Knights Of Xentar Color Wheel Chart
The colour wheel is an essential guide for colourists and in this post we look at why its such an invaluable salon tool. The colour wheel, sometimes called the colour star or circle, is an important tool used to manipulate colour. As the subtractive colour model is being used here, the primary colours are cyan, magenta and yellow. Splash Of Color; Stay On The Path; Stock Animal Diet; Stock Parody Jokes; Storybook Episode; Super OCD; Surprise Party; Swallowed Whole; Tangled Family Tree; The Big Bad Wolf; The Butler Did It; Too Incompetent To Operate A Blanket; Too Smart For Strangers; Twice Told Tale; Unbuilt Trope; Unorthodox Holstering; Victory Is Boring; Werewolf Theme.
Goodwill $75 in the black case you kind of see it within. It's not all good though.Good - System turns on, controller, audio all work, eye shield isn't damaged/funky, and has 3 nice games in their box, also has battery box and the AC adapter module too. Came in a nice hard briefcase, cleaned it up to keep it in.Bad - Left eye is DEAD, games have no manuals, batteries blew up in the battery box, slight damage to game stickers, and my hands HURT.
Also, no stand.:It was a blockbuster rental. Stickers on every single piece (system, battery box, ac adapter, part to ac adapter to lock on, games back AND FRONT.)Took me hours to clean it. The games I had to thumb rub the stickers off the front the tools put on the labels, backs had big BB stickers to pick away then alcohol wipe to kill entirely as did everything else. Battery box was fairly crusty but superficially thankfully mostly on the flap coils up top, got it de-funked.I'm going to have to mail this off, been wanting one of these nearly a decade and got it finally. I couldn't leave it to rot in that place, and they were annoyingly thinking of throwing it in the trash compactor when I mentioned it was broken, so it's a rescue. Ohh, a Mario's Tennis 'For Display Only' box.
Mega man x legacy collection x challenge. ―X Challenge, Mega Man X Legacy Collection X Challenge is a mode exclusive to the Mega Man X Legacy Collection and Mega Man X Legacy Collection 2 which allows the player to simultaneously fight two bosses from the SNES and/or PS1 Mega Man X games ( X1 - X6 ) using X in three consecutive battles.
I got one of those too. Makes the collection more complete.Nice!Yeah it does. I'll figure out something to do with it. I put it on a shelf sideways standing up with the other 2 for now as I don't want it smashed in the case all of it came in. I got my VB back on Saturday afternoon with the solder fix done on the ribbon cables and wow are the visually excellently clean, bright, and sharp.
I'm glad the one I had came with pinball as it maybe the most replay value possible title the system has other than maybe 3D-Tetris depending on taste. With like 4-5 tables and a high score mechanism on it, lots of fun. Same goodwill, but today of all things, Japanese N64 carts. Very strange to be in this area, seems it was a collection of them as there were a dozen, all marked $11 which sucked for the rest. There was Doraemon, Tamagotchi World, various JP version of games we did get too, and one of those T&E soft golf titles which were all worth less than they asked.I know it was a break even on them importing (game+shipping) but I didn't care.
It's Custom Robo, Custom Robo v2, and also Puyo Puyo Sun 64 so I'm happy. Also another shop, $3 - PS1 Street Fighter the Movie in a cracked(hinge gone on both) plastic long box. Haven't seen this one since the 90s at a store so I couldn't pass it up.
Disc is scuffy enough, but superficial I hope as I haven't tried it yet. Saw an ad in the facebook marketplace for some computer parts for 10 bucks for everything so I grabbed it. Even if a fraction of it works it's a good deal. I'm most hopeful for the 486 and motherboard. There's some decent video cards in here. A whole tray of floppies including 2 unopened packs.
Some cool old software and hand scanners. Big boxes of video and sound cards of various types cdrom and dvd roms floppy dives hard drives. I've ordered an ide to sd card adapter so I probably won't even use those. Some interesting pieces in here that I couldn't pass up for ten bucks.If that DDR2 800mhz XMS 2gb ram is good I'd buy it from you if your looking to sell it. This I found yesterday and it threw me off at first. I got this nice $3 bag of 80s toy parts, inside was a rough rider (LJN ver of stompers) but it had the wrong top and was dead - I revived it! Now I have a working motor and light, but no body unless I balance this jeep frame on top since locking it down will lock the wheels.
What you see here are a lot of mostly GIJoe a few Masters, Kenner StarWars, Stompers and misc parts.I went back later hoping the spot I found the bag was it was gone. Annoyed I looked around, scored this gem of a book set which (according to amazon) weighs 20lbs and it was all of $2. Second hand market seems to value it upwards of $100 unless you luck out closer to 60.
I used to love this series, I probably will end up keeping it and flip through the jokes, but wow, nice score they missed pricing better as it was just tossed on top of a bookshelf in that area.Just wish i could find another Omni rough rider top for my motor, I think it's the larger 4x4 pick up truck frame as it had the high arches which you can see here: (Also my wheel hubcaps are cone shaped like that too.).Not pictured also found another cheap $2 PS1 game (Jedi Power Battles, black label, excellent shape, total keeper.)Edited February 20, 2019 by Tanooki. Didn't get anything from the Goodwill, as that was picked fairly clean by the middle of February. A DVD player here, some computer keyboards there, but nothing absolutely essential. It seems to have become a dumpster for products that retail products couldn't sell. Lots of headphones and hand tools still in the package, with prices to match.
Saint Vincent had something nobody wanted, a loudmouth redneck whose solution for America's issues was genocide. A splitting headache, from having to listen to his dumb ass. Nice stuff and that Interplay package I was aware of it and at one time a year ago was thinking of grabbing it. I looked it up, it still has value too around $30 so with you at $5 into it, you did very well.It's easy to get it going on your PC. What you do is fire up dosbox, tell it to mount 2 drives instead of 1.
Mount the optical to a letter so it can be picked up, then another as your primary drive on a set directory. Run the CD inside there, use the original DOS installers and have it dump it to your mounted drive you made, and it'll work like normal. I had to do this for a couple things I picked up fairly recently both for CD and 1.44 floppies.
Nice stuff and that Interplay package I was aware of it and at one time a year ago was thinking of grabbing it. I looked it up, it still has value too around $30 so with you at $5 into it, you did very well.It's easy to get it going on your PC. What you do is fire up dosbox, tell it to mount 2 drives instead of 1. Mount the optical to a letter so it can be picked up, then another as your primary drive on a set directory. Run the CD inside there, use the original DOS installers and have it dump it to your mounted drive you made, and it'll work like normal. I had to do this for a couple things I picked up fairly recently both for CD and 1.44 floppies.That works fine unless a game uses CD audio.
I thought that still worked.I've got Knights of Xentar talkie-CD version of the game and it is able to access the audio on it. The game just like in real dos, when you enter a new area where a tune fires up, or when you get into a pop up conversation the game pauses a moment while the CD spins up to play the correct audio. I had to configured D-Fend Reloaded a particular way for it to work, but it does. Same with PGA Tour 96 for DOS.Oh it would play but DOSBOX does not do CD audio very well at least with default settings.
But then again I don't care since I just play on a real DOS system anyway. I actually have a post in this forum again! Yay!First pic - not thrift store finds but at prices that were largely better than thrift store prices (all items are brand new).1.
Animal Crossing Amiibo Festival with two Amiibos - Wii U - $9 (Walmart); 2. Super Smash Bros Wii U - $3 (Walmart); 3. Pokemon Y Nintendo 3DS - $3 (Walmart); 4. Pokemon Alpha Sapphire Nintendo 3DS - $3 (Walmart); 5. Infinity 3.0 Star Wars disc pack - $2 (Walmart); 6. Murdered Soul Suspect Xbox 360 - $5.69 (Target)Second pic - thrift store finds - all $2 eachLooks like the GBA games are 7 Trials To Glory Yu-Gi-Oh, Road Rash Jailbreak and Ultimate Masters (x2).
Note: Steam-Heart’s is technically a hentai game. Some of the screenshots on this page contain partial nudity, although the critical parts are censored. So don’t go browsing this around your boss or mom or anything.I’m not sure what kind of career path one needs to go down to write plot lines for porn. It’s not exactly the most glamorous of gigs, since the story is almost always an unwelcome third wheel. Yet I’d always admired those awful Cinemax movies that tried to parody whatever popular movie of the time, but adding some random naked chicks and God knows what else. You ever see that one based off The Planet of the Apes? It was imaginative, if nothing else.
And indeed, Japan can occasionally be a bit more creative when it comes to their porn, mostly in animated form.In Steam-Heart’s, you play as a duo of warriors, a dude named Blow and girl named Falla. The idea is, there’s a virus that’s infecting a group of catgirls and have driven them crazy. I may be simplifying things a bit, but that’s the general idea. The only thing that can cure them is Blow’s man juice. The only way to save is them is by piloting their starships through wave after wave of enemy fighters, destroying the boss robot piloted by the infected target, and railing her six ways till Sunday. I’d love a feminine critique to this concept – it’s massively hilarious. And if you take the “shmup as dating” metaphor too far, what does that make the boss fights, foreplay?
PC98Anyway, Steam-Heart’s was initially a home computer game (originally released for the PC98, later for Windows 95), which means the porn is pretty graphic. For a mid 90s hentai game, the artwork is actually really, really good. It was later ported to both the PC Engine and Saturn. Since most console manufacturers don’t want graphic sex on their systems, the cutscenes had to be toned down quite a bit. Nearly all of them were completely redrawn to be more suggestive, although the artwork quality is still pretty good. Alas, instead of awkward text scrolling on the bottom of the screen, now you have awkward voice acting.
The Saturn version is actually slightly more censored, as they erased the few sightings of nipples that you get to see, and cropped out some other tiny bits, but otherwise, they’re practically identical.Oh, the actual game? Right!In the PC98 version of the game, your ship is equipped with a primary weapon, which is either a vulcan cannon or a laser. Both can be upgraded or switched by grabbing power-ups. You also have an array of secondary weapons – some include turrets that stay at a certain part of the screen and rain fire, while others are satellites that hunt down foes, similar to. You only have one life, but you ship can take approximately six hits before being destroyed, which isn’t so bad. Although you can’t directly control the speed of your ship, you can temporarily boost in a direction, so you can quickly dodge enemy fire or snag some power-ups. This is probably one of the most well implemented aspects, and should show up in more shoot-em-ups.Graphically, outside of the cutscenes, there’s very little that Steam-Heart’s does to distinguish itself.
The one level takes place over the sea, another takes place in the sky, another over land, another in a factory, and finally the last one is in outer space. At least some of the boss mecha designs are kinda cool.From a gameplay perspective, there are three different versions of Steam-Heart’s altogether, Now, the PC98 could produce some nice high res graphics, but the sprite manipulation didn’t exactly lend itself well to action games, so the movement is more than a little bit choppy. Since your ship doesn’t move particularly fast, you’ll probably be using the boost – a lot. Plus the game gets really difficult even the lowest difficult setting – it certainly wants you to put effort into get to any of the action. At least there’s two player simultaneous play.The PC Engine CD version is substantially worse. All of the ingame graphics have been redrawn, and there’s a nice huge worthless status bar on the side of the screen. While the scrolling is much smoother, the gameplay feels much slower, even though it still tends to toss a lot of stuff at you at once.
Furthermore, most of the secondary weapons have been toned down or eliminated, and the two player mode is gone, although you can select to play as either Blow or Falla. Altogether, it just feels rather boring.Thankfully, the Saturn version fixes all of these issues. The graphics have once again been completely overhauled, and retains the action of the PC98 version while running at a much smoother pace. Some of the scaling and rotation effects have been put to great use too, especially on some of the bosses. Two player simultaneous is back as well.
There are a couple of new secondary weapons as well, including a flame thrower and a lightning sword. You can also store up to three secondary weapons and detonate them as necessary (similar to some of the Star Soldier games), with each having some kind of unique effect. You can have a bomb weapon that triggers at the same time as your main weapon, so you can hit enemies on the ground, another addition solely for the Saturn version. While this port is plenty difficult, you’re offered unlimited continues from right where you died, so it’s not too hard to get through the game. While it’s technically the tamest of three (but only slightly over the PC Engine version), it’s definitely the best version of Steam-Heart’s.
Compared to other Saturn shooters – well, it’s not quite in the same league as or but it’s certainly not on the bottom tier either. Both console versions are pretty expensive, although the PC Engine one fetches a bit more, despite being inferior.Links.