Tuesday, January 12, 2016
Monday, December 21, 2015
Teenagers From Outer Space: TFOS Does Winterfest!
First
off, no relation to the Mystery Science Theater 3000 subject of the same name.
Although that was certainly goofy enough to be right at home in this game.
Without going into too much detail, as I’m pondering a rundown of the game itself sometime, once upon a time a designer at R. Talsorian Games found out about a really funny sci-fi/school comedy anime called Urusei Yatsura and evidently thought it would be a great basis for a role-playing game. And thus was born Teenagers From Outer Space, where creatures from across the cosmos have decided to enroll their kids in human schools and expose them to such radical ideas as individuality and capitalism. The players control these star spawn, or the lucky kids who’ve been put in charge of helping them get acclimated to life as an Earthling teenager. And hijinks, as they say, ensue.
Sadly
while the game’s fondly remembered by the people who did get to experience it,
it evidently didn’t find a lot of support from the game-buying public. I own
six products with this game’s name on them and as far as I know that’s it. Three
are versions of the core rules, two are premade adventures and one’s a mall for
the players to hang out at. Heh, malls. Remember those?
One
of those premade adventures is the subject of this particular review, but pays
homage to its animated roots by eschewing the long and intricate plot of the
only other premade adventure, “The Field Trip,” and instead being a loose
outline of short, humorous episodes to keep things fast and fun. They also
packed in a list of new powers characters can have, like being stretchy or
literally being so cool your character can deflect an attack by making a (hard)
saving throw.
As
the name indicates the meat of the series of little episodes laid out in the book revolve around the winter festivities
of the characters’ school (Or perhaps the very, very basic premade school that
comes with the booklet. I’m not sure if it’s embarrassing or not that the
school outline that came with “Bad Medicine for Dr. Drugs” was more detailed. And that was a serious anti-drug tale that still thought a good name for a street gang was "The Monkey Thugs"). These
include the big dance, electing the WinterFest king and queen, an extremely
cheap and dangerous carnival, a planetary invasion by three races of evil,
uncool aliens at the exact same time, and of course saving Santa Claus from
corporate mercenaries.
Yes,
really.
Of
course the GM’s expected to fill in an awful lot of blanks to keep things as
crazy as possible, so the scenarios in this module require a certain kind of
person to run them. But then, TFOS requires a certain kind of player to begin
with. The main focus of the scenarios is on winning a popularity contest
against a pair of jerky but good-looking cool kids (aren't they all?), something the players can’t
do with brute force even if the game makes it easy for players to equip
themselves with silly futuristic weapons. Hell, it’s easy for the unwashed
masses to resort to violence; if they were smart and sophisticated enough to
try something else they wouldn’t be the unwashed masses.
On
that note, though, I’d say that while the final scenario where the players help
save Santa is practically required, it’s also a disappointment. While in the
hands of a good GM it’ll still end up being plenty silly, it’s also just your
typical “blow up the bad guys” thing from any old RPG. Besides the holiday
theme it’s not connected to the previous plot ideas and just kind of pops in
like a poorly-integrated boss fight. There aren’t even circumstances that have
them meeting up with Santa who’s already in trouble: the kids just hear about
commandos attacking the workshop on the news and, presumably, pile into their
flying saucers to go to Saint Nick’s rescue. Suppose those zappy guns it’s so
easy for the players to get had to figure in somewhere.
I guess I'm just down on heavy combat in a game that tries to be as cartoony as possible, and the penalty for losing all your hit points is missing your next turn, and then getting them all back after that. Sounds to me like the combat monsters can stay home.
I guess I'm just down on heavy combat in a game that tries to be as cartoony as possible, and the penalty for losing all your hit points is missing your next turn, and then getting them all back after that. Sounds to me like the combat monsters can stay home.
It’s
a little interesting to note the game getting a little more blatant about its
anime roots, even if some of it’s stuff the players aren’t really meant to see.
One of the aliens the players have to save Christmas from during the three-way
invasion are the Robotoids from planet Voltron, and considering whose work
inspired this game in the first place, I highly doubt it’s a coincidence that
one of the stimuli the new power list uses as an example of what can set off an
“out of control power” is being hit with cold water. Not when switching genders is already a power in the game.
And
look at those cute Totoros you can win for your lady! Or whatever’s appropriate
on the planet you’re from.
All
in all, aside from the combat-centric scenarios, this is a pretty good module.The winter festivities are a great setup for plenty of teen-related chaos, the new powers and devices described in the book are cool and a lot more original than the ones in the book as they weren't filling most of it out by copying and pasting from UY's major alien characters.
But
if there’s one thing that’s a shame about this book, I’d actually say it’s the
humorous insert art, since nobody’s meant to read the booklet except the GM. As
bare-bones as it is to leave most of the content up to the person running the
game who actually knows his players and their quirks. So, here’s a few more examples of the goofy pictures in this booklet, along with a little sample of the mayhem
waiting to be unleashed.
Happy
holidays!
Monday, September 29, 2014
Adventures of the Rope Warrior (Snark)
Making
something that’s boring but beneficial entincing to kids is a tricky job,
not helped by how a lot of edutainment makers seem to severely underestimate
kids’ ability to tell when they’re being led on. Certainly I have fond memories
of some of the edutainment shows of my youth, but one approach that seems almost
impossible to pull off is when the makers try to weave their moral into a story
of grand adventure to grab young viewers’ attention. Most of the time you get a
Captain Planet and the Planeteers,
something remembered more for the absurdity of its presentation than the
positive values it contained.
Which
is why I feel a little bad saying that David Fisher’s pair of books are pretty dumb. But then, books about a guy
who gets the strength to save the universe from alien drug dealers and
obesity-promoting corporate bosses by jumping rope, well…If anybody’d ever
heard of this, Captain Planet’s place
in internet history might in trouble. Or at least Drug Avengers's.
I
say I feel bad because the benefits of jumping rope are something I’m inclined
to think he truly believes in. The first of these Rope Warrior books came out
in 1996, but in August of this very year he put out a new book of jump rope tricks.
I do believe this is an entire lifestyle for Fisher, and yeah, nearly all of us
could stand to spend more time looking after our health. Still, if you write a
morality tale, and you name two negative characters Maury and Ima Whiner, you
do it to yourself, really.
It
also doesn’t help how both books start off with this:
Granted
it’s talking about feats like using a jump rope to swing on something or
twirling it to deflect projectiles. The kind of stuff people only do in high
fantasy, and without which the jump rope would have no place in the narrative. Still,
it sounds really weird to set out to tell the reader jumping rope is totally awesome while
telling them not to do any of the things the role model the story gives does
with his jump rope.
But
I’ve delayed talking about the story itself long enough. In 2086 (90 years
after the work is published rather than the usual even 100, cute), the Roper
family are the first humans to live on another planet in an experimental
station on Mars. They’re really into fitness. So much so that young Charles got
the nickname “Skip” for his love of skipping rope.
![]() |
Obviously happy family in action plot. DEAD. |
But
one day their idyllic existence of getting up at 4:45 AM to jump rope every
morning is shattered as evil aliens from the planet Keebar (Keebar??) attack the Mars station and
try to perform some kind of insidious operation on Skip’s parents. When it fails,
their leader, Varco, guns the Ropers down and blows up their emergency escape
ship, leaving young Skip alone and jumping rope for years, awaiting rescue.
But
eventually rescue does come: an old friend of the Ropers comes by to check on
them after 15 years of no regular reports (yeah, really). A friend who’s since
joined the “Intergalactical Drug Police,” but I had a lot more fun just calling
them “the Space Narcs.” Anyway when Skip finds out the Space Narcs are on the
trail of the guy who killed his parents, who runs an interplanetary drug ring,
he wants in too. And because he’s the main character, he gets in.
It
turns out the Space Narcs’ next big operation is to destroy an isolated but
heavily-defended drug factory. As opposed to someplace in the middle of
civilization but not sticking out like a frigging sore thumb, but whatever. We’re talking about villains only one step up from ones who chop down acres of
rainforest just because they’re bored. The Space Narcs have a formula that can
make anything coated with it indestructible, but not enough of it to actually shield
anybody, let alone multiple agents, from getting close enough to destroy the
factory without being blown away by its massive laser sentry guns. Skip suggests they coat his jump rope with the formula so he can twirl it to
deflect the lasers while the other Space Narcs blow up the factory, and so his jump rope will actually figure into the plot. Because
he’s the main character he's given his wish, and because he's the main character his idea works.
But
unlike in other brainless, socially-relevant adventure stories, blowing up one
extremely obvious source isn’t enough to topple the Keebarian (yes, Keebarian)
drug empire. The Space Narcs did find a clue to where to look
next, though: the word “GIRTH” and the fact that they tracked Varco’s escape
ship to Earth. Being the newest member and thus the one least likely to be
recognized, Skip heads to the planet of his parents’ birth to find out the
meaning of GIRTH.
So
we begin the second book, Survival of the
Fit, and with the setup out of the way all remnants of subtlety are lost
without a trace. GIRTH turns out to be the name of a huge company that runs a
city where everything is automated and most people never leave their homes.
Gee, in a book where the hero jumps rope, that can only mean evil’s afoot!
Indeed,
as Skip finds out when he infiltrates their headquarters and meets up with a pair of
shapely females who were kidnapped for trying to host a workout show on public
access (one of whom falls in love with a guy named “Skip” waaaay too readily),
GIRTH is under the control of none other than his archenemy Varco the Keebarian
drug kingpin! The reason GIRTH doesn’t let anyone get away with being healthy
is so they’ll die young and their bodies can be harvested for the impurities a
sedentary life inflicts, which it turns out are the secret ingredient in Varco’s
evil Space Drug! And the reason he got mad at Skip’s parents, if you care, was
because they took such obscenely good care of themselves there was nothing in them to make drugs
from. Which leaves us with an absolutely beautiful Space Whale Aesop:
exercise regularly and eat right or you’ll be contributing to alien drug
trafficking. Good lord.
![]() |
The blob guy looks about as confused as I was. |
And
the book manages to get even more insane. Skip proposes to the Space Narcs that
he and the girls go back and try to encourage people to get fit. The Space U.N.
applauds his devotion but thinks that’ll take too long, Varco will figure out
what they’re up to and move his operation somewhere else, and the only viable
option to stop him now is to blow up planet Earth for the greater good of the
civilized galaxy. Not even the city where they know his headquarters are, the entire frigging planet. Makes me wonder if the other planets who belong to this group
worry about what might be going on on their planets that’ll get them blown up.
![]() |
What are you even pointing at, Skip? |
But
wouldn’t you know it, the Space Narcs arrested a guy who tried to blow up their
ship who turns out to be from the future! And if he takes Skip far enough back to
have time to spread the joys of rope-jumping and stave off the need for
planetary destruction, he might be able to bargain for a lighter sentence! And
after accidentally ending up in the Cretaceous period first because that’s a
rule about time-traveling in subpar stories, they finally get to their intended
time period, which surprised me a little by still being about 50 years in the
future relative to the book’s publication.
I
was kind of expecting Skip to come back to the late 20th
century and have his adventures in fitness alongside some normal kids from our
time. Such as in some supremely ill-advised programming like Lazer Tag Academy or something.
![]() |
Speaking of.... |
Or worse, that David Fisher might try to evoke some more interest at school
assemblies about the joys of jumping rope by claiming to be Skip Roper himself
come back to save the world with the power of aerobic exercise. Or maybe even on
one of those televised appearances he’s so big on you knowing about.
And
despite the promise of another adventure, this is where the saga of the Rope
Warrior ends. You almost have to think the author knew that, with how the book
ends with the time traveler making another stop to save Skip’s parents too,
thus ridding him of any baggage he might’ve had and leaving nothing but his
passion for jumping rope. And that’s another problem a lot of these heroes
meant to teach messages suffer from: they’re so clean-cut and boring the
message they try to encourage seems boring by association. “This guy saves the
world from aliens and says I should jump rope? Geek. Let’s go watch the Power
Rangers instead, they fight aliens with laser guns and super-cool robots.”
![]() |
Yes, I'm aware something was stuck to the scanner. It seemed appropriate. |
Just
from a technical standpoint, the first book feels like the author wanted to
shove in every single little idea and detail he came up with, thinking that’d
make the limited story it actually tells more gripping. There was a fair bit I didn't mention to keep the summary from bogging down. Like when Skip’s been
on the station for years he realizes he’s grown out of his kiddie jumpsuits and
goes to put on one of his dad’s. There’s some kind of biological sample in the
elbow that melts into Skip’s blood when he puts it on. In both books, we never
find out what it did to him.
Also,
right after his parents are killed, Skip sees himself on the Mars station’s
security cameras and realizes he’s walking around all angry and obsessed like
Varco did. He decides he needs to keep his cool and not let anger overtake him.
And that’s the last we hear of that. It wouldn’t be unreasonable to assume the
reader’s meant to take away the lesson they shouldn’t let their problems take
control of them. But if Skip realizes that and overcomes his problems that
quickly, he’s even more dull to read about…
But
point being, there’s an awful lot of stuff going on in the first book.
It feels very, very busy for a young
adult novel. In the second book by comparison, it felt like I was watching an
old movie serial most of the time, with lots of little cliffhangers at the ends
of chapters. Where some GIRTH security guards shoot into a cardboard box we’re
led to believe Skip’s hiding in, and he winces as lead rips through the sides
of his hiding spot…except he was actually climbing the wall of the building,
and what he was wincing at was one of the guards making a bad joke. When the
Keebarians think they’ve tricked Skip into returning to his Space Narc buddies
carrying a time bomb, in the next chapter we find out he actually realized his
Space Narc identity badge felt kind of heavy and turned the tables on the Space
Drug Pushers.
But
speaking of the Space Narcs, I’m really worried about them being run by idiots.
In the span of the two books we find out they incarcerate their prisoners
somewhere the prisoners can see their impounded vehicles, meaning if they were
to escape their escorts or cells…yeah. There’s also a rule that any Space Narc
can challenge any other Space Narc to combat at any time. This challenge cannot
be denied. Not to the death or anything, but what the hell kind of
drug-policing body is this??
The
rule’s real reason for existing seems to be so a main character gets a chance to
prove himself before the Space Narcs when an incredulous senior member
doesn’t believe a guy who’s only been in the agency a day should be hearing
about all their most important plans. Which, really, Skip probably shouldn’t,
but he wouldn’t be involved in the plot if he didn’t. The way the author
clumsily plasters over that plot hole it just sounds like the Space Narc
administrators are using the contraband substances they confiscate for themselves.
And
whatever other problems the series had, the second book almost seems as if it
was never proofread. One particularly awful incident shows itself after the
heroes find out what the secret ingredient in the villains’ Space Drug is, and the
Space U.N. decides they’re too firmly entrenched for any solution to work but
the (regrettable) annihilation of planet Earth.
Now,
as noted the Space Narcs arrested a guy who turns out to be a time traveler,
and Skip and another human Space Narc decide to have him take them back in time
along with the girls from the public access workout show. Once in the past,
Skip and the girls plan to spread a message of health and fitness to derail the
villains’ plan before it can start, and save Earth from destruction.
But
that’s when the bad continuity checking kicks in. Skip and his human Space Narc
buddy decide not to tell the girls about the Earth being destroyed in their
present…but then they immediately do. Yet when they go back in time, a
character accidentally voicing his surprise at Earth still being where it’s
supposed to proves they actually did go back in time. The idea that Earth
wouldn’t be there causes the girls to ask what he meant, and they’re distraught
to learn Earth was destroyed. Despite having been told about that before they
left.
Like
I said at the beginning, I feel a little bad raking these books over the coals.
Mostly because the author does seem to believe in his message, and a little bit
because he seemed to think the Rope Warrior was going to be huge. In the back
of the first book are profiles of a couple of the supporting characters,
seemingly meant to go on the back of action figure packages.
There
were was even a fan club membership form.
Look
at that. The author believed in the Rope Warrior books and their fan club so
much he set a date when he’d stop accepting applications, even. Does anybody
out there still have one of those posters or newsletters? I’m just so morbidly
curious after hearing about this.
But
let’s get real. A role model who fights alien drug lords and travels through
time…but what you’re supposed to pay
attention to is him jumping rope? Was never gonna happen. Good on the author for his dedication to the
merits of jumping rope. But good on whoever made him realize his attempt at a
rope-jumping pop culture icon would never happen, too.
Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Loonatics Unleashed - The Music Villain (Snark)
Here
we go with the kickoff to the finale of Loonatics
Unleashed. Technically they consider the finale to be a two-parter, and
that’s the two after this one. But forget that. This episode leads straight into
the last two and has events you need to know about for those to make sense. It’s a three-parter.
This
episode’s called “The Music Villain,” eh? As in the stock member of a superhero
rogues gallery with a music motif?
The
Loonatics are at Zadavia’s little underwater house where she’s praising how
much more formidable they’ve gotten, like Bugs with his magic sword and Wile E.
in the “non-technology hero department.” No idea what she was watching to make
that assessment, since if anything the show relies on his inventions even more
now than the last season. In fact as she says that we clearly see footage of
him using his turn-things-to-water gun from “Cape Duck.” “I’ve been trying to
get out of the lab more” indeed.
Right
after this they’re interrupted as Zadavia gets a talking email saying she and
guest are invited to the show at the Cosmic Abyss that night, but it’s only
from “a friend.” Lexi says that’s apparently a mondo venue, and despite being
some kind of super vague important dignitary/law enforcement official,
Zadavia’s curiosity’s greater than her caution and she decides to see who sent
the tix.
Daffy
acts as if he’s obviously going to accompany her to this, but she comeidcally
picks Wile E. instead. At least she didn’t pick Bugs. Daffy shows up anyway, since
it’s hard to keep teleporters from gate-crashing these things. He even acts
like a jerk and tells Wile E. to get them some drinks, and Wile E. does. Hey,
if he’s a jerk, you’re a doormat.
![]() |
Check the reactions on the crowd. |
The
generic music act ends, and introducing the next act is none other than Mr.
Leghorn, almost unrecognizable yet somehow more recognizable than ever because
of how much more Doug Dimmadome-y he became in between seasons.
Meet
Bootes Belinda, an annoying funk musician OF
THE FUTURE! He sounds a lot like the guy who talks over the intro sequence,
actually, because, well, it is the
same guy, Bootsy Collins. Dang, went all out for a name for his character, eh?
He constantly says “Hit me!”, and I’m inclined to humor him.
After
a minute Zadavia recognizes the music the band’s playing, and Bootes calls out
to “Zadie” before he starts blasting lasers from his stupid future guitar into
the stands
The
entire band starts destroying the stadium, and despite having energy powers
sufficient to go up against fighter ships, I have to notice Zadavia’s content
to do nothing more than blast a few pieces of falling debris before they hit her and
her escorts. Not other people, just her, Daffy and Wile E. This leaves the two
Loonatics present to try and subdue the militant musicians. Granted Zadavia was
just talking about how much they’ve honed their skills, but is this really the
time to promote their personal growth?
Daffy
and Wile E. aren’t much use and get flung into the stands, and the band fly
away on their floating stage, having achieved…something.
Back
at Loonatics HQ (and not the underwater house) Zadavia’s still sure she heard
that short bit of music before, and right then Bootes easily hacks their
communications and taunts Zadavia that they do indeed have a shared past even
though she claims to have never seen him before. Flexing his Batmanesque
Detective Skills™ once again, Bugs suggests they “do some snoopin’ and see
where handsome and his funky band play next.” Which will work! Because after
collapsing their previous venue and attacking the attendees, he’ll show
up to play wherever he’s booked next and WON’T be intercepted by legions of
police and/or military waiting for the guy to show his face. Besides, he’s
obviously interested in Zadavia, so even if the Loonatics do run into him at
his next gig, what are the odds it’ll just be a distraction so they won’t be
around to stop flunkies from grabbing her? I’m going to go with high to very
high.
But
we don’t even have to wait. Retiring to her underwater house, Zadavia’s
flabbergasted to find “the Lumarius Flower of Freleng” floating in her room,
since “it can’t be, not here.” When she touches the bloom, it sucks out her
rainbow powers. Bootes was hiding and comes out to explain how the flower’s
“the black dwarf daisy, a cosmic light sucker. No photons escape its petals.”
And since her powers are apparently light-derived, she’s badly weakened.
Although if she was able to recognize the flower you’d hope she’d know that and
know better than to touch it.
And
remember Bugs’s plan to check where Bootes’s band will be playing next? They’re
not calling around or checking booking records to find that out, the Loonatics
are out randomly hitting nightclubs
hoping to find one he’s playing at. I
just…wha…why…how did…<deep breath> We went from Bugs solving mysteries with his master detective skills to randomly throwing out
lines hoping for a bite? Why nightclubs when he was big enough to get booked at
a huge stadium? And perhaps best of all, the Loonatics aren’t out checking
different clubs, so as to make semi-effective use of their time with this
gambit. All of them are together for some reason as they do this.
Daffy
apparently got a bit of action while they were in there, though, leading Bugs
to declare “You’re hopeless, Duck.” Consider who came up with the genius plan he’s not sticking to
before you remonstrate anybody, oh Great Leader.
Bugs’s
watch goes off then, and he automatically can tell that Zadavia’s in trouble
and they speed to her underwater house to the rescue. You see?! I told you, you
were just leaving her ripe for the picking, but noooooooooooooooo!
They
run in and find the place trashed, which I guess Bootes did just to be a dick
since obviously no struggle took place. “Looks
like the maid’s in for a butt-kicking,” Daffy opines. “Uh, I don’t think a maid
did this, Duck,” Bugs replies. And I don’t think he was serious, ya big-eared
twit.
Wile
E. plays back the security cam footage, showing Zadavia touching the flower and
getting sucked dry before Bootes himself calls them on the holo-phone. He shows
them he’s got what’s-her-face hostage, but is willing to let her go for “a
little cosmic guitar” that Wile E. can “funkenstein up.” Wile E. traces the
signal (which Bootes was expecting him to do), but first it’s off to
funkenstein up that cosmic guitar. And that’s all they’re telling us about this
thing for now. Cosmic guitar.
![]() |
Zadavia put a security camera in her ow bedroom? |
Upon
arriving at the rail yard to meet up with Bootes, Bugs asks if everybody knows
the plan. You’re only asking now? Everyone says yes
while brandishing progressively larger weapons. Yeah, that’s not gonna turn the
situation ugly. Bootes shows up and quips, “if it ain’t a blast from the past!” He does ignore all their weapons, though, and just wants the
guitar.
As
soon as he has it, the band attacks the Loonatics but proves more than a match
for the varmints’ firepower. That is, until Wile E. gets them with his trusty jello gun.
Somehow being trapped in jello exposes the band members to be robots (or
“mannequins”) except for the keyboard player, who somehow uses his keyboard to set two trains on a collision
course with the car where Zadavia’s being held. Gotta say, it’s actually pretty
clever for this show to have the real villain trick the heroes into thinking
one of his flunkies is the leader to take them by surprise. Even if none of them noticed how he was suspiciously absent before.
The
Loonatics stop the trains just in time, but Zadavia proves to be a holographic
dummy, and this gives the keyboard player time to free his puppets and make off
with the cosmic guitar. And none of the Loonatics bother to think of pursuing
with those jetpacks they got there with.
Back
at his hideout, the keyboard player siphons Zadavia’s rainbow powers, which she
still has somehow despite the thing with the flower, into the cosmic guitar
which makes it truly cosmic, I guess. Zadavia wakes up and remembers seeing him
before, back on Freleng, this menacing personage proving to be one Rupes
Oberon.
The
villains to come from Freleng have all been insultingly one-dimensional, but
this one’s just painful. Rupes, or as the credits call him and so shall I,
Keyboard Man, became embittered and joined a cabal for universal domination
because…Zadavia ignored his composition for a new Frelengian national anthem
(How can a planet have a “national” anthem? To quote one of the masters,
“Doesn’t the fact that it’s universal make it international?”).
Although
as usual Zadavia hardly comes out smelling like a rose. “But Rupes, we already
had a national anthem. One that had words.” That’s why you turned him down?
Because of the existence of lyrics??
She’s
only explaining this now, by the way. The way it plays out in the flashback
he’s serenading her, then Deuce whispers something in her ear and she gets up
and leaves without so much as a “thanks but no thanks.” Yeah, he’s a maniac for
becoming a force of evil over that (I almost said lunatic). No doubt. Who knows
what might’ve happened if she’d been polite about it instead of getting up and
walking away, though?
At
Loonatics HQ, the varmints are actually taking time trying to figure out who the
band’s puppetmaster was. Clearly not the guy it obviously was in the last scene!
![]() |
Look at this guy. He does not look like a cool, butt-kicking, crime-solving hero. Sorry. |
Wile
E. finally deigns to explain the significance of the cosmic guitar, and that it
ties into string theory. To hear him tell it, “Think of the universe as a
galactic orchestra. The Keyboard Man knows that if he can channel Zadavia’s
energy into his guitar, he can use that power to control the universe.” Simple
enough, not that he’ll ever do anything of that magnitude, but what does that
have to do with your description of the universe as an orchestra?
Bugs
magically intuits that what Keyboard Man wants above all else is attention.
That’s right, but how does he know?
Anyway, it means he’s going to try whatever he’s going to try at Galaxy Fest,
the biggest music fest ever. Which has nobody there when the Loonatics go there
and when the band attacks them again.
As
before the Loonatics prove a poor match for the band and get knocked all over
the place by their musical energy blasts, even without the bad guys busting out
the cosmic guitar. As usual Wile E. has a device to fit the occasion (Really
getting to strut his non-inventor stuff, isn’t he?), a satellite dish to
reflect the band’s attacks. Bugs goads them into shooting by insulting Bootes’s
mama, which works even though he’s just a puppet being controlled by Keyboard
Man.
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Where is that coming out of? Is he Inspector Gadget all of a sudden? |
The
mannequins are handily destroyed by their own reflected attack, but Keyboard
Man appears to be all too happy to be rid of them, as it’s only then
he busts out the cosmic guitar and uses it to drop the de-powered Zadavia off
the stage and open a portal that’ll take him to meet some other powerful baddie
he can join up with to complete his grand scheme.
Unfortunately
Roadrunner catches Zadavia, who moans. “I’m afraid the guitar isn’t the only
thing he’s taken,” Zadavia moans. “He’s also taken my powers.” Which you were
getting so much use out of, with the way you make them do all the dirty work.
By
the way, Bugs tries to console her by saying they can always get the guitar
back. Even though he himself said before it made Keyboard Man invincible, and
it gives a deranged musician control of
the fabric of the universe. Please be in a hurry to do something about
this, Greatest Action Hero of All Time! Man, this show was never that great,
but it’s gone downhill fast the last
couple episodes.
Who
should Keyboard Man be paying a visit to but Optimatus! Who’s chained to a
chair even though he wasn’t last time we saw him. I do hope they’re going to
explain that.
But
I ain’t betting on it.
And now...back to the two-part series finale.
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