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mikeszekely

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Everything posted by mikeszekely

  1. Eurusian Autocratic States Alliance? Seriously, I don't know. I thought ISAF was Independant States Allied Forces, and the other side was simply Eurusia or the Eurusian Air Force. David, I thought that one paint was the default Mobius/ISAF color, one paint was the Eurusian, and the third was either unrelated to both or perhaps a paint for one of the countries that made up ISAF. Did you happen to notice any other markings?
  2. Hey, they released Robotech, didn't they? To go you one further, they tried to release the Sentinels, didn't they? HG doesn't seem much like a company concerned with quality as whoring their only franchise for 15 years.
  3. No, see, while that'd be cool, I can't afford to pay more for the planes than the game. Some nice little ones, around 2 bucks a piece, and maybe then I could slowly buy all 50 something planes from AC5.
  4. Actually, aside from Ace Combat 5 and Megaman X8, I'm done with PS2. And mind you, Megaman X Command Mission was the last game I'd bought for the PS2 in months. I have a perfectly good, ordinary PS2 with a nice mod-chip inside, so I couldn't give a rat's behind about the new PS2 design. If I were to spend any money on a new system, it'd be the Nintendo DS, but even then, I'll probably wait and see how it's doing in the spring. Now Xbox... I've bought the entire ESPN 2K5 line, Guilty Gear X2, SNK vs. Capcom Chaos, Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2005, Star Wars Battlefront, X-Men Legends, and Mortal Kombat Deception since August, and a good bit of that's on Live, so look for Pharaohman if you want to play me in any of those games. Also, between now and the end of the year, I'll definately be snagging Dead or Alive Ultimate, Halo 2, and Knights of the Old Republic 2.
  5. It has moving parts, but I shouldn't imagine that'd it have more moving parts than a GBA SP. The DS still uses cartridges. And what's wrong with your Samsung phone? I've had a Samsung phone for nearly two years now. I want to get a new phone, but only because the technology in mine is so dated now. I've never actually had any problems with it.
  6. Forget figures of the pilots. I'd like to see them release a line of Ace Combat aircraft miniatures, along the lines of the Hot Wings series.
  7. Are you kidding me? While Chevy and Ford seem to have the truck market cornered still, seems that for every Ford car on the road, there's three Hondas, and for every Chevy car on the road, there's three Toyotas. I personally drive a Mitsubishi, and my wife's looking to buy a Toyota Echo. My best friend drives a Toyota Matrix. While the senior citizen crown may still prefer their Buicks, Japanese I-4s are in.
  8. No one will ever embrace it? HAH! Toyota dealerships have waiting lists 6+ months long for the Prius, and demand will likely be just as big if not greater for their new hybrid Highlander SUV. Not to mention Ford's new hybrid SUV. Change will come eventually, hybrids are merely a stop-gap method of conservation until the technology and infrastructure for alternative fuels like hydrogen are fully figured out and implemented. Not to mention that SUV's are just plain dumb. Need the space? Get a (smaller) pickup. Too many kids? Wear a condom. The SUV is a frivolous egobooster that people drive around to make them feel like theit lives are bold and exciting. The vast majority of people don't need them. By 2006, a lot of dealers will have hybrid vehicles. I think Mitsubishi is even going to have a hybrid Eclipse that's supposed to get almost as much hp as the current GTS model (206 for the hybrid, 210 for the 2004 GTS).
  9. My ass. Where do you people think electricity comes from? You think your electrical outlet is some gateway to another dimension where electricity abounds? I'm no expert on how generators work, but I do know that most of them burn oil for fuel. I think I read in Pop Sci that if every gasoline-burning car, truck, and SUV was replaced with a totally electric car, we'd actually consume MORE oil to meet the increased demand for electricity than we would if we refined it into gasoline and burned it in the engine. Now how about we all stop blaming Bush and the Republicans for stuff that's only their fault in the minds of the extreme left?
  10. Yeah, I was playing that. Until MK Deception came out. And I'm picking up SNK vs. Capcom tonight. Shooting Ewoks and Gungans is fun, but not as personal as the 2D ass-whoopings I'm going to be delivering, if anyone wants one.
  11. Here's a tidbit for you... the Xbox version of Midway Arcade Treasures 2 is apparently Xbox Live enabled... meaning versus matches in MK II over the net. Sweet.
  12. Unforutnately, that'd be something like 75-95% of America, and probably 99% of the residents in Southern California. Well, if I go back to school in the future, at least I know what to study... looks like there's a huge demand for psychiatrists...
  13. Portable systems aren't just for your workday commutes. I like to play my GBA on my lunch break at work, on the can when it's time for #2, and even a little bit in bed after I've tucked myself in for the night. The more I read about the DS, the more promising it looks.
  14. Sure, the wingmen in Ace Combat 5 seem more likely to get kills than they were in preivous Ace Combats, but in all fairness, there's a helluva lot more stuff to kill. In preivous Ace Combats, I'd kill every white target, every red target. On the demo, when I tried taking out all the escort fighters, I ran out of time.
  15. Not entirely correct. Advance Wars, Battle Network, Pokemon, Golden Sun, the GBA Astroboy game are all unique to the Gameboy systems. Also, the Cube version of Four Swords is actually a step down from the fun of playing GBA Four Swords. Not to mention the PS2 Astroboy being something of a flop, while the GBA game is one of the more memorable titles of the year. It could also be argued that the 3D Castlevania game doesn't quite stand up to a number of the GBA Castlevania games, I doubt anyone would clame Sonic Adventure 2 was better than the GBA games, and the console Mega Man games remain stale and dated in the face of much better sequels on the GBA like Mega Man Zero. I'm not trying to convince you to buy a GBA or a DS, if you're not likely to play a portable system, there's no real point in you picking one up, but to say that all the games are ports or rehashes that don't stack up to what's on the consoles is utterly false. I've found more games that impress me on the GBA than I have on the XBox. PS2, and possibly even the Gamecube combined. Hold the phone, Ladic. I love the Sonic Adventure series, never really cared for the Genesis Sonics. And the Sonic Advance series is Genesis, just prettier. And as for Megaman... while the Zero series is brilliant, and X7 less than stellar, Battle Network went from an innovative remix to a childish series that revolves around fetch-quests. Meanwhile, I liked Network Trasmission for its back-to-its-roots style of gameplay, Megaman X: Command Mission is excellent, and Megaman X8 is shaping up to be everything we'd hoped X7 was going to be. Anyway, aside from that, I do agree with your point. There's a lot to love on the GBA. And while the DS does seem a little gimmicky at times, it's still backwards compatible with GBA games, and although the titles I've seen so far fail to make any innovative use of the stylus or second screen, they've mostly been solid games in their own right.
  16. There's some theory out there, damned if I can remember it, that says that x ammount of energy is required for a population of a certain size to achieve a certain level of technology. It's without question that technology has grown incredibly in the last 200 years, as humans learned to create electricity with generators and pipe it into indivdual home, and to power engines and and the aforementioned generators by burning various fuels. Technology growth has also begun to slow down. We are burning fuel at ever greater rates as our planet's population grows, but we're essentially burning the same fuels we've been using since World War II. To continue significant advances in technology, new fuel sources must be worked out. Nuclear fusion, some kind of chemical mix that's easier to produce and burns cleaner and more efficiently than oil, hybrid technology... those are short-term solutions. To that end, anti-matter research may not give us anti-matter reactors to power starships in our lifetimes, but they will be the method of choice for future generations. And to the pessimist that worry about the research coming out of the military... most of the technology we use today... laptop computers, cell phones, GPS navigators, the internet, satellite TV, commercial flight, nuclear fission... we have today because of the military. And we haven't destroyed the world yet.
  17. There are plenty of top tier games being released these days, so I don't have time or money for a game that's "just okay." Especially because the only reason I bought Battlecry is, after ignoring all the Robotech garbage, it's Macross. Not being a fan of Genesis Climber Mospeada, and definately not liking the bastardized Robotech, the game's gotta be a lot more compelling than "just okay" to get my money.
  18. Ah, the hell with that. I personally don't need yet another version of a movie I already have, especially when I prefer the TV to DYRL anyway. For the 25th, I want a new Macross TV series.
  19. The Philippines should think about purchasing the Swiss JAS-39 Griffen. It's the "F-5" of the 21st century. I thought that Sweden didn't export their fighters. In fact, I thought the reason why they had Saab develop fighters in the first place was so that they didn't have to import any. No reliance on foreign fighters plus no exports equals neutrality.
  20. Sony didn't show cooler games, they showed PS2 port after PS2 port. I'm not going to buy my games twice, once for the PS2 and once for on the john. Same as I'm not buying my movies twice, once on DVD, and once on UMD. The problem with this so-called "marketing to the older crowd" is that everyone assumes that the older crowd wants more bells and whistles and has more money to pay for them, which really isn't the case. To that end, I think that the PSP has a lot in common with the N-Gage. If I'm going to buy a cell phone, I'll buy a nice cell phone. If I want an mp3 player, I'll buy maybe the new Pocket VAIO. If I want a portable movie player, I could buy a nice portable DVD player, but I think I'll stick to watching movies on my laptop when I'm on the road. And if I want a game machine, I'll buy a machine dedicated to playing games. I'm not willing to spend $300+ on a handheld. I'm definately not willing to spend that much when the reason it's so expensive is because they added a ton of features I don't want. I'm especially inclined not to buy said handheld when all of those features chew the battery life down to around 2 hours average. I'm not a Sony hater. My PC, my VCR, and my laptop are all Sony. I liked the PSone, I like the PS2, and I'll probably buy a PS3 at launch. But it's gonna be a cold day in hell before I blow $300 on the PSP.
  21. The Gundam ones, yes. The Jolly Rodgers one, not really. It's how most basketball shoes look these days. And when you look at the kids wearing basketball shoes these days out in public, their shoes are really the last of their fashion faux pas.
  22. ******ACE COMBAT 3 SPOILERS*************** For the American version, there were some planes you unlocked reguardless, and some planes you unlocked based on how many points you had. You had no real way of knowing how many points you had, but basically it had to do with your rank... something like A was 3, B was 2, C was 1, and D was 0. For the Japanese version, you were only allowed certain planes for certain missions, based mostly on which path you took through the story. Here's the complete American list. Bear in mind that the names are as they are in the game... some purely fiction, others fiction upgrades to real planes. Oh, and yes, the Japanese version implies that the planes, all of them, have real cockpits. I assume that in the future, they decide it's safer for the pilot to have an armored cockit with some kind of VF camera... ala the Varauta fighters in Macross 7. EF-2000E Typhoon II MiG-33 Fulcrum SS F/A-18U HornetADV F-16XFU Gyrfalcon R-101 Delphinus #1 R-201 Asterozoa F-16XA Sakerfalcon F-15S/MT Eagle+ F-22C Raptor II F/A-32C Erne Su-37 Super Flanker R-102 Delphinus #2 R-211 Orcinus Su-43 Berkut R-103 Delphinus #3 XFA-36A Game RF-12A2 Blackbird R-352 Sepia XR-900 Geopelia UI-4054 Aurora X-49 Night Raven In addition to those, the Japanese version had: A/F-117X Nav Hawk R-311 Remora The story for the American version is summed up basically (in 35 missions, with one bonus mission) as you're a pilot for UPEO, a peace-keeping force that works for the Neo United Nations (NUN). Two corporations, Neucom and General Resources, are duking it out. You eventually discover that it's because of a group called Ouroborus, who were trying to get the two corporations to wear each other down so that they could step into the power vacuum, and that they're being controlled by a rouge AI. It's implied that you are also actually an AI. The Japanese version is much, much more complicated. UPEO, Neucom, General Resources, and Ouroborous are all fighting over the prototype X-49 Night Raven, and it's pilot, a girl named Rena who'd been trained since a young age to be a kind of super-pilot. You begin the game working for for UPEO, but throughout the game there are different points where you can shift your alliance. What you decide determines what missions you play (56 total if you play through every scenario), what planes you can fly, and what ending you get. As you play through the game, you'll eventually meet Rena, as well as Dision (you first encounter him as the pilot of the F-15 in "Joint Maneuvers," but he'll eventually get the Aurora, as well as a few other characters. The real gist of it all, though, is that Dision and his lover were killed awhile back, and you never actually meet the real Dision, but rather a computer program that simulates Dision's personality. This was possible because he participated in a program called Sublimination Project, which apparently was some sort of project to download people's conciousness into the Electrosphere (which was kind of like a world-spanning digital world that replaces the internet in the future). You yourself are apparently a program created by a guy named Simon (who is responsible for the Sublimination Program). Depending on the path you pick through the game, you may destroy Dision and/or the Night Raven, but Rena might survive. You may also take another route and meet other characters, but Dision and Rena seem to be the most important. Say what you will about Ace Combat 3. Yes, it's a very different creature than Ace Combat 2 or Ace Combat 4. Yes, it would have been nice to have more cool real-world fighters, and yes, a lot of the purely fictional fighters are freakish and less than cool. Yes, the American version was as much a hack of the original as Robotech is of Macross. But it was still a very ambitious game in Japan with an incredible sci-fi story and some really unique missions, and either version sport some of the best visuals you'll see on the PSone (Sorry, David, but I think the fighters in AC3 are much more detailed and much less polygonal than AC2, with better lighting effects including glare from the sun and around the afterburners). Maybe the AI was a little off at times. Maybe it doesn't quite fit in with the rest of the Ace Combat family. With that in mind, I stand by my original opinion... AC3, by no means, sucks... it is, in fact, quite good. The only game in the series that truly sucks is Air Combat, which, like the original Ridge Racer, may have been pretty cool at the time when games were just starting to venture into 3D. But the ugly graphics, nasty controls, limited missions, and even more limited plane selection make for an awful game in retrospect.
  23. I'm thinking about it. I mean, the price seems reasonable, the newer DS games like New Super Mario Bros look pretty good, confirmed titles in development like the new Castlevania should be promising, and it plays all my GBA games, so I might very well trade my SP for it. That said, though, I'm thinking I'm gonna hold off for a little bit. There's too many console games coming out right now, and I can't afford everything.
  24. LOL, isn't that just sick??? another case of a 30 year old aircraft out burning some of the newest kids on the block... (although, the Tornado isn't really NEW, per say) ...and neither is the Hornet. In fact, if all was right and just in the world, the Hornet would be phased out as planned with the F-35B, but no larger "Super" Hornets would be replacing the F-14. Instead, the F-14 would be replaced with either the Super Tomcat, or a plane that kicks ass the way the F-14 does, like maybe a Navy variant F-23. I just ran through Ace Combat 2 last night and Ace Combat 3 today. Aside from the lack of real-world planes (including the F-14) and the inclusion of some freaky-looking fictional birds, I think the thing that turns most people off about it is the fact that it doesn't really seem to fit with 2 or 4. In those ones, it's straight up military. You have military style briefings, fly real-world military planes, and take part in a campaign against a foreign military. Ace Combat 3 is far more sci-fi... more so, if you've played the Japanese one (the "rogue AI" piloting the Aurora used to be someone named Keith... and was also the the pilot of the F-15 in "Joint Maneuvers"). You get your briefings via a computer, you fly some fictional craft against other fictional craft, in fictional settings like Geofront and Megafloat, seemingly all by yourself. It's true that AC3's soundtrack was a little dull at times, but it fit it's unique atmosphere better than Ace Combat 2's rock soundtrack. Overall, though, I'd still say it's a damn fine game. Anyway, I digress. I didn't pay enough attention during the briefings in Ace Combat 2, so I didn't catch much in the way of names. And Ace Combat 3 takes place around a lot of artificial places like Megafloat and Geofront. I did manage to pick up a few names, though: Waiapolo Mountains, Port Edwards, and Expo City. Now, if anyone can remember if any of those are in AC2 or AC4...?
  25. I looked but couldn't find it. Link? Did find this though, very interesting and cool: <<<Unlocking new aircraft is a bit more complex than simply beating a mission and getting a new plane. Instead, the game totals up a record of how many kills you've earned with each aircraft -- once the kill meter is full, it unlocks a new plane that descends from the first plane. Racking up kills with a vanilla F-16, for instance, might unlock the improved Block 60 variant. Focusing on a particular plane you like, then, will unlock more planes like it, but at the same time, you'll have to develop skills with a wide variety of aircraft types to unlock the complete selection of 50+ planes. >>> That'll rock. Start with F-14A, then you can get the B, then the D, as you gain more experience. Which also explains the many F-16's we've seen. Hmmmn, wonder if the Super Hornet comes from the Legacy Hornet, or is considered its own line. And it also means you won't get a dozen different Flankers unless you want to spend time doing it. I think this is a great idea---if you really like a plane, you can get better versions of it. Wonder if you still have to save up money to pay for them, or buy weapons like in AFDS? That's sounds like it could be a good idea, as long as it's F-15 to F-15S/MTD, and not F-15 to F-22. I mean, I'm cool with the F-15, but I'd rather fly other planes. My favorite planes, though, are the two ATF. I'd love to see more X-planes, like the X-44, or even concepts like the VG wing F-22 and F-117 that were being considered for the Navy. David, while I understand that someone who loves real planes as much as you do would be really turned off by the fruity totally fiction designs in Ace Combat 3, it's really a shame that you couldn't have kicked back with a fictionally upgraded real-world fighter and gotten into it. I was actually dissapointed a little with Ace Combat 4, because while I liked the gorgeous visuals, real-world fighters, and more military less sci-fi story, the fact that it was half as long and filled with mostly ho-hum average missions after a game as long and with as much variety in missions as Ace Combat 3.
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