Unknown Sailors of U.S.S. OaklahomaAn interesting story from the Miami Herald details the obstacles facing current efforts to identify the remains of the unidentified dead of U.S.S. Oklahoma which was sunk by 9 torpedoes 74 years ago today.
After some time, they noted a a plane with a big red meatball on it trailing black smoke and approaching from the east. As it turned out, it was a Zero from IJNS Hiryuu. The little biplanes were completely obsolete and had no hope of besting a modern fighter in a dogfight, but this one was obviously damaged and might be easy pickings...or lead them to the Japanese task force...and in any event, the odds were two against one. Of course, they had no idea what the Mitsubishi plane was capable of....and even less of an idea about the undamaged Zero from IJNS Akagi that was escorting its companion far above them all....
Yeah...things got very interesting for the floatplane crews, very quickly. The odds were now one and a half of the most formidable fighters then in the Pacific verses two planes that were frequently used as target tugs. The dogfight lasted about twenty minutes, with the two biplanes dropping to just above the water, jinking wildly and covering each other with the flexible rifle caliber machine guns in their rear cockpits. All the while the pilots tried to present their observers with a good broadside shot. The little planes were so slow that it was hard for the Zeroes to get them in their sights and their lack of any armor, an extra set of wings and rapidly emptying fuel tanks made them sufficiently maneuverable that Radioman First Class Robert Baxter was able to get a bead on the undamaged Zero and pump it full of enough .30-06 that its status changed from "undamaged" to "little Japanese flag on side of utility floatplane"*. The already damaged Zero was beginning to come apart and its pilot made a desperate bid to reach the nearby island. The two shot up Seagulls limped back home having achieved a small victory against great odds on one of the darkest days in U.S. Navy history.
There is an odd postscript to this story: The damaged zero made it to Ni'ihau, which was (and still is) a cattle ranch. The cowboys took in the pilot, one Shigenori Nishikaichi and threw a luau for him until they got access to a news report and realized the situation. They then held him in the house of a ranch hand of Japanese origin named Harada (to facilitate communication) until the authorities could arrive. While they waited, Harada armed the pilot, helped him escape and assisted him in taking over most of the ranch and holding the island hostage, threatening to begin killing people if they could not account for everyone on the island, the names of whom Harada had given him. Since one guy had gone to get help the killing was set to commence starting with the wife of a cowboy named Ben Kanahele. This proved to be a poor choice for victims as Mr. Kanahele tackled the pilot, getting shot 3 times in the process, but while Nishikaichi was shooting him Mrs. Kanahele jumped on the pilot and bit him until the perfidious Harada pulled her off, by which point the profusely bleeding cattleman was able to get to his feet and slit the pilots throat. Yoshio Harada fled and committed suicide. ben Kanahele was hailed as a hero and the traitorous actions of Mr. Harada during this incident may well have contributed to the awful Japanese internment that started the next year.
This Week's Chapter of RWBY Seems to Have No Title
I Propose Retro Funk!
As has generally been the case in this tournament cour, most of this episode's important stuff takes place outside of the fights. But the main fight went in an entirely unexpected direction and was gloriously worthy.
...and then after the fight...all that stuff happened.
Let's see, Penny wants to transfer to Beacon...given her peculiar circumstances and legal status, this seems a far fetched dream...but it's irrelevant because they reveal at the end that she's pretty much doomed.
This episode did further clarify that Ironwood is probably not working for the big(?) bad....wittingly....but she does now have every single secret he thinks he has. Of course it turns out that she's been hacking most of the other good guys at least as thoroughly for 13 episodes. It should be further noted that the whole IT plot thread predated the OPM hack and E-mailGate by a year. Monty saw the future before he died!
Pyrrha has her awesomeness re-affirmed....and she's doomed.
As to the fight itself, I found it jarring to see late 80's hair and late 90's genkigiirl tropes bundled together in a blindingly iridescent rainbow ball of spazz.
It was an interesting choice to have the character who has arguably developed the most teamed with the one who has developed the least.
Weiss should change her name to Yin.
This episode even had some actual science in it. It implies that if you jump into lava, it you could loose your singing voice and ruin your dress....which is, in fact, TRUE!
UPDATE:
I did note as I approached the fridge that the avatars of urban asskickery they fight in this episode seem singularly ill optimized for fighting GRIMM out in the wastes which, of course is the raison d'être of the huntsmen and huntresses competing in this match . Whether this is is implying something is unclear.
The pacing and voicework were fantastic, Meg Turney in particular did a stellar job as Neon Catt.
1
> As to the fight itself, I found it jarringjarring to see late 80's hair and late 90's genkigiirl tropes bundled together in a blindingly iridescent rainbow ball of spazz.
Just a couple days ago I was catching up on MlP:FiM season 5, and watched the Halloween episode, and Pinkie Pie's costume was essentially the same.
Posted by: RickC at Sun Dec 6 21:10:25 2015 (FvJAK)
2
"As has generally been the case in this tournament cour, most of
this episode's important stuff takes place outside of the fights."
That's pretty much true of ALL Tournament plots, which is why I hate them so much.
Posted by: Mauser at Mon Dec 7 02:04:51 2015 (5Ktpu)
2
A common size for flintlock ammunition was .68 or .69, which is the same size as a large paintball load. That looks about right. The gun itself looks to be about 14" long, so that would more or less make sense.
Oops! I Joined a Cult!It sounds like a pre-Jonestown 70s sitcom, but it is both scarier and stupider.Someone named Jared Burrell (via) reflects upon the recently arrived at realization that his game development networking group had become a cult.
Trigger Warning for those who have been involved in fandom to any great extent...this will bring back memories; annoying and perhaps creepy ones, but be aware that these pathologies are far more mainstream now and in some fields it is nigh impossible to just walk away.
Certainly this still rings true...
You know what’s really condescending? Anointing yourself the Tone Police for the betterment of mankind. Let’s call a spade a spade. There’s no metal detector and this is no "safe space.†It’s a bourgeois space, with bourgeois conventions, and bourgeois sensibilities. All this talk about protecting "marginalized groups†is cover for making sure upper middle class kids – who can always call themselves nonspecifically "queer†to gain victim status – receive the same physiological coddling as adults they received growing up. We’re looking at an entire generation of helicopter children entering chronological adulthood. They can’t handle the world as it is so they want to turn everyone around them into their own personal helicopter. And "social justice†is their vehicle for that.
That certainly jives with my observations of some of the individuals I interact with at college. But there is more to it than intellectual indolence. These little exercises are an effete' and passive aggressive way of proclaiming and protecting one's social status...
The entire language of social justice – the up talking, the indirect phrasing, usage of words like "problematic†and "uncomfortable†– functions in such a way that rich kids can identify one another and enforce their sensibilities on everyone else. If you’re from a working class background and want to fit in, you had better learn to speak that language. So every gamedev networking situation is a contest to demonstrate that you belong to the correct tribe. That’s how you make friends. The only thing a Safe Space Policy does is formalize what’s already going on, and give an organizer explicit permission to bully and ostracize someone who fails to conform to a certain bourgeois sensibility.
I'm sure most of us have met this guy...
For a thoroughly self-hating, emasculated man like MyCult, this his only opportunity to feel like a tough guy. He’s not physically imposing or rich, and these days one can expect women to be financially independent, so the traditional role of protector and provider is closed to him. Grasping for some remnant of masculine identity, he’s taken the mantle of Chief of Tone Policing, which he can do without guilt because it’s easy for him to believe that other men are as misogynistic as he is.
I urge you again to read the whole thing. It does a very good job of conveying what a chilling effect this sort of thing can have and what a perniciously effective gatekeeping tool this is.
2
I haven't done xmas shopping in an actual store for three years, I think, and I'm not likely to start now.
Actually, come to think of it, I don't do much shopping in stores period.
Posted by: Wonderduck at Wed Dec 2 02:49:45 2015 (zAcee)
3
I see a problem of UPS not hiring enough people to cover peak periods. As long as Brickmuppet and the team continue to carry on, the management is going to skate along with the current staffing levels because they don't want to pay extra people in off-peak periods. It is going to take a significant deterioration or a complete meltdown to get their attention.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Wed Dec 2 10:10:08 2015 (XOPVE)
4
BTW, Steven could attract attention of Instapundit to this. He always wrote about "Retail Support Brigade" in previous years, but not this time.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Wed Dec 2 10:11:31 2015 (XOPVE)
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Actually they hired lots of seasonal people. The issue has been that the volume the last few years has been way above predictions, even though they anticipated a big increase. this year it was a whole different level. Remember too that the economic outlook is not great and a good deal of this increase involves sales shifting from stores to web browsers.
In our particular case we have additional physical plant limitations as well. There is only so much one can cram through a building and for our building, we have exceeded that. An expansion of the building or moving to a larger facility would solve most of the issues since we can't utilize the people we have as effectively as we might due to space limitations. Any further specificity would get into P&C info, but rest assured it's not flaming incompetence or venality on the part of our personnel dept.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Wed Dec 2 11:00:15 2015 (AaBUm)
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I'd like to corroborate Brickmuppet's assessments above. I was at UPS Worldport, i.e. the main North American air hub in Louisville, KY, during the X-mas seasons in 2013 and 2014. The increase in volume that I saw in just that one year was huge. On Monday Dec. 22nd and Tuesday 23rd, 2014, my overnight shift came in around 18:00 and left at 8:00 the next morning when the day shift came in to take over. Every work station in my department, sorting, was being worked by either a year-round employee or a seasonal hire, so I do not think a lack of personnel was the problem.
By the way, our overnight shift the week before that was only running about six to seven hours long. Obviously, lots of folks waited until Christmas week to order presents - yikes!
For what its worth, the sorting department had lulls in the action on even those last two nights before Christmas Eve delivery (we don't deliver on X-mas Day), which suggested to me that our fleet capacity was the real limiting factor: There are only so many truck bays from which to unload, and only so much room on the tarmac (a.k.a., "the ramp") for airplanes to land and depart. UPS (or FedEx, either) can't just triple that capacity overnight because so many shoppers waited until the Monday before Christmas to order stuff from online retailers.
As they say in the Land of the Rising Sun, "Gomen nasai."
Posted by: Blue Crab at Thu Dec 3 17:18:45 2015 (P2Eio)
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"Ramp" is the correct term nowadays. It is also called "Apron" in international use as blessed by ICAO. The offical pilot/controller glossary defines "Apron" as:
A defined area of airport or heliport intended to accommodate aircraft for the purposes of loading or unloading passengers or cargo, refueling, parking, or maintenance. (With regard to seaplanes, a ramp is used to access the apron from the water)
"Tarmac" was a material used for pavement of ramps before concrete took over. It is a kind of asphalt. Thus, colloquially it used to mean "a paved surface, such as apron, taxiway, or runway". However, once the movement and non-movement areas of airports became better defined, and the aeronautical glossary more rigid, tarmac disappeared from use, only remaining in a specific phrase "Tarmac Delay" (and e.g. "Three-Hour Tarmac Rule").
This transition happened so long ago, that I did not hear even veteran airmen refer to tarmac. The Airport/Facility Directory uses "asphalt" to describe tarmac-covered runways.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Thu Dec 3 18:02:41 2015 (XOPVE)
From episode 4 of this season's RWBY, which seems to have really hit its stride. This episode's fight was still not up to the spectacular choreography that Oum was known for, but the pacing was superb and the tension was as intense as anything we've seen.
The last 9 of the 14 and a half minutes was spent with people sitting and talking while either drinking tea or playing video games. Those 9 minutes however, were very well paced and developed characters, moved the plot along, clarified plot points and answered questions.
The mechs from episodes 4 and 10 of season two were indeed stolen and both Ironwood and Winter Schnee are aware of team RWBY's involvement in destroying one. Additionally the lot stolen was prototypes being sent for range testing that were not fully equipped.
The Schnee family are unusual in having a set of powers consistently passed down by heredity as opposed to most other gifted people who get completely random abilities. This raises some questions about how Punnett squares work in relation to superpowers. Perhaps superpowers involve Punnett dodecahedrons. How that would result in there being no such variability in the Schnee family tree is unclear unless said tree is a straight line....Eww. In other news we learn that in addition to all their other charming characteristics, the Schnees have a second ability...a form of necromancy. They can call forth the spirits of defeated enemies to act as slaves. Weiss is the first of her family in some generations to not be able to do this at all. Until, perhaps, today.
Winter, Weiss's sister, is imperious, authoritarian and intensely regimental. She also seems to be about as decent a person as can realistically be expected from someone who grew up in (and never got away from) her family.
Yang, for all her bravado, is quite broken in some ways. She sort of shuts down when shown a picture of her Mom...
The capture of Torchwick by the girls last season has not, as Ruby believed, caused a mere reduction in crime. Crime in the city has stopped...totally...in the weeks since the breach. Their elation is short lived due to the implication that that the underworld is tightly controlled, by a much bigger figure.
Mercury and Emerald are absolute monsters.
While no explicit reference was made, we now probably have a very good idea of just what was going on in the "White" trailer and yes, it looks like that incongruously expressionist installment of the original 4 teasers is indeed canon. Even more surprisingly, it likely happened pretty much as presented (though some of it is a flashback).
Also: From this point forward, the heiress is on a budget.
One observation. One of the things the success of this series has made possible besides increasing the crew by 50% is that they have been able to hire additional professional voice actors (some with impressive resumes) to supplement the shows writers and animators, cosplayers and internet personalities that has made up most of the main cast. Interestingly this has resulted in the relative novices in the main cast being backed up by serious pros playing bit parts. The original cast has actually held their own pretty well and even those who started out a bit awkward have grown into their roles nicely. The additional money, however, is still well spent. Elizabeth Maxwell has hit it out of the park as Winter Schnee who, it turns out, is absolutely vital to understanding Weiss.
When one observes one's plamos start doing this....
...it does not actually mean that one has been blessed with a Lilliputian moe' waifu, but is, instead, a rather strong indication that one really needs to get out more.
2
The base of the animation seems to be accomplished by about one second of pedestal and tilt movement; changing the POV of the camera while focusing on the same point. In fact, I think the animation of the skirt is the same motion done with a larger movement, and then applied as a separate layer. You can see a squeeze or stretch morph on the head, so I would guess most of the animation of the individual parts is done that way. *If* I'm right, the truly impressive skill was in isolating the parts to be animated so beautifully.
Posted by: Ben at Sun Nov 29 12:46:31 2015 (S4UJw)
Some Quick Links
While there is considerable concern being expressed about the Syrian refugee situation, Dustbury finds someone raising the alarm about a less appreciated invasion. He also helpfully points out that all of my problems stem from a parking fee. In retrospect, it's probably a decent trade-off.
I linked to the unfinished version of this before, but the animator finished it yesterday and thoroughly succeeded in producing a cute and technically interesting little skit.
I was expecting something like that one which was based on a Tom&Jerry cartoon, not something sweet. But it is sweet and they did a really good job on it. Very nice.
I read somewhere that KanColle had eclipsed Touhou as the fan meme of choice. I'm glad to see that it isn't totally true.
Posted by: Mauser at Fri Nov 27 22:21:23 2015 (5Ktpu)
4
Vicks VapoRub makes an excellent cheap liniment, but it sounds like you may need to break out the BenGay and/or heating pads instead. I also foresee that you may have to take morning and evening showers/baths, just for the muscle relief.
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Sat Nov 28 13:58:14 2015 (ZJVQ5)
5
I'm sure you know that you don't want to combine VaporRub, BenGay, ice, or heating pads at the same time, in any combination. In succession with some space between them - that is the way to go. (But this is the Internet, and who knows who may read this stuff. So I clarify myself.)
Posted by: Suburbanbanshee at Sat Nov 28 14:00:48 2015 (ZJVQ5)
Oh Dear
It looks like Turkey has shot down a Russian fighter. There are, naturally, conflicting reports as to where the Russian plane was, the Russians say it was over Syrian airspace, the Turks insist it was over Turkey.
Reports differ if the Turkomen rebels have one or both Russian aviators from the SU-24. Regardless, watch how they are treated. If they are smart, they will turn them over, but being that Russia has been pounding them from the air, unlikely.
So, the fellows being backed by the Turks and who are allied with our proxies in Syria have just shot two Russian pilots dangling from their parachutes. They likely did so with our bullets, since they are working with the FSA.
1
Wait, it gets better!* The Syrians the Russians have been attacking shot down a Russian rescue helicopter, too! Wanna bet they blame that on the Turks, too? "If you hadn't shot down our plane..."
*...in some subset of the word "better" that I'm not altogether familiar with.
Posted by: Wonderduck at Tue Nov 24 20:49:16 2015 (zAcee)
2
This is where my lack of naval expertise hurts. Russians moved their prized asset, "Moskva", into the area and tasked it to help covering the approaches to the Khmeinim airbase, when and where jets are most vulnerable. Turks may send their submarines and do a General Belgrano on it. So 3 days ago Russians attached an ASW destroyer "V.Adm Kulakov" and a small ASW fregate "Smetlivyi" to form an approximation of a combat group around "Moskva". Compared to how it was done in WWII, clearly it's nowhere near enough. I expected 6 or so frigates, each with a helicopter, to surround "Moskva" and elbow Turkish assets both above and below the surface. But I don't know how it's done nowadays. Clearly it's not done however Argentinians were going at it, we know that much.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Wed Nov 25 16:11:38 2015 (XOPVE)
At best this is a revenge move. I can't see the Russians actively hunting and sinking a Turkish submarine, even if they were capable of doing so, unless the sub had fired first.
And these days, when a sub shoots, it hits.
So I guess this is intended as a deterrent. "Yeah, go ahead and shoot a torpedo if you want to lose your sub afterwards."
It then becomes a couple of questions: what kind of provocation would it take for the Turks to decide to shoot, and would the Russians actually have the ability to find and sink the sub afterwards?
A different question: what happens if Turkey closes the Dardanelles to any and all Russian warships? And then Russia decides to send a group of ships through anyway? And Turkey uses shore-based artillery and airstrikes?
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The combined British, French and Russian navies could not force the Dardanelles in WW1. If Turkey decides to close the Bosporus it is closed.
Russia would almost certainly consider this an act of war.
NATO would probably not back Turkey if they did that unless bullets were already flying.
Turkey has one of the largest armies on earth and in that regard are an extremely vital NATO ally. Turkey has as many ground troops as France, Italy, Germany and the UK combined.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Thu Nov 26 01:21:42 2015 (1zM3A)
7
The combined British, French, and Russian navies couldn't force them in WW1 because back then the three armies combined had less computing power than my cell phone. Ground-based defenses had two major advantages over sea-based gunnery - a much more stable firing platform (i.e. more accuracy) and a much smaller target profile (you had to hit the gun more or less directly to dismount it, whereas any hit on the ship can do damage enough to sink her eventually.)
The big disadvantage is that the ground defenses have limited target footprints - if you're outside their range, they can't come get you. The Union navy attacked several Confederate fortifications using this method, firing really large mortars from outside the range of the forts' defenses.
In the modern era, of course, fixed fortifications aren't worth that much at all - we can knock them out with missiles smart enough to fly right into the embrasures. Of course, that's the US... just how good are Russia's missiles? I doubt we really know.
On the other hand, the only reason that Erdogan is still in power is because he gutted the Turkish military's leadership and replaced them with his own people. You don't purge your staff like that without tons of damage to the effectiveness of your fighting force; ask the Russians about that! So even if Russia's capabilities aren't that great these days, neither are the Turks.
Personally, I'm of the opinion that we ought to have wound down NATO well before now. Soviet Russia's expansion needed to be stopped; Putin's Russia isn't nice, but it's simply not a threat to the US. We don't need to put ourselves on the line for a military alliance to prevent tanks coming through the Fulda Gap anymore. Nor am I fond of being lectured about not putting enough into social spending by countries who shamelessly free-ride on our military expenditures.
And the idea that we could get sucked into a conflict by the Erdogan government is positively grotesque. I wouldn't just leave him hanging, I'd root for the Russians.
Posted by: Avatar_exADV at Thu Nov 26 06:44:41 2015 (v29Tn)
8
The littorals are still the most dangerous place to be a warship. Clutter, interference and well camouflaged batteries of missiles and artillery that can have their guidance radars on mountains to make use of their maximum range make any sort of inshore operation very dangerous. Both the Bosporus and the Hellespont are exceedingly narrow. The sea of Marmara is big enough to allow submarines to maneuver in and that brings us to the other thing the Turks pay a lot of attention to...mines. Mines sank Allied battleships with alarming regularity and Turkey is still highly adept at mine warfare.. If the Turks want to close those straits they will likely remain closed until foreign boots tread the full length of both the Asian and European shores.
The big question is how badly Ergodans Stalineque purges have affected the army's fighting ability. The Turkish troops are generally pretty good but given the army's previous hostility to islamists, and officers with islamist sympathies had to be dug up from under rocks. They are not likely to be experienced. I tend to agree that this is likely to have a seriously deleterious effect on their effectiveness.
Personally, I'm of the opinion that we ought to have wound down NATO well before now.
Yes, but sadly we didn't and the treaties have us kind of stuck.
And the idea that we could get sucked into a conflict by the Erdogan government is positively grotesque.
Unfortunately thats how the treaty works. Of course article 5 doesn't necessarily apply if a NATO member shoots first and pokes at the bear.
I wouldn't just leave him hanging, I'd root for the Russians.
Yep. Russia certainly seems to be the more reasonable player here.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Thu Nov 26 09:28:49 2015 (AaBUm)
Article V of the NATO treaty ultimately only requires each member to do what they think is best. We found that out in 2001 when Article V was invoked for the first time and the response from some European countries was underwhelming.
Everyone is supposed to treat it as if it was their own country that was attacked, but that's not binding. (As we found out in 2001.)
At this point the NATO charter is pretty much a dead letter. Obama won't do anything except deploy strategic hash tags and expressions of deep concern. Until a new president takes office, no one in Europe had better be depending on American military power. And if it's Hillary, they still better not depend on it.
The whole list is interesting as well as disturbing, but the last on the list is quite the doozy.
Already synonymous with misery for unrelated reasons, the worlds bloodiest porkchop may one day bring suffering and death to many far from its bleak shores.
This is incredible. Bethesda has invented time travel!
This game really is 'all that and a bowl of grits'.
Most surprisingly, despite the grim premise and post-apocalyptic setting, Fallout 4 gives off a remarkably optimistic vibe.
I find it really interesting how they integrated a first-person shooter quest game with a 'rebuild civilization' game. What's interesting is the freedom one has. The player can pursue the main quest like a regular adventure game, wander around and interact with the incredibly detailed world (usually via high powered weaponry) or focus on the second life aspect of building a settlement. The player can also build a series of settlements and thus rebuild civilization. I'm nowhere NEAR close to finishing the main quest...there's just so much interesting stuff to do.
Re-playability looks to be really high.
On the down side:
Mirelurks. Those things are tough.
Also: It's like clicking on a TV Tropes link that delivers crack intravenously...I predict the collapse of society by the end of the year.
1
This morning I was checking out an insane asylum guarded by a team of mercenaries (real pros; they told me I was trespassing and ordered me to leave, without shooting), when I happened to look up and notice a windmill on top of a nearby overpass, made from an airplane prop. Well, I had no reason to bother those mercs (didn't have the quest item to get into the asylum...), so I decided to explore.
With both ends of the overpass collapsed, I had to hunt around for a bit to find a way up there and see what was going on. Scrambling over the junk, I spotted a Gunner logo spray-painted on the side of a bus, and knew I was going to have a fight on my hands. Sure enough, but I wasn't expecting the combat droid; that made it a lot tougher.
It wasn't a quest or a marked location on the map, just a little something thrown in to fill out the world. If you noticed it, cool; if not, maybe next time you play through.
Favorite characters so far: Nick Valentine and Dr. Brian Virgil.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Sat Nov 21 23:51:15 2015 (ZlYZd)
2
The old Fallout games had skills, which were a big factor in determining your weapon damage - if you had low skills with guns, they did low damage, but as you got more skilled with guns they increased more and more in damage.
F4 gets rid of skills, and your progression is in your basic stats and in perks you add at every level. And it's a big improvement! Under the old system, if something was good at low skill levels, it was ludicrous at high skill levels; by contrast, if it was pretty balanced at high skill levels, it was terrible at low skill levels. Guns got balanced at high skill levels, which meant that for most of the game, guns were -crap-.
In F4, you don't have to worry about having sunk several levels of skill advancement into a particular class of weapons in order to make them non-crap - they're mostly all right to start with, and certain modified examples are quite a bit better than "all right". Add in the perks on top of them, and the ones you choose to specialize in (and by this I mean broad categories, like "rifles", "all heavy weapons", "all automatic guns", etc.) can feel quite powerful.
I also really like the new power armor system. It's not the endgame armor anymore; instead it's something you leave at home for normal adventuring and then trot out when you expect heavy combat, in which case it makes you far more resilient than normal. (Or you can get the right perks, in which case it becomes your "normal" gear; I basically don't get out of mine except to craft and sleep.)
VERY happy with it overall.
The settlement building is nice but not nearly feature-complete yet; I expect they'll do like Skyrim and drop in a little DLC expansion that adds a lot more options.
Posted by: Avatar_exADV at Sun Nov 22 00:36:13 2015 (v29Tn)
3
Rutskarn made a good point in his Elder Scrolls retrospective: it's incredibly frustrating to make an attack that clearly connects in the 3D UI, but then be told you missed the hidden die roll. If the game shows you shooting someone in the back of the head with a .44 magnum, then by golly it had better hurt. I'm still carrying the first 10mm pistol I found, upgraded with mods and perks, and I just cleaned out a building full of super mutants with it, including a suicider. Very satisfying.
I've been making heavy use of the power armor, but thanks to Tinker Tom, I have some very resilient clothing now. As a bonus, my character no longer looks like an extra from Mad Max.
Between patches, DLC, and third-party mods, I expect to see the settlement feature improving a lot. Actually, the mod I'm most looking forward to is an adaptation of the Skyrim "reduced NPC speech distance" fix; I had to move the weapon-crafting station in Sanctuary so that settlers wouldn't stand in the doorway and spam me.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Sun Nov 22 02:28:32 2015 (ZlYZd)
4
Let's get to the important part: what do the girls look like? And how many of them are there?
5
Post-apocalypse Boston has a surprising number of attractive, friendly, competent women, some of whom can be romanced. They put a lot of effort into the face-design system that's used for both the PC and the NPCs. And there are a lot of NPCs, with a wide range of skin and hair colors, as well as a variety of ethnic features.
You can also replace the clothing of friendly NPCs. I recommend the "summer shorts" outfit for women, which not only shows off their figures, but can be retrofitted with ballistic weave for some of the best armor in the game. It's the only moddable clothing I've found so far that leaves the arms and legs bare for additional armor pieces, and it looks pretty good with the trilby hat that also accepts ballistic weave.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Sun Nov 22 13:30:15 2015 (ZlYZd)
The Russian's Strategic Situation Room is Much More Bright and Cheery Than Ours
We cannot tolerate this lily gap!
This is all in Russian, but allegedly they are making a big show of the pounding of ISIS positions earlier in the week which saw the first combat use of the Tu-160 (Blackjack). Tu-22m(Backfire) as well as the ubiquitous 'Bears' were used as well. Additionally, according to RSNF, Putin orders the CO of the task force built around the big cruiser Moskva to co-ordinate with French forces.
1
That setting looks all sorts of wrong. One would expect it from China, but not Russia. But then the official ideology of Russia under Putin is "Eurasianism", so perhaps it fits.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Thu Nov 19 13:30:24 2015 (XOPVE)
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