A journey into the things we love: Podcast + blog! Get your geek on or discover your inner geek: games, video games, RPGs, comic books, movies, TV, books, oh so much more!
Crossing a river. Firefinger and pterafolk. Shield guardians are heavy. Azaka tigers out! When do turned undead actually turn? Climbing speed. Carrying capacity. Falling damage. Smacking someone as they fall past you.
This is an ongoing series of Shane’s notes, thoughts and tips for running the D&D adventure Tomb of Annihilation, plus D&D rules clarifications and DM / GM tips in general.
Shane Plays Geek Talk Episode #236 – 1/18/2020 Most Anticipated Geek Movies of 2021
Highlights:It’s the fifth annual team-up with Arkansas talk radio legend Dave Elswick for our Most Anticipated Geek Movies of 2021! What made the cut? How did our picks from last year hold up? Dave and Shane’s thoughts on Wonder Woman 1984. Dave’s theory on The Empire Strikes Back. Ed and Elizabeth Warren. Dave thinks Shane looks like Jerry Garcia. Press Play!
Shane Plays Geek Talk Episode #235 – 12/22/2020 The Elusive Shift: How Role-Playing Games Forged Their Identity with Jon Peterson
Highlights: Jon Peterson discusses The Elusive Shift, his newest in-depth book about role-playing game history. The importance of fanzines to the hobby and researching its history. Where did the term “role-playing game” come from? The history of “roll-playing” vs “role-playing”. Letting the dice tell the story vs GM fudging. Some dice history. Platonic solids and the nature of reality. What was Gary Gygax’s design reason for saving throws? The three types of wargamers. A D&D cookbook. Orc bacon. Bonus bad jokes.
I recently came across a copy of Runaway on DVD in excellent condition at my local Goodwill. For the first time in decades, I gave it a rewatch.
Runaway is a science fiction movie from 1984 that was written and directed by Michael Crichton. It features Gene Simmons in a business suit as the villain and Tom Selleck as a near-future LAPD officer who handles “runaways” which are robots that have gone off their programming in some way (see, because, in this near-future so many robots help with jobs and domestic tasks it needs its own police division).
It’s a fun 80s movie with some decent nostalgia value, but what really caught my eye this time around were several examples of futurology related to technology. Given that Runaway released 36 years ago, I’m impressed.
Let’s take a look.
Tablets
Not only did Runaway predict tablets, but it also nailed kids sneaking them under the covers after bedtime to learn about dinosaurs and other cool stuff.
Drones
The police use a machine they call a floater to investigate a dangerous situation by flying it into a house and using its camera. This is a straight-up drone and amazingly well predicted.
Video Doorbells
While investigating a crime, the cops in Runaway decide to check the video messages on the victim’s “door recorder” as part of casual standard procedure.
A lot of movies have predicted autonomous vehicles and Runaway did it with a cheesy mannequin in the driver’s seat, but I’ll still give it credit for doing it before it became almost a standard in sci-fi flicks. I’m not sure if the “robot” was doing the driving or if the car was driving itself.
Bluetooth Earpieces
We’ve had earpieces in sci-fi before, not the least of which being Lt. Uhura’s famous Star Trek prop. Runaway, however, is almost spooky in how well it predicts the sleek design of Bluetooth earpieces decades later.
Digital Photo Editing
While doing the police sketch artist thing, Runaway shows a sort of portable computer where the artist is practicing her craft using digital photo editing. In this case, maybe it was a set of stock hair and facial features she kept swapping in and out until it got close? Anyway, that’s not Gene Simmons with a thin mustache, it’s the space between image sections.
Smart Bullets
Luther, the movie’s villain, has a sweet pistol that fires smart bullets that use a sophisticated heat-seeking system to chase their victim while changing course during flight and even pulling a tight u-turn if needed before striking their target and exploding. I doubt the military has anything this precise, but smart bullets do exist now.
Shane Plays Geek Talk Episode #234 – 12/11/2020 OSR Gaming & Frog God Games
Highlights: Who are Frog God Games? The current state of OSR RPG gaming and some OSR history. Recommendations on trying out OSR games. North Texas RPG Con. Large cons versus intimate cons. Con special guest invitation criteria. Economics of RPG conventions. Economics of the RPG industry. RPG archaeology. Tavern brawls. A cool story about a lost piece of D&D and Gary Gygax history. Michael “Bad Mike” Badolato and Carl Heyl join.
When I first started Inktober, it was a bit of a lark with a big self-deprecating wink. Over time I’m actually noticing improvement as well as receiving spontaneous feedback from others that I’m improving. It’s a pleasant development. I’m not saying I’m great or anything, just getting better. Who knows what next year will bring? I’ve even bought some art pens.
Comics artist Tom Scioli ran “Jacktober” this year instead of doing Inktober. Each day was a prompt related to Jack Kirby. I did one day of this with the mother box prompt. I think it was the first time I’ve ever tried to draw kirby crackle and it was fun to do.
Shane Plays Geek Talk Episode #233 – 11/25/2020 Asunder RPG with Adam Lawson & Robert J. Schwalb
Highlights: Asunder is the dark fantasy RPG (powered by the Shadow of the Demon Lord system) set in a dying world with no metal where humans have transformed plants and insects into living weapons. Adam Lawson and Robert J. Schwalb join to discuss! How long is the average tabletop RPG campaign (the answer may surprise you)? What’s it like to make an RPG for the first time compared to what you THINK it will be like? The “Dread to GURPS” scale of RPG crunch. Shane has one of Robert’s sweaty custom leather wristbands.
Shane Plays Geek Talk Episode #232 – 11/13/2020 Tékumel: The Empire of the Petal Throne & M.A.R. Barker with Robert Alberti
Highlights: Tékumel: The Empire of the Petal Throne is known as the first published tabletop RPG setting, but began long before that in Professor M. A. R. Barker’s imagination. It’s a rich and exciting world matched by a fascinating creator! Bob Alberti (Tékumel expert, author, and friend of Professor Barker) tells us all about this important part of RPG history.
Shane Plays Geek Talk Episode #231 – 11/2/2020 Dungeons & Dragons Cartoon: Fan-created Final Episode
Highlights: The unproduced final episode of the 80s Dungeons & Dragons cartoon now exists thanks to superfans Ryan Nead and Marshall Hubbard and is receiving widespread praise! What was involved? How long did it take? Why did they do it? Why do they love the D&D cartoon so much? Is it an energy bow, a lightning bow, or a plasma bow? The final episode in other media. Ryan has a DeLorean.
Shane Plays Geek Talk Episode #230 – 10/23/2020 The Kill Journal with Adam Lawson
Highlights: Writer, director, and producer Adam Lawson (Snakes on a Plane, Escape the Night, The Eighth, TableTop) joins to talk The Kill Journal, a horror graphic novel about survivors of supernatural slashers who band together to get revenge. Which version of Michael Meyers is the most frightening? Michael vs Jason. What does Adam think of “newer” horror movies? Ed and Lorraine Warren. RPGs as spectator entertainment.