Me. And a lot of people I know in real life.IRG CommandoJoe wrote:How can anything cyberpunk be great? Ugh, I just can't stand cyberpunk. Who the hell likes that shit?
And no, I don't care what you think about us
Moderator: Edi
Too bad we in America have that little bit about 'seperation of church and state'.The bible should be a mandatory read in elementary school, along with an explanation as to why it is a vile book. We'd have more atheists that way.
Hmm...maybe I'm getting this confused...what exactly is cyberpunk? Isn't it those guys in futuristic movies made in the 80's that have stupid crazy hair and are just disgusting lowlives? Or are they like hackers or something? Whenever I hear the phrase cyberpunks, I always think of those guys in the BTTF II movie that chase Marty on the hoverboards. lolPeZook wrote:Me. And a lot of people I know in real life.IRG CommandoJoe wrote:How can anything cyberpunk be great? Ugh, I just can't stand cyberpunk. Who the hell likes that shit?
And no, I don't care what you think about us
That would be wrong. Know thy enemy. If you can stomach the prose...IRG CommandoJoe wrote:Can I answer on behalf of a very large percentage of SD.net's community?
The Bible.
Prepare to burn in the cleansing thermonuclear fires of the world's atomic arsenal.A honorary mentioning goes to Lord of the Rings
Check out The Girl Who was Plugged In. It's a short story, I think by William Gibson. He's been credited as the pioneer of cyberpunk. But I disagree with that assessment. I think the first cyberpunk novel would be Caidin's Cyborg. [Edit: poorly phrased. That would be Cyborg by Martin Caidin] It's a great story that got turned into a total shitfest TV show that I loved when I was a kid: The 6 Million dollar Man. Seriously, the book is superior reading. Personally, I didn't like The Girl Who was Plugged In, but it IS a good example of cyberpunk.IRG CommandoJoe wrote:Hmm...maybe I'm getting this confused...what exactly is cyberpunk? Isn't it those guys in futuristic movies made in the 80's that have stupid crazy hair and are just disgusting lowlives? Or are they like hackers or something? Whenever I hear the phrase cyberpunks, I always think of those guys in the BTTF II movie that chase Marty on the hoverboards. lolPeZook wrote:Me. And a lot of people I know in real life.IRG CommandoJoe wrote:How can anything cyberpunk be great? Ugh, I just can't stand cyberpunk. Who the hell likes that shit?
And no, I don't care what you think about us
WTF!!Dahak wrote:The Mars Trilogy by K.S. Robinson.
Avoid. At. All. Costs.
Never read anything that boring in my entire life (although Hopcroft/Ulman's "Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation" really came close).
A honorary mentioning goes to Lord of the Rings.
You can hardly dismiss cyberpunk on the fact that you don't find the girl hot. (btu frankly either do I).IRG CommandoJoe wrote:Welp, there are a few grudges I have against The Matrix. First off, I don't find Trinity remotely attractive and I don't think other people do, but since she's the The Matrix girl, people say she's hot. I dunno, maybe it is just me.
Thats because Neo is the one, he can bend the Matrix to his will. For christs sake he can fly goddamnit!Secondly, there's a scene which makes no sense at all. The part where the helicopter smashes into the building, but the building bends in before exploding. WTF is that? If computers were powerful enough to generate an entire universe that people live in that is an exact duplicate of the real world, why would that happen? I'm sure if some computers that complex exists, they'd be able to accurately simulate real physics.
To quote Morpheus "Your mind makes it real." Something along th elines of it being so real your brain can't tell the difference.Some more things...why does the Matrix kill you physically and not just mentally screw you up? There is no logical explanation why whenver Neo got hurt you actually see him getting beat up in his chair. Makes no sense. The people that were killed in the Matrix should have just been brain dead or insane or something. Not actually have physical damage.
While playing FPS games like Aliens Vs. Predator, I've caught myself ducking to the side when something was coming at me as if that would somehow make my character onscreen evade the rocket flying at his face. That's on a little 17" computer monitor: imagine if my brain couldn't tell I wasn't actually creeping around on the surface of LV-426 with xenomorphs trying to chew off my face. That's how I'd interpret that scene: Neo's brain is so locked into what's going on that his body is reacting as if being punched, despite the lack of physical impact. Another analogy would be Morpheus's comment about "have you ever had a dream that was so real, you couldn't tell the difference?" I have: I've woken up from a dream where I was trying to kick something and woke up because my heel came back down on the edge of the bed hard enough to hurt and wake me up.Some more things...why does the Matrix kill you physically and not just mentally screw you up?
Well, LotR lacks character description. While Tolien managed to build a very believable world with detailed history, I just can't get myself to care for his characters ecause of their total lack of personality. They are merely vehicles to tell his history with, not characters in a caring sense.Captain tycho wrote:WTF!!Dahak wrote:The Mars Trilogy by K.S. Robinson.
Avoid. At. All. Costs.
Never read anything that boring in my entire life (although Hopcroft/Ulman's "Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation" really came close).
A honorary mentioning goes to Lord of the Rings.
BURN IN THE FIRES OF MOUNT DOOM HERETIC!
MAY YOU TESTICLES BE RIPPED OUT BY A RABID DONKEY!
MAY YOUR (oh, dammit, must think of something...)