"God Warrior" isn't a bad name for the Eva itself, is it? If you went back in time 20 years, you could probably get the gist of the series across to someone with the description "mecha anime featuring the God Warriors from Nausicaa."
"God Warrior" isn't a bad name for the Eva itself, is it? If you went back in time 20 years, you could probably get the gist of the series across to someone with the description "mecha anime featuring the God Warriors from Nausicaa."
The attack of the children's book villains wouldn't draw him out?
I dunno... the last quoted sentence seems a little convoluted.
Right now, we consider Albert Einstein to have discovered the theories of special and general relativity, much the way people sometimes credit Leonardo Da Vinci with coming up with the idea of the helicopter. (He didn't. There were toys ones in China centuries before him.)
My freshman-level college Bio lab perpetuated this in the lab handbook. Not only that, the professor doing the lecture told us that every Bio textbook, ours included, gets the ovarian cycle wrong, because at any given point in time there are a bunch of follicles in different stages of development.
I don't think reinforcing the existing stigma attached to schizophrenia and other mental illnesses is going to help anything.
My imagined phone dialogue, taking place ~36 hours ago:
Didn't you just say that?
There should be a ratio of CG stuff on screen to emotion.
Right. Quite true. They're different because he maintains his memories; otherwise, the initial conditions are identical, so lots of events repeat. But keeping his memories, like most instances of mental time travel, makes it a different variety — a past-changing variety. If it's "stable," the past doesn't change; it…
This "day-long stable time loop" movie basically became the name we use for that type of movie, instead of saying "oh, it's another day-long stable time loop movie."
I think the operative phrase is "the Avengers universe." As in, the Marvel Cinematic Universe, which for a Marvel setting has a severe lack of Spider-Man, Fantastic Four, and X-Men so far.
Eh. I think I'll just stick with my memories of The Spectacular Spider-Man.
It's surprisingly useful.
Possibly the coolest thing I saw in my entire 10th-grade chemistry class, including the alkali-metals-plus-water demonstration (from behind a glass shield, of course).
Time of Eve is love. There have only been a few times when I've seen an anime's first episode and thought, "Yes. This is how it's done." Time of Eve was one of them.
But look at how turns 3-28 of the hunt-and-target game go. It hits F6 (columns being letters and rows being numbers) and goes into Target mode, where it starts with four cells to try: F5, F7, G6, and E6, in that order. The first of these is a hit, but it doesn't interrupt the procession like a stack-based algorithm…
Am I mistaken, or does he mean "queue" when he says "stack"?
That's the odds for playing randomly. With this algorithm, it was about one in a million.