When I watched the pilot for Hazbin Hotel , I adored it. It had a good balance of serious vs. silly. The musical nature worked. The characters were appealing. And I suppose I could say it has an irreverent edge that drew me in too. The series was one of the few bits of entertainment I would say I truly anticipated and even was the final nudge to get me to subscribe to Amazon Prime. The first season was pretty great. Some of the voice actor changes were a little off-putting, but grew on me. The season was filled with banger songs. Really, I loved it all around, I think. The second season didn't quite hit with me in the same way, though. Releasing two episodes (of eight) a week was a detriment in my book. The first two episodes were largely showing fallout from perspectives of Hell and Heaven, without moving things forward much at all. The next four then set up the stakes, explaining a few things and revealing others, but they felt moving a little fast and left me thinking "tha...
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ReplyDeleteThank you for not being one of the million who posted with something like: "Failed his Saving Throw vs. Death" or something else insipid. Let's remember the man for what he did, changed the idea of tactical fantasy miniatures into a codified rules experience of fantasy role-playing with a Tolkein-esqued spin.
ReplyDeleteAs someone who made a "failed his saving throw" comment, and not that I would argue that was a little trite, it was meant with the deepest respect to what a great man created :) AD&D was how I met redwolf, and the rest of the nighthawkes, got involved in the SCA, met the Droogs, and made so many memories I can't even count... Hell, Nighthhawk was one of redwolf's characters. Maybe it would have been more appropriate to say that he cast "plane shift", and I won't deny that alot of the "saving throw versus death" posts around the internet were people mocking him... just saying that mine wasn't ;)
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