Catch more of the Terry Nation Army at Dalek 63.88’s YouTube channel
In our last chapter our heroes made it to Warbride’s compound. Whether they’ll actually meet Warbride herself with all that security has yet to be seen.
At this point I’m giving up trying to come up with pre-review rambling, so sorry if this looks bad on the homepage for someone just dropping in, but we’re going to get right to the review.
Ah, this should boost some time. While reading chapter 26 events seem to flow at least into chapter 27. That’s what happens when you write an intro before reading the chapter. So it looks like I’m reviewing two chapters because I want to see where this goes.
Runners: Bad Goods #3
Serve Man Press (June, 2004)
WRITER/ARTIST/CREATOR: Sean Wang
Read the color version here. I’m still using the black and white original because that’s what I have in print form.
Ironically for this topic, the video does contain swearing. It’s James Rolfe; you shouldn’t be surprised.
Check out more from Cinemassacre on YouTube
I actually use some of these as replacement swears. It’s more fun for me to use fake swearing like that, so it calms me a bit faster.
From what I hear, and note I’m not a tabletop RPG player but I follow quite a few on YouTube, someone from Microsoft was behind Wizard Of The Coast’s “open gaming license”, in which really it’s not open. If you do anything with their game mechanics they will claim it and take all the money you earned. And if they don’t like something you did (the false “racist” accusation comes to mind, where you can’t have evil races anymore because some orc’s feelings will be hurt) they will shut you down altogether. This has sent D&D fans away from the game and to other offerings. Pathfinder seems to be the one I hear the most. Apparently they were convinced Dungeons & Dragons players were so obsessed with their game that they would pay WOTC for the right to make content. That kind of backfired in their faces.
Over at The Clutter Reports this week I posted a video talking about the different terms used by Transformers fans in discussions, and for that site’s purposes sales and auctions, in case others wanted a boost selling figures they have. It works for non-Transformers action figures as well, except of course for the parts involving shape-changing robots.
Here at the Spotlight this week I’m hoping to finally make all my posts. It seems every week I miss one because Friday didn’t have a “Yesterday’s” Comic review. We’ll also be finishing the Kree/Skrull War in the same feature this week and continuing TekWar for Chapter By Chapter. I’m not sure what else will be next but hopefully you find something you like. Have a great week, everyone!

When I decided that my Saturday slot in “Yesterday’s” Comic would be the Fox Features Golden Age comics it was because I was listening to the Blue Beetle radio dramas and wanted to see the comics from that period. I ended up going with the earliest of their anthologies to feature superheroes and crimefighting, Wonder Comics, later renamed Wonderworld Comics even though Blue Beetle debuted in Mystery Men. I was going to go through Fox’s offerings the way I had DC and Marvel even though they didn’t have a shared universe…and I wasn’t touching the romance comics. Well, Wonderworld Comics has lost me because out of all the stories featured in the anthology only about three characters interested me.
So I’m going back to the original idea of going through Mystery Men unless that also gets boring and I’ll just jump to the solo titles for Blue Beetle, The Flame, and Green Mask, the only superheroes they seem to have with their own series. As I was going through my “Watch Later” list for Saturday Night Showcase offerings I came up another of Linkara’s collected retrospectives, like last week’s examination of the Marvel Comics Transformers run. “Blue-Skying” covers the early history of rookie patrolman Dan Garrett, his re-imagining into an archaeologist by Charlton Comics, and his two replacements, Ted Kord and Jaime Reiz, the latter appearing to be the only Blue Beetle to get a live-action counterpart and only the last two having animated appearances. Garrett just got the radio drama. I thought this would be a good one to use as a sort of preparation for me returning to the the reason I started with the Fox Features comics in the first place. So let’s listen in as Lewis Lovhaug, aka Linkara, looks into the history of a comic character Frederic Wertham once believed actually turned into a giant beetle to fight crime, because Seduction Of The Innocent will haunt me forever, and follow his replacements…one of whom turns into a giant beetle to fight crime.
Note that the original multi-part retrospective was created in 2016 and will not update any events after that.