Marvel DLC for LittleBigPlanet Getting Pulled Soon

Marvel DLC for LittleBigPlanet Getting Pulled Soon

All of the Marvel DLC for LittleBigPlanet games is going away December 31, Sony has announced.

The DLC includes Marvel-themed level packs and costumes, including those for popular characters like Captain America, Iron Man, Spider-Man, and others.

As Polygon reports, there were four Marvel-themed costume DLC packs released for the original LittleBigPlanet, while two were made available for LittleBigPlanet 2. A level kit for LittleBigPlanet was also released, and the PlayStation Vita edition of LittleBigPlanet got an Arcade Pack themed around Marvel.

LittleBigPlanet and LittleBigPlanet 2 DLC is compatible with the PS3 and PS4 versions of LittleBigPlanet 3.

All of the content is on sale, with costume packs going for $3.29 each, while the level kit is offered for $2.74. The Marvel Arcade Pack for LittleBigPlanet PS Vita, meanwhile, is available for $2.74.

In addition, LittleBigPlanet 3 is on sale for $12/$8 as part of the third week of the PSN 2015 Holiday Sale.

Sony didn’t say why LittleBigPlanet’s Marvel DLC is going away, but the expiration of a licensing agreement might be the reason. After December 31, if you already bought any Marvel DLC for LittleBigPlanet, you’ll be able to redownload the content at a later time.

Marvel DLC for LittleBigPlanet Getting Pulled Soon

Man designs, builds church out of Legos for annual display

Man designs, builds church out of Legos for annual display

SAGINAW, Mich. (AP) — A Michigan man designs and builds a church out of Legos and displays it his own house of worship each year as part of a Christmas season tradition.

John Kraemer makes one church per year out of Legos and puts it up at Christ the Good Shepherd in Saginaw, The Saginaw News reported (http://bit.ly/22kwxAX ). This year’s creation, built from about 15,000 Lego bricks, is on display throughout the holiday season.

Kraemer said he builds for a number of reasons, including a connection to his faith. He calls the Lego churches a “snapshot of parish life.”

“I’ve always had a very deep passion for my Catholic faith,” Kraemer said. “For me, it’s really the core of who I am.”

And he’s noticed how others enjoy seeing his work.

“As I’ve gotten older, I’ve come to appreciate that, No. 1, people enjoy this,” Kraemer said.

In the 1990s, Kraemer started coming up with designs for Lego church buildings. His first display was a Mount Sinai Lutheran Church in Montrose. In 2003, he put one up at his own church, which then was known as St. Helen Catholic Church, and has done so since then.

Kraemer has a mild case of cerebral palsy that somewhat limits his mobility and has faced other health issues in recent years. He said the process of planning and building a Lego church each year is therapeutic.

“It allows me to overcome some of my own challenges. It allows me to do something I really love,” he said.

Man designs, builds church out of Legos for annual display

Analysis: Lego sets are better than gold, stocks

Analysis: Lego sets are better than gold, stocks

Did Santa bring your children Lego sets for Christmas? You might want to consider not letting them open them. Not only will you save yourself from invariably stepping on them, but you could save for your kid’s college education.

According to an analysis by the UK Telegraph, the building-block toys are a better investment than gold or the stock market.

The FTSE 100 (an index of 100 companies on the London Stock Exchange — similar to the S&P 500 on the New York Stock Exchange) has increased in value an average of 4.1 percent since February 2000, according to the Telegraph analysis. By comparison, Lego sets kept in perfect condition have increased in value 12 percent each year during the same period. If you invested in gold, you received a 9.6 percent annual increase in value, according to the Telegraph.

The secondary market for Lego sets, especially ones that are no longer in production, is the reason why Legos are better than gold. For instance, the value of the Cafe Corner Lego set, which originally sold for $139.99 in 2007, can fetch as much as $1,600 on sites such as BrickPicker.com, as long as the box is unopened. But where’s the fun in that?

Analysis: Lego sets are better than gold, stocks

A Christmas message from Harry Potter!

A Christmas message from Harry Potter!

From Weasley sweaters to Invisibility cloaks. From the Great Hall and its 12 towering Christmas trees to the cozy kitchens of Number 12 Grimmauld Place and the Burrow. There are many reasons and ways that make Christmas truly magical throughout the Harry Potter series.

Harry spent most of his Christmases at Hogwarts–playing wizards chess with Ron (and getting destroyed, literally) or dancing the night away with two left-feet at the Yule Ball during his fourth year, at the Twiwizard Tournament.

Christmas is also a time to gather with loved ones: friends and family. Harry became an adoptive son to the Weasleys, and he got his first real Christmas gifts from Mrs. Weasley (a yearly Christmas sweater–one with his first initial, one with a Hungarian Horntail on it, one with with a Gryffindor lion). Sirius made a grand entrance into his grandson’s life, by anonymously gifting Harry his Firebolt in his third year. Sirius was later abel to host Christmas in Harry’s 5th year, with all of Harry’s family: Lupin, Tonks, the Weasleys, and Hermione.

Pottermore is also celebrating Christmas, and its importance in real life and the Wizarding World. They have put together a beautiful hi-res hi-def Pottermore “Moments” 2016 calendar, available for Muggles and No-Maj alike to download here.

Christmas is a time for love and joy, a grand celebration with friends and family. Even with our/your Dursley-like relatives (though, we hope none of you are gifted a tooth pick or a single tissue). From all of us to all of you, we wish you and yours very happy, merry, and safe Christmas!

Merry Christmas!

Please Stop Spreading This Nonsense that Rey From Star Wars Is a “Mary Sue”

Please Stop Spreading This Nonsense that Rey From Star Wars Is a “Mary Sue”

Over the weekend, even as most of us were celebrating the fact that a new Star Wars movie did not in any way suck, some portions of the internet got sucked into a pointless, silly debate. Is Rey, the film’s hero, a “Mary Sue”? The answer is no. Next question?

Some spoilers for The Force Awakens ahead…

I wrote about this on my Tumblr, but wanted to get into it in a bit more depth. So here goes.

“Mary Sue” is one of those terms that had a useful meaning in fan culture at one point, long ago, and has now become both vague and toxic. Originally, a “Mary Sue” was an author surrogate, inserted into fan-fiction. The “fan fiction” thing is important, because part of the fantasy of the “Mary Sue” was the fan-fic author getting to live at Hogwarts or travel on board the U.S.S. Enterprise. And this thinly veiled copy of the story’s author is incredibly good at everything, to the point where all the established characters marvel at her (usually it’s “her”) wonderfulness.

The “Mary Sue” is a very specific wish-fulfillment fantasy, in other words. It’s about getting to hang out with Harry, Ron and Hermione, and having them admire you. There’s nothing wrong with that kind of fantasy—we’ve all had it, when we get especially invested in a particular universe—but the term acquired a pejorative meaning because people felt it made for bad stories. Fair enough.

Over time, the term “Mary Sue” has broadened until it means “any female character who is unrealistically talented or skilled.” Which is insane for a couple of reasons: It makes this “trope” so vague as to be meaningless, and this is also purely a way at tearing down female characters who are good at stuff.

So without getting into heavy spoilers, Rey has one element of the “Mary Sue” character locked down: She’s a newly added character in an existing universe. But she’s among a bunch of new characters in the first chapter of a new story, so it’s not like she was introduced halfway through Return of the Jedi and suddenly started out-Lukeing Luke.

Meanwhile, is Rey unrealistically competent? She’s good at fixing machines, having spent her entire life as a scavenger taking apart the crashes spaceships on Jakku. She’s a good pilot, and maybe figures out how to fly an unfamiliar spaceship rather quickly. And she’s strong in the Force, learning to use Force powers incredibly fast. Just as most of The Force Awakens is pretty explicitly patterned on A New Hope, Rey is basically this movie’s answer to Luke Skywalker. Luke touches a lightsaber for the first time about 45 minutes into A New Hope, and is using the Force pretty brilliantly by the end of the movie.

But still, Rey’s prowess in this film is pretty incredible, considering that she doesn’t have Obi-Wan to train her. There are lots of hints that she had some training when she was a child, but in any case, this seems to be one of those “just go with it” things.

(I’d also argue that—SPOILER ALERT!—Kylo Ren teaches Rey a lot about using the Force. Every time she gets better at using it in this film, it’s right after Kylo Ren has tried to use it against her. She sees what he’s doing, and copies it. I thought it was fairly explicit that Kylo Ren is Rey’s “teacher” in this movie.)

But in any case, this is a convention of these sorts of movies. Kingsman also has a protagonist who is useless at the start of the movie and is an invincible badass by the end of the film. Most superheroes have a freakishly steep learning curve, even if they don’t have any powers. (Especially if they don’t have any powers.) If you are worried about realism, go watch My Dinner With Andre.

The thing about Rey, and characters like her, is that she subverts the actual awful trope that is ruining everything: the female character who is badass until the final act of the movie. Most films, with a character like Rey, would have her be ridiculously competent and brilliant until the final 20 or 30 minutes of the film, at which point she suddenly becomes useless and Finn has to solve everything. This is a trope that I have seen in approximately seven billion movies: the super-awesome woman who becomes suddenly less awesome as the male hero takes control of his power.

So yes, Rey is a tad unrealistic. Not unlike everything else in this universe with a magic space elf and fantasy mind powers and spaceships that can jump across the galaxy at the push of a button. What she isn’t, is more unrealistic than most of the other characters.

What the “Mary Sue” thing shows—other than that people will find any craptastic excuse to tear down female characters—is that memes have a decay rate. After a while, they wear out and you gotta find new ones. Fan culture is good at putting its finger on that one thing that’s bugging us at this one specific moment, but then absolutely terrible at generalizing and extrapolating, until you reach the heat death of criticism: total loss of information. This is a failure mode of fan culture, and it’s something to watch out for.

Please Stop Spreading This Nonsense that Rey From Star Wars Is a “Mary Sue”