I'd hoped to continue my experiment with using random encounter tables to plan free time this month, but it's December and--like many people--I find that free time isn't something I need to worry about much during the holidays. Rather, it tends to be a blur of planned engagements and commitments--and that's true even in a normal year, which this isn't. While I won't right now dive into all of the reasons why this year has been more difficult and trying than others that come to mind, I feel strongly about not losing my momentum where it involves this blog; so I'm going to keep things going with some quick thoughts and reflections here as the season almost literally flashes in front of my eyes.


Games! When family gets together, we enjoy playing a variety of games--with favorites including titles such as Ticket to Ride, Dixit, Catan, and Quirkle. I'm not always a fan of card games--but I also particularly enjoy playing Twelve Days around the holidays and have for the last couple of years. Noting that, I noticed something for the first time in picking through the deck just the other day. Is it just me, or has anyone else noticed that Mrs. Claus looks fierce? I mean, Santa looks like Santa but Mrs. Claus--an hour of Sweet Grenadine hair color and she's out clubbing, right? Mr. Kringle, I think you need to stay on top of your game--that's all I'm saying.

how that project turned out. But I've also always just made an association between Christmas and robots dating back to around when I was seven. For some reason, all through my childhood, robots were really prominent on all my gift lists. There was the Transformers phase, which I suppose was fairly common. But another really deep cut--one that I will write about more comprehensively in a later post--was when I desperately wanted Raydeen from the Shogun Warriors.
The Shogun Warriors was a short-lived comic book series and toy collaboration between Mattel and Marvel back in the late 70s. But what was weird from my perspective was that the crossover between the toys and the comics seemed to be only partial. While I'd have been happy to own any of the two-foot tall figures based on the giant robots from the comic, there was only one crossover character--Raydeen. Unfortunately, it was also the most scarce of the figures in my area--presumably for the same reason.
It's only been in recent years that I learned that these robots were actually separately featured in Japanese animation in their own respective titles; the Marvel comic simply reinvented and repackaged them for an American audience. So the Great Mazinger that my parents eventually got for me--the one I ungratefully treated as a consolation prize--would have been warmly welcomed in thousands of other houses. While not featured in the Marvel comic, Mazinger was the subject of multiple anime series and even a recent animated movie. A cultural juggernaut several thousand miles away, he was greeted by an upturned nose and a sniffle at my house where I was a little boy who didn't know what he had.
Is there a Christmas message in there? Something to ponder as we bob and weave our way through various holiday traditions and obligations? Perhaps. In the meantime, I will simply wish you and yours happiness both in the midst of and in the aftermath of your celebrations.
Merry Christmas to all, and to all a geek life. :)
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