In Real Life

Unlikely Fan Fiction Crossover Battles: When Diablo Meets My Little Pony

Lar’zak looked on the tent with horror clawing it’s way into his brain. Pony’s corpses littered the grounds around the tent, and those who females who hadn’t been killed suffered a fate worse than death.


April 24, 2012
In Real Life

Unlikely Fan Fiction Crossover Battle: It’s Why Tails Is Fighting The Murlocs That Matters

Sometimes it’s not the battle that really matters, but rather the events leading up to the battle. For instance, in 1monkeyfromhell’s “The Winter of Tails”, Sonic’s sidekick is on the run because everyone he knows has been murdered in horrible ways.


April 17, 2012
In Real Life

Unlikely Fan Fiction Crossover Battle: The Hunger Games Vs Mario Teaches Typing?

This one was just too easy. I mean, who hasn’t imagined the characters from Suzanne Collins’s young adult novels interacting with the disembodied Mario head of Mario Teaches Typing 2?


April 10, 2012
In Real Life

Unlikely Fan Fiction Crossover Battle: Link Encounters Resistance

Colorful. Bright. Cartoonish. These are all adjectives used to describe the light-hearted and airy adventures found in Insomniac’s Resistance series. What happens when Nintendo’s dark anti-hero Link comes on the scene? Glorious chaos.


March 22, 2012
In Real Life

Behind The Walls: Pushing The Boundaries Of Fan Fiction

Kotaku AU

The world of Fan Fiction is a curious one — an intimidating mass of yaoi, wish fulfilment and sprawling non-canonical fandom. But the reasons for writing Fan Fiction are as extensive as the reasons for writing fiction itself. In this feature, we explore the curious world of fan fiction — from the beautiful to the bizarre.


March 20, 2012
In Real Life

Unlikely Fan-Fiction Crossover Battle: Sly Cooper Vs Yoshimitsu

When you love two things as much as fan fiction author slyfan1030 loves the Sly Cooper and SoulCalibur franchise, you can’t resist the urge to have them both at once. Like the more “romantic” version of such a conundrum, the solution is often more trouble than it’s worth.


March 13, 2012
In Real Life

Unlikely Fan-Fiction Crossover Battle: Commander Shepard Versus Sephiroth

As if the Reapers, the Geth and a twisted web of intergalactic political intrigue weren’t enough to deal with, Fan-Fiction.net author Master-of-Mythology has to throw one of Final Fantasy‘s most powerful villains at him. Some days it’s just not worth getting out of bed with Tali.


August 5, 2011
In Real Life

The Best Story Ever Has Sonic, Giant Boobs, Mountain Dew

Brian has a story to tell you. Of love, and Sonic the Hedgehog. Brian’s story is totally true. Only, Brian’s mum, don’t read it, OK?


October 20, 2008
Uncategorized

The Best World of Goo ‘Review’ Yet

I stumbled across this “review” of World of Goo courtesy the boys at Rock, Paper, Shotgun and nearly ruined my laptop while reading, as I spewed my morning cup of coffee all over the screen. Andrew Doull, IT manager and occasional GameSetWatch columnist, wrote an homage to the game in the form of EA CEO John Riccitiello fan fiction. Yes, fan fiction. Which includes ninjas, an evil plot against our own Brian Crecente, and much raving about those damn ‘little guys’ who keep managing to pull out big hits:

He knew the capabilities were there. The early iterations of Spore in the EA Advanced Weapons Labs had showed the way. But the cost… they’d had to nuke an escaped Brian Crecente on the corner of 4th Avenue and Broadway. Only a clumsy Gawker clone and a Sims expansion pack which wiped the knowledge of that intersection from the public mind had ensured the cover up. His favourite noodle house had been on that corner. Really great noodles ….

He wondered if he should arrange another attempt on Stephen Totilo – the wounds from the Desktop Tower Defense debacle were still fresh. But it was the little guys who were causing the real problems: penetration attacks from TIGSource were getting more common every day and Stallman still lived, protected by the Dckx mafia, despite that outrageous price on his head. He could feel the sand slipping through his fingers like goo through a pipe. How could he identify the next big thing if he couldn’t even see the potential in his own staff?

As Doull says in a comment below the ‘review,’ “Despite what I wrote, this isn’t a specific dig at EA or the game industry. It was more a ‘isn’t it a great opportunity to be an independent developer, because the tools are now out there to not have to worry about the low level stuff anymore’.” It’s worth a read just for the mental image of a clone Crecente and a destroyed corner in New York City. Long live the indie game.

Review: World of Goo [Ascii Dreams via Rock, Paper, Shotgun]