- Dołączono
- 27 Cze 2014
http://towerfall.tumblr.com/post/110562144181/alternate-archers
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Next up is the alternate blue archer. If you keep up on gaming news she may seem familiar - her appearance is loosely based on feminist games critic Anita Sarkeesian. Anita’s work has been an inspiration to the TowerFall team. Her “Tropes vs Women in Games” video series gave us a valuable new lens through which to assess our character designs. TowerFall is about bringing people together, so it’s vitally important that the cast of playable characters makes everyone feel invited to join in. Simply put, this wouldn’t have occurred to me if not for Anita, and feedback from players has reinforced how important it really is. We’re very excited to immortalize Anita in a small way, as the alternate Last of the Order.
Oh thank Christ.
For a few seconds, I was worried this was a replacement sprite for one of Shantae's Fey Archers, and I was about to verbally fist-fuck something.
Also, have you guys seen the responses? There's some great ones amongst the reblogs and ass-kissing, and they're priceless:
A Very Savvy Tumblrite powiedział(a):Wow! Anita is going to be a cool character! as soon as you hit her she’ll use pseudo-science about you being a misogynist until you give her money!
Another Savvy Tumblr User powiedział(a):Anita Sarkeesian is now (sorta) a videogame character.
Collusion intensifies
This Guy Knows What's Up powiedział(a):So for those who missed it, Anita Sarkeesian is going to be a character in an actual video game.
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Meanwhile, on an unrelated but-still-amazing bend, Ben "I Hate My Audience And Do Not Want a Career" Kuchera may have just gotten himself in trouble, by giving Gamergate just what they needed to make advertisers leave Polygon in droves:
Leader of Gamergate powiedział(a):Some other anon found this, might be of interest to you guys. Reposting.
Just the other day, I happened to stumble on a little gem some of you may get a kick out of. This involves the misadventures of Ben Kuchera promoting fan edits with unauthorized film footage…. on a gaming publication, no less
As a refresher, Ben Kuchera tends to advocate film piracy from time to time, especially if the film happens to be a fan edit or an unreleased-director’s-cut-definitive-edition-omfg-download-now sort of thing. His magma opus for his pro-pirate stance is a peculiar Polygon article headlined,
>"You can watch an ‘unaltered’ version of Star Wars in HD today, if you bend the law.”
https://archive.today/C56jE
Bennyboy can be pretty sneaky. In the youtube video Ben linked to, the video description provides a link to a paste bin, which then leads you to a list of instructions in order to acquire the Despecialized Edition.
Basically,
Polygon article -> Youtube Video -> Pastebin -> Torrent
ANYWAYS, THE HOBBIT
Five months later, Bennyboy is back with another fascinating tale of another legendary yet “legally-problematic” fan-edit. Enter, The Hobbit: The Tolkien Edit. Basically, it’s Peter Jackson’s Hobbit trilogy with all the filler bullshit cut out. Sounds awesome, right?
https://archive.today/qfpju
Well, here’s the catch. The Tolkien Edit covers all three of Jackson’s Hobbit films. Also, the third and final film just came out in theaters a month ago, and has yet to see an official Blu-Ray release to date. How exactly did this anon editor get ahold of the third Hobbit film, in 720p no less? As with most fan edits, take a wild guess.
Oh, and Ben Kuchera directly links the website hosting the fan-edit at the bottom of the article, listed as “Source." He basically points his readers directly to the torrent.
So, in this case:
Polygon article -> Host of fan-edit -> Torrent
And how exactly did Bennyboy found out about this magnificent fan-edit? Once again, check down at the bottom of the article: io9. A film/tech/“geek” blog owned by Gawker Media. Of course
https://archive.today/izCLd
Now, ask yourselves this: how would Polygon’s advertisers feel about plugging their products on a website that advocates fan-editted torrents and film piracy, especially when linking the source of the torrent directly in the article? Hell, I doubt a majority of their advertisers are even aware of the existence of these articles.
It’s worth mentioning that Ben Kuchera isn’t the only one from the Polygon Bunch who advocated film piracy. Back in July 2014, a massive HD torrent of the Expendables 3 leaked online late July, well before its theater release date in August 15th. David Pierce from The Verge decided to torrent the film on his laptop. In fact, he watched it twice. He then proceeded to write an article headlined,
>“I torrented ‘The Expendables 3’ and I’m still going to see it in theaters.”
Subtitle:
>Why a leak could be the best thing that ever happened to Sylvester Stallone.”
https://archive.today/USKOm
These fucking guys
tl;dr - Ben Kuchera wrote another article on Polygon about advocating film piracy. Also, if Polygon’s advertisers happen to find out about this article, they may not too pleased.
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