm and feel. That was the one disappointment on this album. The song that was to be a Flamenco, ended up being a slow, dreamy waltz, that doubles as a ballad. It is somewhat the star tune of the record, and Zach helped big time with my arrangement.

  What a shock it was to find that the album barely fits on a single disc. What was once going to be a borderline EP, is now a 70 minute album. I haven't done a physical release since "Laws Within" as it is a very expensive project. I like to have physical pieces of each of my records, but as of now there are 5 of my albums, including this one, that have no physical release. Releasing the album period is expensive. To physically press it is even more ridiculous. Perhaps if I get more royalty money, I will use it to press a Vinyl, which is what I did with "Love Fist." For that, I ask you please keep listening relentlessly to my collection on whatever platform you prefer.

  This has been a very rewarding process, and some of you have watched from a distance, but never really got an understanding of what goes into it. Sometimes you see documentaries of Nas or DMX, and how they go through the study process to make their records. What musicians like myself go through is even crazier, because we are composers, arrangers, performers, writers, and master/mixers. We wear many hats, and compose on a more intricate level as well. I've done what musicians do, with the added fact that I'm an orator, and produce poems, spoken word, and rhyme. It is a wild ride.

  When this is done, I will do a video walkthrough of the process. Hopefully, this project can get reviewed, but regardless, it has grown on me, and it will grow on you as well. Look out for it on 5/18/22.

Friday, April 8, 2022

Certificate of Nothing

 



  There appears to be a conundrum when it comes to skillsets and certification base in this country in particular. There are worldwide, so many licenses that are accredited nationally, technical certifications specific to disciplines, and overarching degrees, sitting at the top of the heap, which encompass a broad and high level didactic of a major branch of study. Time and sense have proven that having certifications in specific disciplines is the optimal environment for productivity. We've seen over the last few decades, countless employers in the medical field, and technology field, immensely regret not having certified and trained professionals in high pressure or even legal situations. Having a pig-skin holder filling a position, is one of the stupidest approaches. It's cost money and more.

  I started working in partnership with a major vendor/company that requires extensive and specific certification to service their equipment, which makes total sense. In total, I have to achieve about 3, each one having a full-blown curriculum. As I looked over the material, I recalled a discussion I had with someone in my IT department a while back. He told me that if I'm looking to pursue a position in the department, I should make sure I go back to school and achieve at least my associate degree in Computer Science. I let him know that I have several colleagues that had tenure in the field with no degree and had thriving careers. He continued to say that as things stand today, you will likely not even be considered unless they see evidence of some kind of pig-skin. and they don't care what it's in. They just need to see that you pledged to the country on some kind of university level before you are initiated.


  It really makes me wonder about what the certifications really mean, when you have the university clause acting as a gatekeeper to keep non-degree holders out. At this point, I have certifications in SQL, AWS, A+, and other minor courses. Even seasoned IT personnel who have degrees will tell you in honesty, that the certifications are harder and more telling of actually applicable knowledge. It is far easier to go to a university and sit through a base-level entry computer science course, and grab an Associate's Degree, than it is to learn, sit and pass a specified Certification exam in a work-based field, covering extensive and specific information. The only other difference is that the degree will take up time and money you don't have. When analyzing profit and risk, it makes no logical sense for an employer to take on an employee with no applicable knowledge,  who will demand more with their degree, unless they were told or mandated to do so, which is something I'm beginning to believe is happening. Many of  these employers would rather leave a position vacant than hire a certified person without a degree. And it makes sense to assume they are being threatened to do so, because principally it offers zero benefit and greater risk and cost to them.


  I remember in Radiology school, when medical facilities would actually look down on college based programs because they offered minimal practical training opposed to hospital based ones like the one I attended. Some courses and clinicals weren't even available. You pile on several prerequisites and fringe material from the actual course. What the heck is Psyche 101 going to do for operating medical imaging equipment or computers?

   I really wonder about certifications. And it isn't because I think they're inherently wrong. Quite the opposite. I feel they don't have nearly the weight they should. Perhaps if universities sponsored and supported them more, there could be more integration between the two. Every Cert I ever took was challenging and comprehensive. It would be good for that to mean something in the work field.

Sunday, March 20, 2022

New Art Piece

 This is entitled, "Held From."

It symbolizes much of my world.



Wednesday, February 9, 2022

White Lust, and Black Fear

 




   Unfortunately, Virtually Everybody is Racist.

 HERE IS A PROJECT:


    Look at the above picture. Take a minute for real. Be honest with yourself. What do you see? What did you look at to determine that? Why?

    I've broached this topic on numerous occasions, and just like many  before it, it comes to roost over time, and I go from insane to making complete sense years later. Joe Rogan is the latest target in a social situation on "race". The issue is that the list ends when it shouldn't. Prior, we had Hulk Hogan, and Roseanne. Numerous celebrities have come under fire. What I want to discuss here is the fact that Teddy Atlas said something by accident that was deeper than anything I've heard from people in recent history. He said on his podcast, "Race has been a blight on humanity." He meant to say racism, but his mistake was actually far more correct.


  Remember a few years ago, there was a woman named Rachel Dolezal, who worked with the NAACP, and came under fire for posing/passing as "black". She was removed from her position or resigned, which I can't remember. The entire community was outraged, and she was basically labeled as either a racist, or race baitor, or at times racially insensitive. She made a comment to the effect of "Humans made race." Those weren't her exact words, but she drove home a similar point that Teddy did, and was further roasted for it afterward. The fact is that humans did create the concept of racial separations at some point in history, and washed away the truth of a single common ancestor.


   Today even in 2022, with how progressive everyone likes to think they are, virtually everyone does the same paper bag test that was done in the early 19th and 20th century. The deception is the fact that we assume only a few seedy people in society do it, when that is far from the truth. I was watching a drama series the other day, along with other programs, and when I paid attention, I noticed how in media, whenever a character falls to the black side of the paper bag spectrum, they assume the general hard label of a black- either male or female. When they fall anywhere over the other side of the spectrum, the label becomes regionally based on country or part of country. Also, at that point, many races begin to vacillate between a middle, and being absorbed into "white". I find it interesting, because it isn't just in cinema. It is in everyday life. When you see someone, if you are honest with yourself, you pass a silent algorithm over them that includes culture, visible skin color classification, and status in society, that makes you decide on their classification falling into one of two categories. If they are of low status, the paper back constraints tighten, and if they fall to far to the dark side of the spectrum, they are cast down with the "blacks." If they are of social status, the paper bag algorithm expands, and unless far to the "black" side, they are up for consideration of being classified more specifically according to region, and are granted access to the "white" side, with any caucasian affiliations accentuated. Not to say there isn't a very small minority- pardon the pun, that aren't prisoner to this mindset, as I have met some. It isn't common. I personally do not fall into this thinking because I've educated myself not only on race, but on humanity's genetic roots.


  One of the comments that Joe Rogan made was that it is physically inaccurate to call anyone "black" or "white" for that matter because it's scientifically inaccurate. That's true point, but it underscores the fact that this paper bag test that everybody does, doesn't give nearly the information you all tell yourselves it does. When it comes to racial education or genetics, most are scared to even dare dive into the subject, but it's actually very interesting. I've brought this out before, but one thing I notice is that there is a great deal of white lust and black fear. I never really noticed until recent times how much fear plays a part. Of course you have stereotypes in so many cases, but there is a heavy marginalization that takes place the minute the moniker of "black" is introduced. It's a sea of mystery, where every extreme nightmare is realized. And with that comes avoidance. When the moment of sympathy calls for it, so many cultures get in touch with their blackness and how oppressed they are. When the novelty has passed, a mad dash is made back to "whiteness."

  There was a study on some Indonesian cultures and other cultures from Pacific Islanders and even other regions of the earth, where they found out that those people shared African Ancestry with Africans as far back as they were able to go. They were puzzled because of their intrenched preconceptions. This fact was true before they discovered it. I could take 35 years to accept that the sky is above me. It doesn't become so at that point, even if I'm 9 billion people.

  The thing is that I'm not trying to argue everything coming from one race or another. The argument is that the concept is imaginary period. We all have this imagery of the progressive world moving about and making great strides in all fields, and that imagery is tied to "white." Outside of that, in a little crevice of the African Continent, what composes the "black" race, were merely percolating in place and having no real part in history. Then some who are more conscious of the truth, take it to an extreme of complete "blackness." In those times, there were no separations made, splitting a black and white line down the middle, and fighting to pull recruits over to a side. That is a new-world, idiotic, yet "progressive" concept. In truth, it is accurate to say that the assumption that the individuals that took part in activities in what is the mediterranean region today, which is where much of early history took place, were all or mostly of fair skin, is completely false and scientifically impossible due to the natural climate, region and the historical evidence which is still present today. But that's not make an argument to a particular side. The fact is that the entire concept of race has only served to be a weapon.


   Personally, I never knew how racially stupid people in general were until recently. Being racially ignorant is just as dangerous as being racist. And the point is you should be non-racial, bottom line. Even drawing from personal experience, I've gotten amusement out of watching the wild assumptions that people draw about me when they run their silent algorithm. It's to the point where I don't elaborate on myself, because it's clear that even in explaining, their understanding is so poor, it wouldn't move one bit. That's why it's a topic I don't even discuss with people. In the end, before finding the next Joe Rogan, find the current YOU, and change it.

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

The Escapism of Games

 

ESCAPISM




  A Youtuber that I follow recently did a video talking about his loss of a need to play RPG's at this point in life. He's in his mid 40's, and I understood a lot of what he said. He said that in his childhood, it was a form of escapism, which I can relate too. He also touched on things I also experienced, with even in adulthood, RPG's helping through extremely trying times in personal life. I do believe that there are several factors to the decline in the compulsion to play the genre. And the truth is that they all equally contribute. The era we are in, the time factor as we mature, the evolution of gaming, and the interrelation of escapism all play a role.


    When I was a teenager and even prior to that, I formed a love for RPG's as my favorite genre. I remember collecting the early Final Fantasy games as a child and while loving the story, I didn't use it for escape. Even as a teenager, I still didn't use them to fulfill that purpose, but more as a challenge. I enjoyed getting through Final Fantasy Mystic Quest and Super Mario RPG as well as many other great RPG's of the mid 90's. It was moreso in my early 20's that I found that new fulfillment for them. I had a few trying periods where more major issues developed in life, and RPG's of the mid 2000's and into the XBOX 360 era were very pivotal in getting me through extremely tough times. It's the days of games like Lost Odyssey, that I was grateful for very quality and immersive projects at that time that both required a great deal of attention, and had a great deal of detail as well. This made it easy to fall in.


  The Nintendo Switch was a completely needed console, in my opinion, for working adults who want to game. Before it came out, a cinematic experience with a deep and memorable game was pretty much extinct for me, as I am rarely in front of my office TV to sit for gaming sessions anymore. However, there are times when are in commute, or idling at a quiet location, even at work, and that's when the system shines. The PS Vita did a good job, but the Switch is receiving more support and high-end games. It isn't that we outgrow escapism. What happens is that most have to give up on it due to being overwhelmed by life. The thought of sitting down for an 80 hour RPG like Legend of Dragoon is daunting to me today, not because I've lost interest, but because if I have to be in a fixed location, I know that it isn't going to happen. Right now, I'm playing a very involved RPG on Switch, called Astral Chain. The fact that I can take it with me, and put on a headset while on a plane ride or sitting in an office at work, makes it very awesome.

   So I don't agree with his stance exactly. Escapism is still there as long as you don't develop a closed mind, which happens so easily today. There are plenty of kids I know who have no imagination or passion at all. It's become cool to be that way. But popularity doesn't decide value. It is also great that there are plenty of developers out there still making some games worthy of delving into. Thanks to the Switch, I can find time to play.

Industry of Crooks- Destroying Artist Revenue

 CROOKS:

THIS WAS PROPHECIED IN BOOK ONE OF MAGNUM OPUS: THOSE SILENT




  This is a topic that other artists have brought up, but I have to say, it is one that needs to have a huge issue raised. I'm going to include an image here that I want you to look at:




  This is a revenue statement for my total artist sales, streaming and purchase, over the last few months. Somehow, publishing companies have, with all the advertisement funds they collect, scaled down what they pay the artist to actual microscopic fractions of a penny for each digital and physical transaction. How this is legal is beyond me, but this is a very top-heavy structure. It is disgusting, because I believe they have lowered the pay-rate exponentially in the past year. When I first began being published by CD-Baby, I was able to see royalty revenue over the course of a year range between $50 to $350. As of the past year, I have yet to receive a royalty payment, and currently have accrued only $24 over the last year and a half. And it is because of the scale you see hear. Some transactions are literally $0.00001. That is criminal and should not even be allowed by law.


  Think of all the cost that goes into producing an album. From equipment, to mastering, publishing, advertising and showcasing. Much of these costs actually get absorbed into the pockets of these same publishing companies and distributors, who have their back door deals that they keep secret. Every time you pay a membership to a company such as Spotify or Amazon, you are one of millions creating a revenue stream that dwarfs its cost of maintenance. The executives at the top and employees that sit twiddling their thumbs are able to receive salaries that are substantial, while the companies' stocks grow. And as an artist, you are not even a slight shareholder of any of this. We pay flat fees in order to have a publisher release our albums to the distributors and they split the pot. It would take near a decade of consistent distribution for me to see a return on my end, while well within that time, everyone else eats off of advertisement and my net sales.


  What needs to happen is a class action lawsuit. I've heard big name artists complain about this arrangement, and now I truly understand why. It isn't that I'm not getting sufficient streams. It's quite the contrary. I came to find that I have been getting a healthy amount of overseas sales and American sales. What I've seen done in the land of algorithms is blatantly illegal. If you look at the profile pages on a typical spotify page, they are structured to display numbers only when you surpass 1000 hits on a record. I tracked my movement on my artist account, and I found that they have suppressed my count completely and none of my tracks give a count, even though they surpass that number. In fact, that data only shows when I look at the raw data in the books. They do this in order to surpress my exposure and views. It's the same way they tailor Youtube. If you look for an artist such as myself, who hasn't played the "game", you'll actually find it is impossible to access things traditionally on search engines. They make it so that only direct links will work so that you can't grow your own revenue, while you keep producing just enough for them to rape you. 


  When I'm able, I'm going to launch an all-out attack on the industry, and I aim to do some damage.