Episode 3: Wargames
Nov. 23rd, 2005 10:22 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
http://gameshelf.jmac.org/shows/Gameshelf3.m4v (Quicktime 7)
http://gameshelf.jmac.org/shows/Gameshelf3.mov (Quicktime 6)
Jmac and guest host Joe Johnston take a look at some fairly recent wargames.
Memoir '44, an accessible yet rich modular game of tactical engagements between Allied and German forces in World War II.
Gnostica, an abstract wargame played on a shifting deck of Tarot cards. Players use colorful Icehouse pieces to represent their forces.
The players on the show use my copy of the Aquarian Tarot, which, with its pretty but low-key imagery, is my favorite deck for gaming. I marked up this deck with Gnostica stickers [pdf link], which helps tremendously in remembering all the cards' powers and point values in this game.
Warsong, a very deep, story-driven wargame released for the Sega Genesis video game system in 1991. I spent much of the summer of 1993 playing this, and now you too can while away the hours on your computer through a Sega Genesis emulator. Finding the ROM is an exercise left to the viewer cough cough.
I did not like this episode as much as a the previous one, mainly because our regular director, Joe Constantine, had to miss the game shoot. (We currently split the show's footage collection over two shoots: one for games, another for the host segments.) Lee Stewart, who usally does camera, did an admirable job filling it as director for that shoot, and I took over camera duties. My camerawork was rather mediocre, though -- check out the vertigo-inducing focal plane misplacement in some of the Memoir '44 shots -- and I didn't get to play any games!
I need to position the cue cards closer to the camera -- that's why I keep looking to the side -- and have a better idea of what I'm going to say. Until then it's the Umm uhh uhhhhm show, at least during my monologues.
Other than all these technical complaints, I think that the episode content is pretty good. And hey, we used the green screen correctly for the first time (for that intro bit with me yelling at the camera). Looking forward to having more fun with that later.
no subject
Date: 2005-11-24 09:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-11-25 01:16 am (UTC)I am considering asking for a 1-hour slot so that I don't have to make a separate TV edit... filling 50-60 minutes is actually pretty easy, and grinding out half of it to fit on TV is hard and sad work.
No photo montage?!
Date: 2005-11-28 05:12 pm (UTC)Cheers for the Slippery When Wet ref. Jeers for not having the photo montage of Matt behind the credits.
Also, I suggest keeping the show to 30 minutes of tightly editted infotainment, rather than a sprawling, meandering 60 minutes of wankitude. True fans will wait for that stuff on the DVD. ;-)