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Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - 1 day ago


@DeaghlanNG - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: Post about badass motherfuckers you think are cool and explain why they’re badass and cool. I’ve heard you’re an expert on rad dudes


Fuck yeah, I am.


The first I'll discuss lightly as there is a following question that touches on the subject of Megadeth. Dave Mustaine. Basically, he gets it. What is 'it'? Life. Addiction. War. Love. Shitty people. Shitty situations. Corrupt governments/politicians. When he chooses to sing about a chosen topic, there's a good 95%+ chance I'll be right there with him. His lyrics mean the world to me.


Second, Ian Fraser 'Lemmy' Kilmister. If you like Motörhead, you already know what I'm talking about. The man was, in my approximation, a fucking Titan. Superb music, great voice, fantastic bass player. I often find myself watching interviews with Lemmy when I'm depressed and almost always come out with a smile on my face. I don't think there's one interview with him where he isn't waving a cigarette around pontificating about all sorts of subject matter. Also a very funny dude.


Third, Clint Eastwood. What's there to say that hasn't been said? He's my avatar for a reason. He has starred in and directed some of the most badass films of all time. Dirty Harry is a character that I keep in mind when I have to make tough decisions, sort of my equivalent of 'what would Jesus do?'. I think watching Clint's films as a kid made me realise you need to have the balls to tell the truth, even when it fucks you over in the long run. "Opinions are like assholes. Everybody's got one."


Finally, Johnny Cash. What a life that man lived. I couldn't do it justice in such a small paragraph, all I will say is I'm not religious, yet when I listen to his songs - I feel like God is speaking through him. The power of his belief in God is very admirable in my opinion, almost contagious.



Q: How did you become who you are now?


Lots of games and movies. The Sonic series was an early favourite of mine and is probably the reason I found Newgrounds way back. I touched on it a lot in the previous question, but music is really, very instrumental to my progression. Also, being good humoured about serious stuff is a long time habit of mine, and has made me very unpopular with the types of people who offend easily. I'm just trying to get a laugh, really - it's not all doom and gloom, people. And I guess finally, my early decision to quit drinking alcohol. In this coming April-ish, I will be 8 years sober. I've had a couple of rocky days since I quit, where I've caved in, but they always ended badly. Strengthened my convictions, if anything.



Q: What do you think about Christmas?


It's great! The only time of year I hear Dean Martin or Elvis on the radio, not that I listen to radio much but... you get what I mean. It's nice to have a chunk of the year for listening to golden oldies. Also, Christmas dinner around my house is... well it's heavenly.



Q: Your experiences with the Internet


Posting on Newgrounds for the last... what? Week? 2 Weeks? Is the most active I've been on the internet for years. Up until now it's been largely login, listen to music, download film, watch a cartoon then logoff. I was a consumer in other words. It's about time I started giving back in some small way. I never had Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, TikTok, etc. so it's basically still fresh to me at the moment. I did however previously post anonymously on 4chan, but imo it's mostly porn and glowies on there nowadays, unfortunately. There are still some funny, interesting people on there... occasionally.



Q: The story of your username: DeaghlanNG


Deaghlan is Gaelic, it means 'full of goodness' or 'man of prayer/god'. There are various spellings of the name, but the meaning stays the same. Oh, and the NG means 'Nice Guy'... Nah jk. I stole it off of Oney <3



Q: What is NG? How did you discover the NG website? What made you decide to join the community? Do you feel differently about the site now compared to when you first joined?


@TomFulp stirred in his chair one day near the turn of the century, he thought to himself, "There just aren't enough Sonic vs Mario sprite battles on the internet." and just like that Newgrounds was born.


I remember my first day on Newgrounds well. I was young, maybe 6-7. My dad took me to his office and sat me down at his computer, said he had to do something and he'd be back later. In all my wisdom, I typed into google 'sonic'. One of the first results was that one sonic flash game everyone loved back then. It was on a lot of sites, but NG was were I landed. I think i spent all day searching and playing with those old scene creator games. It was magic.


I joined because it was time to start giving back, to put it concisely.


No, not really. It feels a little different than it did way back before I joined. There's still some edge, here and there, particularly in PMs. Can't complain, I always found edgy humour funny.



Q: What is NG not, in your opinion?


NG is not Youtube.

IMO, there is still a focus on quality art, cartoons, music, etc. and less emphasis on things like drama, attention grabbing, AI content farm shite that I can't quite understand why YT allows... oh, wait... it makes a lot of money, nvm. Fuck money. Let's have some fun!



Q: What are activities and subjects you like, although you rarely talk about?


The first thing that occured to me was my love of long drives. If you've seen Mad Men before, some of my favourite scenes are when Don would just get in his car and just drive along chain smoking cigarettes and listening to some old tunes. I remember watching that as a teen and thinking, "Yeah, I wanna be that guy". Fast forward till now and I regularly find myself driving directionless, singing along to some Johnny Cash with a lit cigarette balanced between my fingers. It's probably when I'm at my happiest, as sad as it is to say.


Other than that, I'm very private in the way I approach the guitar. Mainly cause I'm not a natural talent, everything I've learned has been very hard earned. To specify, I don't read sheet music, I don't know the names of chords and I'm not even 100% sure it's tuned correctly - I just hit the strings until they start to sound nice, I treat it a bit like a puzzle. It can be very relaxing when I'm in the right headspace for it.



Q: Why do you think that resonates with you?


I just like focusing on the road, the scenery, the cigarette in hand. Plus the car is moving too quickly for anyone to hear my voice breaking while singing "Peace Sells, but Who's Buying?". It's very relaxing.



Q: What do you think about Doomer Wojacks?


I gives them the thumbs down is what I does with 'em. *spits*

I think memes tend to wear jokes down to a little nub, long after they've stopped being funny. People should be more original, everybody's got one good joke in them. Some have considerably more.



Q: How did you get interested in playing the guitar? And why?


Johnny Cash was the reason I first picked up the acoustic, I still play Walk the Line just about everytime I practice - nice and easy exercise, plus it sounds nice.



Q: Why are you missing both of your big toenails? and how would you say that has impacted you


I'm overwhelmed in this sea of normal toenailed people, it's a lonely existence. I lost 'em cause I used to do athletics/track-and-field as a kid, apparantly it's a fairly common occurence.



- Acting School


More interestingly, I used to attend the same acting school that David Tennant (of Doctor Who fame) attended. Can't say I ever met him, or even know much about him - but it's just something that sticks out in my mind. Feels like a very, very long time ago now. I have a good memory for scripts and am fairly confident with public speaking, largely thanks to my time at the RSAMD (as it used to be known).



Q: How would you describe the experience?


Generally favourably, I was young - but getting up on stage and making an arse of yourself has a way of toughening you up. I once did a '''protest''' piece against smoking, obviously I didn't write it - people were not impressed.



Q: What did you learn at acting school?


How to speak in public was a big one. I also have a great memory for scripts and musical lyrics. Also, comedic acting is far easier cause everyone loves to laugh... almost everyone.



Q: What?


I don't fucking know man, watch this neat vid I found on the internets.

https://youtu.be/6w_RNrrfh0g



- The Sausage Man


I was speaking to a friend recently about an old thing that happened to me on a bus. In my hometown, you get some weird cunts on buses... it's just the way things are. One day, I was sat up the back of a double decker bus and one of these aforementioned weirdos gets on. He sits down a few rows in front of me and takes out a plastic carrier bag. From inside the bag he retrieves a package of raw sausage meat and a loaf of sliced bread. Can you see where this is going? Yeah, that's right. He constructed and then ate a sandwich comprised solely of raw sausage meat and bread. Years later, I still think of that man. I hope he's well.



Q: Why did he do it?


Preparing for the coming apocalypse is my best guess... Also, poverty. Yeah. That's probably it.



Q: Has that made you think about your diet? How would you describe your diet because of that situation you experienced?


Not really. I never was a big eater. More recently I've been on the Ketogenic diet, that is all meat, no carbs. It's working pretty well so far, I think I joined NG because I have been in a more energetic mood lately. Sugar is bad for you, mmmmkay?


Also, the friend I was talking to about the sausage guy was @fuckoffasshole, I wasn't sure if he would want a mention.



Q: What, in your opinion, makes a good sandwich?


Two beautiful goth chicks with me in the middle, would be my choice :P



Q: What do you like about clubs?


Not a whole lot anymore, to be honest. Since I don't drink. It depends on the club. I once went to a proper goth one, where everyone had long black hair and black clothes and there was heavy metal of all descriptions playing - that was pretty sweet. I should probably go there again.



Q: Can you provide examples of media you enjoy? What are the identifying elements you like about it, and why do you think they resonate with you?


Movies, Art, Games and otherwise that contain Guns, Beautiful Women, Explosions, Good Music and Good Humour won't go amiss with me. I'm but a simple man and these are the things that men like me enjoy.



Q: How did you get interested in creating art and animations?


I suppose I was working my first proper job after I got out of college and quickly realised all of the joy was slowly draining from my existence, and if I didn't course correct immediately I was going to grow into one miserable son of a bitch. I stopped playing guitar, stopped drawing, stopped having fun altogether, really. I'm far happier nowadays than I was then, even if I don't have as much money to blow on hookers and intravenous drugs. LOL jk


Animation is still a work in progress for me, but I'm having fun so far. Got a couple ideas for what I want to get done. My first revolves around a photoframe. I'm having problems finding a solid punchline, but it will come to me in time.



Q: What do you like about Megadeth?


Dave Mustaine, David Ellefson, Marty Friedman, Nick Menza, whoever joins up brings their own unique attributes. But the main staying power is Mustaine's powerful, thought provoking lyrics and ear shredding guitar. I don't know how he does it, and continues to do it. But I'm eternally thankful he does. During one of my worst periods in my whole previous job situation, I listened to In My Darkest Hour for the first time and something just clicked. I knew I had to get out of there. Long live Dave Mustaine.



Q: Your favourite drinks


Something fruity with a lime wedge teehee :3


Try sparkling water, it's good for you. You can flavour it anyway you want and it doesn't have a fraction of the sugar that soft drinks typically do.


Also, black coffee. Where would I be without black coffee? Probably in bed.


Peace out! This was fun.



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Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - 5 days ago


@midgetsausage - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: When did you first become interested in animation, and why?


Alan Becker. Oh man, when I first watched Animator VS Animation back in, what, 2017? I was HOOKED. It was so amazing that you could just have a bunch of stick figures move (and fight) on your very own computer screen, and in AvA2 they introducing moving icons, and it was so COOL. Alan had an animation tutorials channel and he mentioned that he used Flash, so I.... acquired a copy of Flash MX 2004, then later Flash 8, then Flash CS5 then CS5.5 then CS6 and now I use either CS6 (for animation) or CC 2015 (for general drawing, for example, all the Cooper Bullet comics).

With it, I used to make a lot of fanmade versions of Animator vs. Animation.


Then I found out you could do more than just that, and, well, I've been adamantly using Flash for 7 years and counting now. My contributions in Tankmas 2024 use Flash, my WIP Cooper Bullet File 4 uses Flash, if I could make it in Flash then I'd do it in Flash.



Q: What is animation?


Animation is beautiful. And the best part is that it doesn't necessarily pertain to drawings; anything could be animated. And what's amazing is that animation, the skill, has a lot of nuances to it; you first need to learn all the technical stuff, like you need to be good at timing. You need to be good at spacing. You need to be good at inbetweening. Then you move on to more performance-related stuff, such as clear readable poses and expressions and whatnot, being good at knowing when to make something do something to something. However, that's teetering more on the pre-production side I suppose.


The best part is that there is no one ultimate way to do it. I can cheat. The great Chuck Jones, blessed be his memory, found great use in bringing out the best emotion in characters by way of tiny movements, such as making a character look elsewhere. It would've been very easy to over-animate the character expressing that emotion, but he found power in doing more with less. That's amazing.



Q: What do you like about this medium? Do you think about it differently now compared to before? If so, why has your perception changed?


Again, it's the fact that it could be ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING! The only limit is.... well, erh, unfortunately there's a lot of limits, right? Technical skill, system requirements (if you're going for the 3D routes 'n shit), the fact that you can only use your 'putter on Saturdays if you're with a family that's strict/also uses that same 'putter, which thankfully I have never had to experience but it's a real thing. But it could be damn well anything.


Mainstream animation--the one you go to theaters for--has definitely changed. A shift has occurred from realistic visuals to more stylized output and by God I am all for it. This is coming from someone who grew up during Disney-Pixar's Golden Age, per se, by the way, and while Toy Story 4 has dust that I could definitely lick and water I could definitely drink, it did not bring me as much joy as Puss in Boots 2 did.



Q: What are your opinions on what makes quality animation? What specific elements do you look for, and why do you think those elements are important to you?


People always point to smooth animation. I think anyone who does is stupid. I find lower "frame rates" a lot more appealing to both watch and work with.


What I generally look for is READABILITY. I must be able to understand what the hell I'm looking at. You don't HAVE to treat me like a child, I just need to know what I'm looking at on my screen. There was a cool Jet Set Radio animation I watched yesterday, it was for the Dreamcast Collab I think. And it was so awesome, the blend of 2D and 3D, it made me squeal like a pig. But problem is, and forgive me if anyone who made that entry is reading this interview (I really mean no malice), I just didn't get what was going on in the middle and the end. I can make guesses, but that's not what I want to do. I shouldn't have to guess what's happening on my screen.

Making sure the audience understands what's going on is always my upmost priority before I move on to other things, because what use is a bunch of cool schtuff if I don't even understand what they are?



Q: The story of your username: midgetsausage


I had a username I disliked. I could change it everywhere else, but it sucked it required Supporter for me to change it here, when I considered this my main hub. KnoseDoge gifted me Supporter one day so I could change it, and it was amazing! But now I had to consider very carefully what my new username should be, and it just so happened that there was like a bunch of half eaten canned Vienna sausages on a plate in the dining room. So I thought, hey, those are midget sausages.


Regarding the "midget" in "midgetsausage"; surprisingly in all 4 years of me being midgetsausage, only 3-4 people have had some problems with it. The only platform that didn't like it was, color me surprised, Roblox. I suppose it's because nobody really uses "midget" as a slur anymore (most people don't even know it is one), they usually point to more supposedly hurtful insults. I would've picked a better username if I had a chance to change it now, yes, but yeah. Even more surprisingly, people call me MIDGE instead of SAUSAGE.

And no, I didn't pick it because oh, midget is a slur, slurs are cool. I just genuinely thought it was an innocuous word for tiny. I mean, it sounded very food-like. Phonetically it sounds similar to nugget. In an alternate universe, I would've named myself midgetnugget.



Q: How did you discover the NG website? What made you decide to join the community? Do you feel differently about the site now compared to when you first joined?


Funnily enough, I considered Newgrounds as a second social at first; I grew up with Flash games, yes, but I played them elsewhere, usually on sites like Y8. So admittedly I was completely alien to NG culture when I first got here, and only viewed it as just a second place to dump my videos to. I still considered my YouTube channel my "main hub".


Unfortunately (or fortunately?) YouTube terminated my channel for "deceptive and scam practices" back in 2018/2019, whatever the hell that meant, which left me with Newgrounds. Probably for the best. I really like it here. I think my experience has only gotten better and better since my initial signup, actually. Isn't that awesome?



Q: How would you describe your experiences with the community?


It's been very fun. I've seen a lot of stuff, been with a lot of stuff, lost a lot of stuff, had fights and shit. But overall, this community has been pretty damn good. I would not replace this community for any other, because I am grateful for what this community has done for me.


My BlueSky account, for instance, went from just double digits to triple digits in the span of a day, because someone put me in a list of Newgrounders to follow and the official NG account endorsed that list. That shit was awesome, I never would've imagined that happening.



Q: What advice do you have for being in the community?


Just keep doing shit! Join collabs whenever you can!


Often people just come here, post their art, barely interact with the community, then complain it's not very good for growing an account. That's 'cus you ain't do shit! You gotta actually engage with the community before the community can engage with you! Be part of collabs/jams, show your worth, then soon people will actually know who you are and will come to you when you post something.


Then again, I think I might've just gotten lucky, so my advice might not work. What worked for me might not work for you. But, like, just get into shit! It's fun anyway! If all you think about is growth then you might as well just be an investor or some shit because we're all in this for the fun!



- Attempting to copy one medium in another medium


Trying to blend two worlds together whenever possible. Attempting to make 3D look like 2D and vice versa, for example. It's one reason I like Team Fortress 2 a lot, the attempt to make a game that looked like commercial art from the 1960s mixed with the ridiculous spy gadgetry and espionage of something like James Bond. Worthikids is also especially good at this sort of thing; Wizard Beer still blows my mind for it being 2D-like 3D. Others include: Klaus (3D-like 2D), the LEGO movies (stopmotion-like CGI), Laika movies (CGI-like stopmotion) and early South Park (cutout-like 2D).



Q: Why do you think you enjoy it when one type of art blends with another?


Because it's AWESOME!!!!!!!! And it's LOVELY behind the scenes stuff that gets me all riled up.


It's also a great showcase of skill, because it's one thing to look good in 2D, it's another to make 2D artwork LOOK LIKE 3D OR SOMETHING. That's so awesome. I am probably genuinely autistic.



- Diary of a Wimpy Kid


I was OBSESSED with Wimpy Kid for like a great part of my childhood. In fifth grade, I even went about making my own diari- sorry, journals. They sucked. But I feel like I can still feel the impacts of Wimpy Kid up to this day; the way it did its black-and-white illustrations can still somewhat be felt when looking at Cooper Bullet's artwork.



Q: What do you like about the series Diary of a Wimpy Kid?


I haven't read the books in a long long while now, but my appreciation for the books has changed overtime. I just generally really enjoyed the batshit crazy situations and, of course, muh subvert-ening of expectationing. Wimpy Kid was definitely the gateway for me to the whole, centuries-old realm of stories where the protagonist wasn't a good person, which was a very novel concept, considering all the other books I had read at the time were just Roald Dahl books where the protags were all goody-two-shoes, which I liked, but I found a deeper appreciation for main characters who really were just pieces of shit.


The art, again, kind of impacted me. The way it contrasted foreground and background elements, the way it handled monochrome illustrations, its simple and elegant style. It both looks like something a proficient artist would do and something a kid would do. How cool is that?



Q: How would you describe the experience of creating COOPER BULLET? What have you learned about yourself?


Dude, EXHAUSTING. That's for the actual comic-creating part. For the coming-up-with-the-thing part, I learned I am stupid and I have no idea what the hell I'm writing about. Later on though, I would use some of my experiences to influence the tone and stories for the comic.


For the actual comic-making part, it's so... tiring, and that's with its already simple sketchy monochrome style. The soul of Monkey Punch, blessed be his memory, also likes to take over my hand sometimes, which ends up with very Lupin-esque drawings, particularly when a character is expressing extreme emotion. It's as fun as it is tiring.


Still less effort than A Waste o' Time, though.



Q: What do you like about Team Fortress 2?


Now. I will have to admit something I do not like admitting, and it's the fact that I SUCK at first person shooters. I can not aim. I can coordinate, I can follow an objective, but I can't aim for shit, and the FPS games my peers play all put a heavy emphasis on shooting. Plus, I also suck at recognizing who the enemy is, because shit just blends in together like visual noise to me. It was just team deathmatch after team deathmatch, filled with sweaty East Asians whose hands have melded on their keyboards and mice and their asses have left deep, irrepairable crevices on their seats that rival most meteor craters.


"That is not my idea of a good time."
*points at TF2* "AND THIS IS?!"
"THEY KILL ME EVERY TIME I MOVE! ME!"


TF2 does not do that. It's still a team deathmatch underneath the hood, but on the surface it emphasizes the objective. Its character design is clear AND readable, there are clear goals, it's amazing. My favorite class is the Medic, precisely because you're so important to your team AND YET you don't have to aim. I even wrote an entire guide for those who want to play Medic, too. He's also my favorite class to draw, apart from the Scout.


The 16v16 lobby size allows for greater freedom to fuck off and do whatever you please, which leads to the little interactions you get in the game which is what I live for. It's so CASUAL. Can you name another game where the entire server just stops because someone started dancing? Or where a stupid A-posing Scout can just show up on your spawn and watch you throughout the entire game while telling you to go left?


That's just the gameplay too. The visuals, the voice acting, the music for the official shorts, the whole package is so damn good. I've sunk 800 hours so far in the game. I'd sink 800 more if I could.

Plus, I could mod the game to include Lupin III music. Very good.



- Linguistics


One other subject I could think of is linguistics. English is not my first language, it's my second/third, as I am a southern Filipino and thus my 1st and 2nd is naturally Bisaya and Tagalog. So while English is second-nature to me, I'm still invested in the many intricacies of this wretched language, and of other languages. For instance, did you know that "loanword" is a calque (word made up of two or more words, e.g. airplane) while "calque" is a loanword (word borrowed from another language)? Tom Scott's Language Files are an especially good place when it comes to this sort of shit.



Q: How would you say knowing multiple languages has changed the way you see the world?


I haven't really thought about that! I think knowing about languages definitely helps, as language is a huge part of any given culture. Though my interest in languages aren't really to do something more practical with it, it's mainly just something I'm plainly curious about. I do not wish to be a linguist :P



- Synthesizers


Did you know that only a few people who used the Yamaha DX7 actually knew how to program the damn thing and so they settled with the many presets, which is why most 80's songs that use the DX7 use the same sounding instruments?



Q: Where did you learn so much about synthesizers?


Mostly YouTube, and it comes with other production trivia about other songs. Michael Jackson songs are an especially good source for weird tidbits about how his music was done. D'ya know the bass for Smooth Criminal is just a sample of a low piano note pitched up?


Ironically I don't know how to configure synths myself. I just like the presets. In a way, I am like those DX7 users. I am equally dumb. The Minimoog is really good, though. I love that little synth. Omnisphere is also really good, granted I haven't really found any use of it outside of recreating the bass and lead synth of TF2's Mann VS Machine theme.



Q: What would are your music recommendations?


CHROMAKOPIA AOTY PLEASE LISTEN TO IT IT'S SO GOOD DHFSDFGJSDHFGSDJFHS I have no idea how many times I've listened to this album from start to finish, it's SO GOOD. SO MANY HIGHLIGHTS. LISTEN TO CHROMAKOPIA ON SPOTIFY FOR THE TRANSITIONS PELASE PLEASE PLEASE (SABRINA CARPENTER)


In fact, after this interview, I'm gonna do precisely that. I'm gonna relisten Chromakopia again from start to finish. In fact, writing this interview right now, I AM listening to Chromakopia. I'm on track 6 now. Heh.



Q: What do you think about Internet drama? What would be your advice on handling it?


My advice is to just turn your computer off, man.


Hahahahahahahaha How The Fuck Is Cyber Bullying Real Hahahaha N*gga Just Walk Away From The Screen Like N*gga Close Your Eyes Haha


You have a lot of time on your hands if all you do keep indulging in dumb ugly ass shit.


If it's internet drama about YOU, then, oh well. That's a different story, no? Just don't add more fuel to the fire.



Q: Your advice on organizing a collab?


PLEASE DO NOT ORGANIZE REANIMATED COLLABS!!!!!!!!


I am begging you, please do not. Snackers (or was it some other guy?) talked about why organizing reanimated collabs was such a pain back when we were still making the Bike Slide collab, because if one animator couldn't do their part and nobody else could fill that role, then it spells doom for damn well everybody, especially if the collab has a deadline of some sorts. Save yourself the effort and, I don't know, make Friendly Frog 2 or something. Anything but reanimated collabs.


That aside, collabs are actually surprisingly easy to run. I figured a lot more would go into it, but it was actually rather simple. Just make a collab announcement, have people join, whip their asses every week or so, compile them (or have someone else do it) and you're on your merry way. That is, if you're running something as conceptually simple as the Sketch Collab. Otherwise, you'll have to do some more work, but the process is the same.


Just.... don't start a Discord server, unless it really really requires close communication. Otherwise, turn that shit into a Google Form.



Q: Why is the Medic your favorite class in Team Fortress 2?


Again, because I can't aim. But the Medic doesn't need to aim! There's a big ass area on your screen where if your teammate was right there and you pressed + held the left mouse button, you instantly hook your healing beam on them. And that area encompasses 70% of your screen. AND once you hook onto someone, you don't even need to keep looking at them; you just need to be somewhat near them.


The Medic is in a weird spot where it's the easiest and yet the most important class to play. On paper, that's really shitty game design, and I guess that's what makes him a lot unappealing for some people to play? Because as the only true healing class in the game, that's all you do. But I like healing. I don't like charging into fights, I like playing support.


That being said, now that you aren't trying to aim and shoot half the time, your main goal now as a Medic is to stay alive and be more proficient with positioning, to achieve better game sense. Do you rush in with your Medic buddy or not? Which Medigun is perfect at this point in time? Is your patient about to die first, or you? Or are you both going to die at the same time? Plus, if you DO decide to play other classes, your knowledge of positioning and game sense is brought over.



Q: How would you describe the community culture of TF2?


I personally try to stay away from the community when I'm not sharing art. Why? I don't know, I just don't want to engage with them. This ultimately leaves me with more tourist-y opinions on the community, but not on the game itself.


There's also the what part of the community question, because there's a lot of parts to it. The MvM community? The casual community? The people who whine about the game's art direction because they watched Death of an Artstyle once? For example, I personally think TF2 YouTube sucks, apart from a few major players, because most of them just do the same things and say the same things.


It's weird. It's tiring, this whole topic. I just like da game :P I mean no malice, this is simply how I enjoy the stuff I like. You don't see me interacting or even minding, say, the Half-Life or Lupin III community for example.



Q: Why do you think people shouldn’t start a Discord server for collabs?


It depends on the collab, that part. If your collab is just a "Make an entry according to these rules! Give them to me after they're done! I'll compile them and you get invited to the project and everything" affair, then surely imo there isn't any need for a Discord server?


Collabs such as Tankmas and FulpWare require servers as one requires a lot of coordination, the other is (was) a secret, invite-based collab nobody knows is (was being) worked on. Whereas, Friendly Frog didn't need a server, and neither did any of the Sketch Collabs. For 2023, we settled on a Google Form. For 2021 and 2022 we had a server, which still surprisingly lives on up to this day as just a general hangout server, but we found out we never really needed it, so for 2023 and this year, we never did.


"Well, what's wrong with just having a Discord anyway?" That's imo too much work for something that should be simple. You have to moderate the chat and make sure people don't start fighting or some other dumb ass shit. It's two things to keep track of at once, which is not okay (for me at least) in a world where you're getting increasingly busier as time goes on.


In summary, I just want to clarify that I'm not saying collab organizers SHOULDN'T make Discord servers. I'm just saying, if your collab doesn't need one, then don't make one. Because one's too much work.



Q: What do you like about Chromakopia?


chromakopia so fuckin good bruh
-- @matoh2 (hopefully, when he actually fucking listens to it soon)


It is so diverse in sound, man. Every track is an ethereal experience. The song transitions also help make the album a lot better than it already was, because it feels like you're listening to two or three massive songs instead of fourteen.


I never really like listening to albums throughout, tell you what. Mostly because most times, there's only really at best four or five songs in any given album that I actually like listening to. Hell, look at Tyler's previous album, Call Me If You Get Lost. I only like five songs out of it, and one of them is a single off the deluxe edition. Michael Jackson's Off The Wall, which I think is his best album... I only like listening to six out of the ten tracks on it. So it's an extreme rarity that I like ALL the songs in an album, and Chromakopia is one of those extremely rare times.



Q: How would you introduce a new person to the NG community? Tips and tricks would help?


I'm not sure if I can really give advice????? Because I still think all this time that I was just a lucky guy, who was somehow in the right place at the right time. Is this impostor syndrome?

Again, I was fourteen and I had joined Cymbourine and ninjamuffin99's unofficial Newgrounds server back in 2019, and I met some of my closest friends there whom I still talk to to this day, and it was also where Tankmas 2020 was hosted. Tankmas 2020 was my big break. It just went off from there. Shoutouts @GeoKureli and @BrandyBuizel, aka the only two people I am gonna willingly ping in this thing.


I guess the only advice I could give is the same answer as the one I gave for how to be in the community: make collabs. Join shit, do shit, post shit. Okay, post your stuff first, then join collabs. Other than that, and I guess most important of all, have fun!

Oh, that was in my older answer too. Well, still, just have fun anyway, and don't pressure yourself if it no longer is.


If it's not fun, why bother?
-- @matoh2 (I think)


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Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - 8 days ago


@OVERSCORE - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: How did you get interested in creating music?


So, I’ve always been interested in music and its creation… it’s a big part of the life of everyone in my family. The journey started one day when I was like 8, I was just hitting every black key on the instrument after hearing my dad play and it clicked… I was sure I wanted to play piano. That’s where most of my theory, composition, and style came from. Then, during the pandemic, we were assigned to write a melody on Chrome Music Lab. After that assignment, I wrote another song on it, obsessed with the fact that I could finally CREATE my OWN music. 5 years later, here we are!



Q: Your advice on creating music


Well first of all, learn theory first, please… figure out the mixing and technical aspects of production. Learn the rules so you can break them in the most expressive and appropriate ways. But just as importantly— DONT write for other people! I firmly believe that the best possible music is created when musicians decide to complete express and stay true to themselves without an audience in mind. Don’t go for the “mainstream,” go for something that’s TRUE! Write your emotions in sound!



Q: What’s the story behind your username, "OVERSCORE"?


When I was still writing Chrome Music Lab stuff, I had come up with this artist name that I thought was amazing and all that… _underscore. Upon my move to NG, that username was taken. So I just put some numbers after it. However, this March, I was gifted supporter status and wasn’t satisfied with that old name… but I also wanted people to still recognize me. So I went with OVERSCORE, hoping I could score above people’s expectations!



Q: How did you discover NG? What made you decide to join the community? Do you feel differently about the site now compared to when you first joined?


I discovered this wonderful website through Geometry Dash, which was easily my favorite game growing up. So when I started creating music, I dreamt of my music being used in custom levels. That was the only reason for a while, and then I engaged with this wonderful community of talented artists, found some great friends who have stayed with me and encouraged me this whole way, and that is when my growth really started to take off.



Q: How did you get interested in playing the piano? What do you enjoy about it?


I became interested in the piano when I was 8, after hearing my dad play a song I never learned the name of… but the way that music flowed, something about it just had me awestruck. The next few days, I annoyed everyone living with me as I played every black note on the piano because they all sounded good together. So my parents starting me on piano lessons. Recently, I’ve especially loved playing it even more. It’s a gift that keeps on giving!

I’d say that what I enjoy so much about it as the way each note is represented visually. Every key is laid out, and this setup just makes it so much easier to figure out songs. It’s also truly infinite in the possibilities of what you can play on it, and that only is becoming clearer and clearer the more I progress.



Q: What do you think about singing?


I’ve always enjoyed singing, but have mostly kept my voice to myself. It’s being able to create music with my voice… I used to take it for granted, honestly. Then my vocal range got absolutely obliterated by puberty! So recently I’ve been working hard to get some of my range back. I would love more than anything else to be able to sing my tracks.



Q: What do you like about Splatoon?


Splatoon is just a blast! Sure it’s community is extremely toxic but, I just really enjoy the game itself. The movement mechanics are intuitive but innovative. The character designs are so charming. And the gameplay is so unique, there’s no other game like it! I also love the stylized graphics. It’s not everyone’s cup of tea but, I have found myself enjoying quite a bit for the last couple years.



Q: Is Dr. Pepper your favorite soda? If so, why?


Dr Pepper is my favorite drink for sure. I couldn’t tell you any of the 23 flavors they put in it, but I savor every last one. I even have a Dr Pepper shirt… I’m dedicated lol



Q: How did you become interested in space?


When I was in like 2nd grade, I got a Smithsonian book all about space… I have read and reread every single page of it since! It was filled with these detailed pictures that would fill the whole page, and described every bit of the universe in detail. My mind was blown at the true scale of all of it, and the shockingly minuscule role we play in the order of all things. Every day, while we’re living our tiny lives here on this rock, the entire universe is just churning about in its secret order, in nearly perfect balance. I find space comforting, awe-inspiring, and fascinating in every way.



Q: Why do you enjoy architecture, especially tall buildings?


I have been interested in architecture for as long as I can remember. When you really think about it, architecture is just art in building form. Skyscrapers are my favorite buildings, however. If a building is a piece of art, imagine hundreds of art pieces all combining into one city skyline— functional, everyday beauty as humanity reaches toward the sky. There’s also something so triumphant about them, I can’t quite put my finger on it.



Q: What do you like about photo editing?


I don’t know, I just find it very relaxing! We capture the world around us with photos, and I enjoy turning the world around me into all it can be by editing it. Or sometimes, I completely change photos into something entirely different, distorting and blurring and recording in new ways. I imagine that’s probably as close to being an artist as I’ll get



Q: Why do you enjoy reading sci-fi books?


Sci-fi books captivate my imagination. I am very interested in the progression of technology (except generative AI, which is a place humans should not have gone) and sci-fi books have very creative interpretations of where this technological development could lead.



Q: What’s it like living with Asperger’s syndrome?


Asperger’s is truly wild, and not an experience words could ever quite do justice. The song Inadaquate by disphing has a line that comes very close though— “I’m not coded like the rest of you.” It’s as if everyone else was given instructions before they began their life: social cues, how to read moods, communication, and the things we do to fit in the society around us. And I am trying my best to blend in and look like I was given those instructions too. My brain just naturally thinks quite differently, and it sucks during most social situations because I don’t have any clue what to do.

But I wouldn’t trade it for anything… the abstract ways I can think and feel make me what I am. I consider it a gift most of the time, but there are definitely moments where it can be tough to cope with. That’s just life with Asperger’s though, and I am proud of how I’ve lived with it. It’s made a lot easier by my friends who just accept my differences. You guys here on NewGrounds are amazing in that area by the way, so thank every one of you for helping.



Q: Your advice for life


To anyone reading this: life is an overwhelming and traumatic mess, and can be so tough to navigate. Find something and someone you can always hold fast to when it all gets to be too much. If you want this kind of connection with someone, you have to be willing to help them through some things too. Enjoy things, joy is essential to our existence. Don’t neglect your mental health and don’t be anxious about sharing it! You can’t suppress things forever, eventually you’ll either snap or break. You need someone to share your feelings with, to help you get through this chaotic journey of our existence on Earth. 



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Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - 10 days ago


@FinaLee - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: When did you first discover NG? Why did you create your account? How has your view of it changed, and why? Do you think you are a different person because of your experience here?


I discovered it when the content that was being pushed was Assassin games and other flashes that involved killing cultural icons. The Audio Portal had just come out, so back then it was just that, games, and “movies.” Didn’t even know the BBS was there. When you’re a young and curious person, you stumbled on a lot of crazy internet content back in the day, and I had no idea that a random person could create art like that.


I created an account at first to catalog my music. There’s actually several accounts over the years, but I only happen to remember this one. But being in a small community of artistic people, I can’t help but stay engaged. Like, you think the community is this closely connected on SoundCloud? What other platform can serve as a content-sharing space while also having the same quality personality? Twitter as maybe a distant second. The culture there has regressed for a while now, though, and their algorithms push the absolute lowest common denominator content.



Q: You describe yourself as goth?


No, but I really like the aesthetic. There’s a lot of culture associated with it that frankly does not align with who I am, and that’s okay. I have a Sandman pfp right now, so I guess it’s understandable that people would think that, though. Before that, my pfps included various butterflies and female rock artists, and I think that’s more representative of me than goth.



Q: How did you get interested in creating music?


I had no choice. Dad was a musician/purveyor of music, closet full of CDs/cassettes, instruments everywhere, etc. I was given my first Stratocaster at 15 and now have a home studio.



Q: What advice do you have for creating music?


If I was talking to the average unscouted artist, I would say that you should understand the rules before you break them. Know the fundamentals of song structure, theory, common progressions, and commit time to your instrument. Pre-Internet, I could have probably left it at that and you would be on your way to having credibility to the title “musician.” Now, I would say that brushing up on the basics of production are absolutely necessary.


If you’re crafting an EDM track, and the kick sounds weak whenever the bass line is playing, there’s a very common production technique that can solve that problem. Now, maybe you actually want a weak kick in an EDM track. Not a common feature, but that’s fine. You are going to be set up for the most success if you already have a solid foundation in all of the things I mentioned. Don’t attempt to deviate from the norm until you actually know what the norm is.



Q: What kind of music do you like and why?


I have a rock and heavy metal upbringing, but I’m down for whatever if it’s got energy. Most times I want to listen to something that makes me want to kick a door down and tackle somebody, but I also got Sabrina Carpenter’s Espresso on rotation too lol.


I think I would have an easier time talking about music I don’t normally like: folk and gospel. It’s often too flaccid for me. You can take someone like Billy Eilish, who is as about as minimal as it gets for a mainstream artist, and I can still fuck with it because I get the mood that she and her brother are aiming for. I just don’t understand folk, though. Like, do people who listen to folk enjoy being alive?



Q: What is the BSS? Why do people use the BSS? Why do you use the forums? How has the culture of the forums changed over the years?


The BBS is a remnant of how people used to communicate with each other on the Internet prior to social media as we now know it. Lots of websites had BBS forums, and they were all structured more or less the same as the one on Newgrounds.


The reason why the NG BBS is one of the last few active BBSs is thanks to the talented community outside of the BBS, and the NG staff investing a lot of time and effort in making the website a viable platform for artists. It’s a tough pill to swallow for some, but a BBS is probably the least important thing for this website. Tommy Boy probably isn’t losing much sleep over nuking some of the subforums.


I happen to use the forums because it’s a lot easier to maintain connection with a website you have a lot of sentimental value with through posting than making tracks. I don’t have as much time to compose something these days, which really sucks. My poor 4X4 is collecting dust. :(


2024 would be my 10th year where I’ve maintained some sort of activity on the BBS. The one thing that I think has changed the most is that there is a lot less variation in personality in the BBS. You still have some characters out there, and I think they know who they are, but I seem to recall a lot more standout users.


On the flip side, there’s also a lot less straight up evil people using the forum. Unfortunately, there’s still a few of those also around that need to fuck off, but I feel alright about where things are heading for the BBS. Could always use some more peeps, though!



- Tom contemplating turning NG into a YouTube competitor


This may not be specifically what Tom had in mind for NG, but he was clearly aware that this was a very possible outcome had he solicited VC money. I also use "competitor" loosely because it would in all likelihood not have succeeded as a viable alternative to a large platform like YouTube.


There is no specific date or timeframe when he thought about taking in investors, as he's had many offers over the years. But maybe the time he was most deliberative was when he created a thread asking the forum what they think of NG potentially taking in venture capital (bad idea in my opinion, because the community is overwhelming out of their depth for something like this). The thread does contain some interesting perspectives, though, including what is probably the main thing that was pushing Tom to consider investor influence.


Thankfully, he did not go through with it, because NG would have likely ended up in the same trash heap as all the other competitor sites.



- The furry avatar hack


Not sure if this will show up in a Wayback Machine archive. It happened on April 11, 2014. Some person (people?) changed the profile pic of a lot of BBS users into furries and Pokemon characters, including Tom. Everyone was confused, and there was no explanation from the mods or staff, leading some to suspect it being an inside job.


Of course, everything was reverted back, but you can still find a few threads about it during that day. The one remnant of this incident can be found on the pfp of @Tancrisisma former mod that never changed it back because their account was already long inactive.



- Good mods, bad mods, have you had negative experiences with the moderation?


I've never dealt with a mod one-on-one who hasn't been level-headed and fair to me. All of my shenanigans were absolutely ban/delete-worthy.


That's not to say that there weren't some dudes who did/allowed some lame-ass things! Review mod had bad opsec and gets his account hacked, permabanning other members from reviewing. Chat-mod who was an all-around awful person, and STILL pops his head in every now and then to remind everyone that he's terrible. Mods that were a little too happy with the banhammer. Definitely some shrimp dick energy, but that's okay. Not everyone can be Turkey or 7Cs



Q: Your advice for the BBS (Please go into great detail. Even things that seem obvious to you might not be obvious to someone new. Include any unwritten rules and guidelines that you think are helpful, share advice you personally use.)


Be creative. Even if you come off as a total goofball, you're still making a positive impact. There was a guy who I think was on the spectrum and made some really weird threads back in the day. Like, he would make a thread where users would fight using their avatars, which seemed like an interesting idea, but then he would interject in the roleplay to turn the losers into popcorn (?????). And THAT'S OKAY. Bring more of that weird shit into the forum and cause a commotion. I'm all for it.


And try not to be a bitch. I mean that in several definitions. Don't cry, don't make "woe-is-me" threads, and don't bring the energy down. If you've got a problem, address it in the right way, because a thread ain't it.



Q: What makes a good or bad mod?


Having a great temperament. That's about it. If you've got some personality to season your moderating, that's cool, but all it takes is temperament and putting up with a lot of shit!



Q: What are your opinions on American football?


I happen to like it a lot. It's the latest thing that I've latched on to. I don't get too many opportunities to bring it up on NG, though. If there was something that I think would translate well from the sport into NG, I think it would be the competitiveness. I'd like to see a lot more shit-talking and team-oriented culture. Any good leader is very critical of themselves and thinks about how what they do impacts the team. These qualities can be a net-positive for the community on NG.



Q: What do you like about fashion?


If I could speak without ever talking again, I would do it. Fashion is one way of approaching that. What you wear says a lot about you because there's a lot of culture and history associated with clothes. If everyone recognized fashion as another art form, we would have a more expressive society.



Q: How did you develop your skin care routine?


Like any person going through their adolescent years, I developed a lot of acne, and instead of accepting that this is something that normal people go through at that point in their life, I looked for ways to minimize it as much as I could. It started, of course, with the basics: Benzoyl peroxide and salicylic acid. Then I learned about exfoliation, how maybe we shouldn't be using bead scrubs to shred our face in the name of removing dead skin cells, how their were chemical alternatives, moisturizers, and many other things.


Like I said before, I've put so much shit on my face just to attain a good complexion. Off the top of my head, I've used egg yolks, hydrogen peroxide, scapulas, coconut oil, olive oil, duct tape, milk, oats, and bunch of other food products. I wouldn't call it a problem, especially now that I've relegated myself to a simple morning/evening routine with only half a dozen products.



Q: What media do you like and why, at what experiences have you had with media?


I'm a consumer of all kinds of media, like any good American. Of course there's music, and I've had plenty of cool live band experiences there. Maybe someday I can play in a band myself if anyone needs an instrument. Hell, I'd do a VA role if the project sounded dope!


There's also the movies, and I try to stay somewhat attentive of what's going on there. I've been on a Hitchcock bend lately. It's nice to see some subtlety in story development. Like, I was watching Psycho, and the main character plotting to run away with the $40,000 to start a new life was made aware to the audience through her actions, but never mentioned in any of her lines. There was also the very beginning scene serving as a motivating factor in her decision-making. I feel like if that movie was made today, the audience would need the character to be much more explicit in her thinking in order for them to follow along.


If you're talking about legacy news media, there's been very minor appearances.



- Wildlife encounters


I remember walking in a park with the wife when we stumbled upon a coyote just standing there 20 feet away from us. It was our first time ever seeing one in person, and we had no idea what to do. Apparently, they're big bitches, and you can just shoo them off. It was definitely unexpected since it was a pretty residential type of park, though!. Even the ranger raised an eyebrow when we told him.


Then there's some of our New England visits during the winter, which showcases lots of smaller critters. Owls are always the coolest. Still hoping we can spot a moose someday when we go up there.


There's also that time I lived beachside in Florida, and a bunch of us would walk in the swamp trails trying to catch baby alligators. That's probably the most Floridian thing I've ever done.



- Disney World experiences


If you ever go to Disney World, the number one most important thing to remember is where you parked, because you will get lost if you don't. I remember melting in the Sun while desperately hitting the alarm button on the car for about an hour.


I'm a Star Wars guy, so Hollywood Studios is my favorite park. There's always stormtroopers prowling around and randomly asking people for identification. If you don't have it, Captain Phasma is going to be hearing about it!



- Funny pizza deliveries


I've delivered pizzas in a mostly okay area for some time, and I still had some wild experiences. Can't even imagine what it's like in less friendly areas. One story that sticks out is when I was walking up to a house with the cops parked outside. As I was going up the steps, one of them pokes his head out the passenger window and asks "Are you delivering there?" I said "Yeah, is everything okay?" And he was like "Yeah, don't worry about it." So I continue up the steps and ring the doorbell. When the guy answers, the cops flanked me and told the guy he's got a warrant and he's got to go. Got arrested right in front of me.


Not much drama with that part except for his girlfriend crying. And I'm standing there awkwardly just holding the pizza, so I ask her if she wanted it. She's signing the receipt while sobbing, and I tell to have a better day. Unfortunately, NO TIP! Fucking hell. I'm glad that dude got arrested.


There's also been a number of weed offers. which was pretty funny. I think one of my favorite experiences was being asked to sing a Christmas jingle when they answer the door. I'm on someone's Snap somewhere, and it made her night, so that felt really nice.



- The time you were thrown to the ground by a Olympic Judo medalist


Her name is Kayla Harrison, and she did a seminar at college about being an SA survivor. But as an introduction/explainer on judo, she asked if anyone wanted to volunteer. I immediately saw it as an opportunity for a cool experience, and shot my hand up. She had a coat on, and she took it off to reveal some MASSIVE arms, and I was like ooooh shit. She told me what she was going to do, and even though I had that preparation, it felt like I teleported from standing up to being on my back. Didn't hurt at all even though the ground wasn't matted. Then I shook hands with her and sat back down to hear her amazing story about being a survivor and winning gold medals in the Olympics.



Q: Your advice for life


Be a happy warrior. There's a lot of things that are going to bring you down, and that's a normal part of life. It's how you react to it that can separate you from everyone else. Excuses are a sign of weakness, and I say that as someone who has had their fair share of vulnerability.



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Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - 12 days ago


@EGurt - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: What is the Internet like from your perspective?


I remember what it was at much earlier times, a lot has changed since then. There were both nice and mean people, but there is no heroes if there is no malicious/mean people. I think Internet kind of reverts back to what it was, but it still feels a bit too desaturated. It is like we had more originality back then. I honestly like Newgrounds for being the reminder of what Internet been like before, people aren't trying to be simple here.



Q: How would you describe your experiences with the Internet?


Hmm. I think I actually specifically remember starting to use Internet at a rather old age, yet still much earlier than people around me. Real world at my location was far more simple, boring, illogical and delusional before Internet I'd say. But it is just my point of view, I'm quite eager to want everything to be perfect and to doubt social norms.


Appearance of Internet did also made real world interactions even more boring too though. I guess that makes real world just a lobby, it doesn't really need to be that personalized and fun if we have Internet.



Q: Do you have any advice for staying safe online?


Internet takes your real you out of physical world. You might want to still care about who you are outside of it. Also it can be worth to learn to not trust or take anything personally on the Internet.


And like, common stuff like don't reveal your real identity too much, don't click links from people that appear mean and definitely don't download executable files. But you can play browser games, they are pretty safe as long as you keep your software updated.


But at the same time some people actually use Instagram and it works for them, I guess it depends where you live, what you do and whether it is safe there.



Q: How did you first discover Newgrounds, and how was it different back then compared to now?


I'd not say I been recently too active on Newgrounds. It still has more free and unique people out there, much more compared to other websites I feel like. Was surprised to be able to exchange a few DMs with TomFulp too :O


Newgrounds was a big thing back then and I think it still has potential to be as big as let's say Steam.


I originally discovered Newgrounds as one of 2 biggest Flash game websites. Ever since then I've been amazed by how many cool & insanely talented people hang out there, it wasn't just a place to play games - it looks much more like a place to hang out.


I remember uploading my first game to Newgrounds and it was like instantly popular. I really wonder if any of my game development success really comes down to my decision to publish Plazma Burst: Forward to the Past game here in 2009. A lot of great and often totally random feedback in form of reviews too. I think only better thing would be if players were suggested to make video playthroughs/reviews, which I think I've told someone before ^^ I do feel like seeing players not understanding gameplay mechanics or UI is something new developers often struggle a lot.



Q: What was it like developing Plazma Burst 2? How did you get the multiplayer to work? What was your experience with the portal system?


I believe I was trying to make a best Flash game in a way I technically could, hoping it would also motivate Adobe to put more effort into it. Basically make something that is beneficial to someone else and you might just make a whole new great thing with you being directly responsible for it.


I'd say I did not have too much hope for Plazma Burst 2 initially, I did hit technical limitations fairly early in development (game just would lag/not compile due to Adobe Flash errors, something connected to the amount of code game had, very similar issue happened to Plazma Burst: FttP, though newer versions of Flash since then did started to allow much more code to be put into) so eventually I decided to wrap it up and publish it, keeping the most of the ideas for the next game.



Q: Your advice for game design


Experiment with everything and as much as possible. Maybe following someone who also does this can help to learn passively. Generally checking out popular games also might help to get the general direction of what modern audiences like.


Your own game design direction might be quite often shaped by playing other games and realizing that something just bothers you no matter how much you play that game - that is probably a good thing to try and fix in your projects.

For example:

  • You might play the game and realize that you just don't like being time limited;
  • You might play the sword fighting game and realize that swords going right through enemies without slicing them in 2 parts but dealing 5% of damage instead is just unacceptable;
  • You might play the game and get 10 pop-up screens trying to get you to buy in-game items, but in reality game developers could just try to implement server hosting feature by players rather than keep everyone playing on costly rented servers;
  • You might play the game where cheating is a serious issue. You might be just the kind of a person who rebalances whole game into not requiring good aiming skills to be a good player or them to be matter in any way at all;
  • You might play the game and realize that all characters are same gender/humans/aliens and then you come up with idea to make everyone robots. It gives originality points and so it can work very well too.


But then there is a game design document thing which most game companies do. You can learn that too but it doesn't define a good nor bad game in my opinion.



Q: What do you think would make the world a better place?


The lore of Star Defenders game I'm working on is that Earth falls into a black hole and Star Defenders are the organization that escaped Earth in time to not be eventually trapped in it (they are basically mockingly called Star Defenders because they defend the idea of space exploration, basically humanity pushed hard against them in a game's lore).


So I think nothing really matters unless humanity escapes Earth. But I'd personally think that being nice and honest to people can be a good thing too, even though drama generally attracts people better.



Q: What are some of your favorite games, and why do you like them?


I think Doom was one of my first games I played, it had a really nice aesthetic I clearly saw potential in multiplayer part of it. Also I did not really understood why gibbed enemies were just a 1 animated sprite.


I liked Quake 3 for the development towards multiplayer aspect, but even then I felt like some stuff were missing from it, which gives me personally exactly that kind of feeling of something being not quite right, thus very motivational too.


I believe Homeworld and Rainbow Six were a really cool games too. I love Homeworld aesthetically and I like how Rainbow Six played (lack of ragdoll physics and no visual damage from explosions kind of bothered me, which is great).


A while later I saw Havok physics engine being added to 3D graphics software and some time after that I've seen Half-life 2 which was one of the first games that had actual ragdoll physics in them (I'm pretty sure there was Hitman game before that). But then ragdoll mode being a toggle was still bothering me.


I guess I can say that I'm rather a technical person, even though I occasionally try to get more of a creative approach to things.



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Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - 2 weeks ago


@SlowPumpkins - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: Where did your philosophy of having the passion to do something you're proud of come from?


A: I not sure when I started to think like that but I believe we all as human beings had this feeling when we accomplish something, we like to build and create stuff.



Q: What do you like about games? What games do you enjoy, and why do you think they resonate with you?


A: I love games because they can have all the things I like in just one media, they can have songs, visual arts, characters that you love and good writing, all in the same game. And the challenges of beat a video game too.



Q: What do you enjoy about horror movies? How do you define a horror movie, and what are the elements that make good horror for you personally? What aspects do you not like?


A: I think it’s pretty close to what I said about games, horror movies can be gruesome and funny at the same time, they have iconic villains and heroes, unique visuals and characters you can only find in horror.



Q: You love music—death metal, doom, grindcore, new wave, darkwave—but you listen to almost everything. Why do you think you love music, and why do these specific genres appeal to you? What are some songs and bands you enjoy?


A: Another one that I can’t tell you why, but I remember when I started to get into metal and heavy songs, I was about 12 years old when I listened to linkin park for the first time, just a few months later I watched the first Resident evil movie, that movie has a lot of new metal songs, new metal is a mix of a lot of styles, started with this kind of song made me like almost all types of music.



Q: What is goth culture?


A: kinda hard to explain, there’s nothing written on stone, goths can be too different from one another, but most of them have the same taste for music, movies and how they like to spend their time. Some people just like to listen to “post-punk” bands, some are more into electronic stuff and other are more like a symphonic metal fan, all can be called goths but they are totally different persons (and I’m talking just about music, but this apply books, movies and life in general). When I say goth culture is more like a generic way to say a large group of people that are into darker songs, horror books or just makeup and alternative fashion.



Q: What is NG about? How did you discover the NG website? What made you decide to join the community? Do you feel differently about the site now compared to when you first joined?


A: I know NG since I was a kid, I used to play games there at the time, and recently discovered that it still exists and a lot of people still use it. I know the people who like my art are there and a lot of artists I love are there too, so I needed to start using NG. About how it feels to be there: It's like a comfort place, I miss forums and the internet where you don’t need to consume insane amounts of information everyday. 



Q: How did you become interested in swimming? You have swimming classes twice a week, and you've also started going to the gym. Why do you think you're focusing more on being healthier as you get older?


A: I did classes when I was a kid, now I need to start exercising cause I’m already having some health issues, most of them I just need to practice exercises, so I decided to start something I was already familiar with. Now I just need to go to the gym to stay strong and get better at the pool (I want to start to swim in lakes and beaches next year).



- Wrong change


When I was a teenager, the woman from the bank gave me the wrong change (the extra money was enough to buy a game boy) I was planing to do that but I was robbed by some dude on the same day. I did the wrong thing and get instantly punished, I swear. instant kharma.


Q: How do you feel the experience has impacted you, and do you think differently because of it?


A: when I was young I felt bad, but if the same happens today I’ll just give back the wrong change, not because of kharma or something, but I don’t want to ruin someone else's day.



- 400 bookshelfs of 5 meters of height


I worked almost two years on a place who you may call backrooms, it was thousands of files and lawsuits on a giant place, something like 400 bookshelfs of 5 meters of height. I didn't have any picture of that time but it was fun to work on a haunted place like that, this was even before stuff like slender or creppy pastas, I wish I could go back in time to share that place to the world (that place is gone now, most of the files are digital only).



Q: Why do you think that place was creepy?


A: all the documents placed in there are crimes, processes and legal stuff. Nothing good was placed in there, not a single funny story or silly act. It was like a graveyard for files.



Q: How do you know when you like an art piece?


A: When it surprises me.



Q: What are your inspirations?


A: Today I think my inspirations are mostly japanese games, the songs I like, comics and cartoons. I really like the vibes from 90’s cartoon network and comics from the era of the heavy metal magazine. I try to mix this with my taste in games.



Q: What are some good art resources and proper training to develop skills as a visual artist?


A: I believe you should draw with everything you feel most comfortable, but for that you need to try everything, I truly recommend going to painting classes, you need to learn before you can choose what to do in art. But the universal tip is: always uses references, always practice with figures, nature, digital images or books, we can’t draw without memory and for that we need to at least draw one time with a reference. For example: never draw a horse? Find a picture, book or I don’t know find a horse on the street, draw him on paper and pencil, try to understand the shapes and how his structure works, you will draw a better horse from imagination later, works for everything.



- Value art


Getting back to talk about art, I worked on everything when it comes to illustrations, I did books, comics, games, pixel art, hentai, all you can think of. and I'm glad I did that, because now I know what I like to do and what I feel good doing, I spend years don't giving much value to my own art, I only changed when I started to took classes and started to talk to other artists, started to get jobs as a illustrator. If I didn't started that classes I'll probably will be working on something else today.



Q: What does it take to be able to value your own art?


A: A lot, sometimes you need to lose job opportunities, raise your prices knowing that fewer clients will come over, but I think the most important thing is: you need to know what person you are, what are your visions and beliefs, what you love is important, what you are is important too. People can feel when you deliver something that you did with passion.



Tags:

11

Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - 1 month ago


@AZ0RZER0 - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: In what ways would you say the Internet has impacted you? Would you say you see the world differently because of it?

 

I can say for sure that I couldn't be the person I'm now without it. While dealing with the outside world is always essential, I cannot stress how much I learned with the Internet, whether it was gore, porn, memes or just current events all around the world. While I'm still not one to start a conversation or talk all the time, I'd say the Internet helped me desensitize myself to a lot of topics and being able to talk about them more openly and with less hesitation.

 



Q: Who is NG for? Do you feel different about the site now compared to when you first joined?

 

Just like the slogan says, everything here is made by everyone and so, made for everyone. It's a place for animators, gamers, developers, artists, musicians, writers, but also a place to meet new friends, to have a laugh, to have a talk, to share a bit of yourself. I love this site just as much as I loved it when I discovered it 4 years ago. At the time, I only cared about revisiting old classics and playing games. But now, I come here for everyone. I come for the threads, the pranks, the collabs, the jokes, the folks, mostly the Supporter Party as that's the one I use and love the most, and then the projects themselves. There's so much to see besides reviewing the submissions on the Judgement Portal, which was almost the only I did for most of the previous years.

 



Q: How do you know when you like a piece of art? What are the elements that resonate with you, and why do you think those elements have that effect on you?

 

I look for something I find entertaining that provokes a certain emotion, but in a technical standpoint, I don't think people should feel stuck with an incredibly strict model of what is acceptable because it's possible to tell a great story with visuals or audio without needing a proper story or character development, or even a great story with simple visuals. Art should provoke and total submission to the norm can kill that aspect.

 



Q: What advice would you give to people dealing with depression? What music did you listen to, and what movies did you watch? How do you come up with ideas for new projects? What is the theme of your projects, and why do you think that theme is present? How did you become interested in creating animations, and what is your process for making them?

 

My desire of making my own animations came in the end of 2020 shortly after Hybrid Theory’s 20th anniversary release, as after his passing, I went back to listen to their origins, and when I came across the Xero demo tape, I listened to it non-stop for 2 years straight. Being my favorite band and having bangers even in their earlier stage, I waited with excitement for the HT20. But Fuse was not there, and Stick N Move was different from the tape. Seeing no one was talking about it, and there were almost no AMVs for me to binge, I decided to try to take matters into my own hands and make an animation for it. I never finished it, and I lost my progress in the floods of Flipaclip updates, but it was a Firestarter.


My ideas come from all kinds of sources, making it impossible to point out exactly what leads me there. It justs clicks. It can be a memory, an activity, an emotion, a song, etc... In that sense, I believe the theme of my projects drift around whatever it's on my mind, with the one of the only consistent features being mood. I gave it three types of mood based on these three emotions: happiness, sadness and anger. From that point onwards, every theme can be seen in any mood, from the cutest and innocent to the gruesome and disturbing, from the stupid and nonsensical to the coolest and badass. I say this seeing as between what I'm working, there's brainrot, there's gore and there's characters just hanging out. I prefer to give a fair share of shiningness and darkness instead of focusing on one ang getting bored of it, hence why style of lack of curves gets constantly interrupted by characters with big circular heads. That way i try new things without nuking what I had.


This model I use to make my projects follows the principles of a personal theme for me that I'm now going to discuss: depression. Yeah, I suffered from it during the first 9 months of 2024 and of course, it was hard. It got in the way of my responsibilities and I focused so much on the despair and hate I had for myself instead of standing up and getting my shit together. But after feeding my mind with suicidal fantasies that couldn't be accomplished and locking myself away from everyone, I started to learn from it.


Anger, sadness and happiness all come together to make you a human. You will never learn everything you need from just being happy, as that will make you naive, something I was for a good chunk of my life. Those dark thoughts can teach you great lessons. Regret reinforced me to not get gratification on harming others; loathing to not get too full of myself and to not be dependent, but also to see that I'm still no less than everyone else. I started being more apathetic, avoiding unnecessary troubles and keeping a chill behavior. Don't let those feelings take a tool on you. Use them as reminders of who you are and what your purpose is instead of convincing yourself that they're not there. No tears, isolation, self-punishment, meds, support or therapy will have any effect until you stand for yourself and learn to live a relation of mutualism with your darkness to become a stronger person.



Q: How did you become interested in swimming? What is it like having parents with a swimming pool that you use every time you visit them? Why do you enjoy going for long walks through the city, and what music do you listen to while you walk?


My dad, being a PE teacher, was always supportive of sports and hobbies. Despite not having an interest in sports, I still attended lots of activities out of school, one of the earliest ones being swimming. While everything had strict rules that required constant teamwork and complicated schedules, this one did not have places to go and every time summer came, we always stopped everything we were doing at some point in the day just to enjoy the pool. When playing football or basket felt like chores, swimming was always natural for me, as a moment when I'm not being judged, a moment when I can forget everything for a bit and relax, even more than going to the gym.


As for long walks through the city, it helps me to think and come up with ideas. I like to stay in my room, but too much at once leads to burnout and lack of willingness to do anything. I also think about it as to do with the fact that I lived in the city until I was 6 years old and then moved to the countryside. When I traveled to the capital for college, I felt relieved with the ability to go anywhere I want on foot or public transport while having a much more interesting view to look at. I prefer a city that never sleeps than a small town haunted by a morbid silence. Maybe my preferences will change in the future, who knows? Until then, this is where I feel I belong. To combine with that vibe, I tend to listen to Canadian pop-punk like Avril Lavigne, Green Day, or Sum 41.



Q: Why do you think you prefer watching instead of reading?


Laziness. I like the fact that art can express itself through more aspects than just words, but the main reason is that I'm too lazy to read. I already have so much to read for college, I just can't do it in my free time.



Q: What is the Newgrounds community like?


Awesome. Very charming and supportive without sacrificing the jokes and criticism. Just that nice balance.



Q: How would you describe your experiences with 4chan and Reddit? What are the differences between them, and have you noticed any changes in their cultures over time?


I always despised social media in general for how fake they are, just resorted to show lame dresses, ugly makeup and places of people I don't give a fuck. For these two, they stood out in their pros and cons. Reddit is great for finding specific information on a topic but its upvote system gives the stage to the popular opinion and overshadows the rest. In 4chan, the stage’s open for everyone, all being anon treated equally in terms of access, making it very open for discussion and my favorite of the two. Some people love to brag about acceptance when they’re no different when it comes to other views on Reddit and on 4chan, thinking that just because one board offends them, then everything is this and that, when really you can just disable the NSFW “offensive” stuff and just have a normal talk or even make friends. 



Q: Where do you think your interests stem from, and how would you define your personality? How is personality constructed, and how do interests play a role in shaping it?


Personally, I describe myself as an honest person, quiet, even though much more vocal than just a few years ago, curious and patient. I try to see people for what they really are and help in what I can, but all with its moderation. I’m no one’s slave nor a host for leeches and I’m surely not afraid to put anyone in their place if they get too cocky.


I like to learn about all kinds of stuff. There’s much more beyond the what’s “important” as people want new ideas to the table and that can only come when you extend your knowledge and culture to other horizons besides your familiar ground. But I also don’t want to fill my head with the most basic NPC shit if that means forgetting everything else to become a normie, so I’m always searching for something new, even if it sounds completely random like “Who invented the spoon?”.



Q: How did you come to consider yourself an atheist, and from your perspective, what is religion? Why do people have beliefs? Why did you want to visit all of the sacred capitals last summer?


I had that standard catholic background of going to church on Sundays, having a catechism class and praying when sleeping at my grandparents’ house. It was so outdated, so lifeless, so preppy, so unnecessarily rigorous, and most of all, it was useless for me. What benefits did I get from prayers? Most of the people that tried to reinforce me into with were just a bunch of jealous and gossiped losers. But then I started to find a pattern: all those euphemisms and metaphors were thrown around without any specification or organization on what was honest and what was figurative, making the whole thing easily corruptible and hypocritical. Big balls for a guy to kill millions with the excuse they were all sinners while sparing liars and monsters he knows about has the perfection he makes himself to be. Oh, but you believe or don’t believe and that’s it. But what do I believe if you’re just gonna be vague about it and shape it for your own gain? There’s no point in calling it a religion at that point. So yeah, I felt my resentment and skepticism did not fit with the indifference of agnosticism and I became a full-on atheist.

 

Different opinions come from different beliefs, some making more use of it than others as it can serve as a source of hope and strength. If they feel it helps them get going, good for them, no one’s going to take that away from you. Having an interest in history and philosophy, religion tends to be a major subject, to which I find it fascinating to a personal but not emotional level. So, I had the idea of visiting the Holy Land, Mecca and Medina, if possible, as visiting the place itself would be much more exciting than just simply studying it from a far. At the time, things looked peaceful, but that’s not the case right now. I’ll have to wait a bit longer, but I really wanted to go there at least once in my life, again, not for religious motives but out of sheer curiosity.


Q: What is the purpose of politics? Why do you personally dislike extreme ideologies? Where do extreme ideologies come from? What defines an ideology? What constitutes good satire? What does a more civilized discussion about politics and the Internet look like?

 

Personally, I don’t like extreme points from both sides as I feel like they represent two perspectives that are too exaggerated to be put into practice in a good and functional way. These, just like every ideology, come from people and the society they live in, depending on their necessities and interests, with some having completely different focuses despite their closeness to the political spectrum. In this sense they also come to fight any kind of oppression presented, with the extreme being exact opposites. But I’m not someone who pursues one for what they believe as that would be unfair and biased. To fight this favoritism, I look for satire to make fun to criticize both sides of the same coin and promote a clever and balanced discussion of the topics, while also staying away from most political arguments on the Internet as they tend to choose sides based on what the media tells them to, rarely being civilized.



Q: What makes a good video about Internet drama as opposed to a bad one? What elements are necessary for it to be considered edutainment? What do you think about MrBeast and Chris Chan? What have you learned from watching drama videos?

 

It all comes down to only two factors: accuracy and neutrality regarding the subject at hand. In an online world where misinformation spreads like wildfire, these are essential to understand what's going on. In the case of Internet drama, this goal tends to be much harder to reach, requiring a long and detailed chronology of the events, always following the rule of “innocent till proven guilty”. While there are archive channels capable of reaching this goal without giving their opinions, just like Bowblax’s videos were during the Pokimane drama that brought him into fame, drama creators can give useful points, if it doesn’t corrupt the main information. Regarding how those points come across, it’s up to the creator to decide whether it be through jokes, gaming streams or whatever, including production quality as you don’t need to be high tech to be plausible and slop (commonly used term for spam content). This last one tends to be thrown around a lot as it add nothing to the conversation, to which I disagree because news are always being updated and can change trajectories from day to night, requiring more updates in lesser time and for people whose purpose is gather information, some moments there’s a lot to talk about, others not so much, but we should not ignore details. That way, they can be seen as edutainment as it informing the audience of the situation while functioning as a form of entertainment in the way it's presented.


Being now more specific about MrBeast and Chris Chan, I will say the following. MrBeast did achieved good ends in a lot of his videos, giving a big contribution that a lot of jealous Twitter users disregarded since day one. And it's not his fault that Kris turned out be such a scumbag. There was no way of him knowing it before hand without having to violate Tyson's privacy, which is a right that should be respected. In that part, he acted correctly. Does this justifies how he treated his workers and let pedos involve themselves in the business? No. While he couldn't have full control of everything, there's still so much stuff wrong here for him to be innocent.


Chris Chan is also a perfect example of how things are not black and white. He reached popularity on the Internet at a time where moderation was next to none, allowing for much harsher trolling than what we have now, he was indeed mistreated at a time that, just like nowadays, had lots of misconceptions and much up into interpretation about Asperger Syndrome (it literally stopped being recognized less than 2 decades after it was accepted), and was surrounded by flawed people. But at the same time, he wasn't (and definitely not now) an innocent angel. He could have left at any moment and he wouldn't have received all of this if he just shut the hell up and not said a word about personal information like his house, parents, teachers and so on. He was a victim, sure, but he also victimised and made a fool of himself when it was clear he knew what he had to do.


To be honest, seeing the amount of looney tune-like arguments at the center of online drama, it just reinforces to me the importance of knowing how to argument and understand how the legal world works to scare the ignorance away. MAybe it could have been one of the reasons why I decided to study law.

 



Q: What is the LGBT community from your perspective? Where do you think your views come from, and why do you think other individuals think differently than you do?

 

It comes from a bit of tradition of education, as it promotes the most accepted view by even the more conservative ones, and the others from people I met in high school and college, as I was in a private school until 9th grade where there was not much diversity in that sense, at least from the ones I interacted with. After getting out of that bubble, it made a little shock with my reality as one thing is seeing it on tv, interacting in real life is another story. While I appreciate the support given by that community to people with a closer reality, I can see how our elder contemporaries still have outdated views as it all changed from one day to the other in terms of acceptance.



Q: How do you think people are influenced by racial identity? From your perspective, what does it mean to discriminate against someone based on their race?


It’s one of those things you are immediately put into without choice and the only thing you can do is live with it as a part of you, to which society unfortunately doesn’t treat everyone as it should. The past showed us all how using race as a way of judgement is flawed and justified some of the worst acts in the history of mankind and useless conflicts that could have been easily avoided. It's stupid and unreasonable, making enemies when we could have been friends or just normal citizens that share the same world. Everyone counts, not just you.



Q: Where would you say your interest in more sensitive topics stems from, and why are you interested in sharing your thoughts on the topics?

 

I feel like it’s something that comes when having an open and mature conversation, being a much better way to deal with taboos than simply ignoring them and let people keep their beliefs for themselves, thus allowing for much more ignorant ideologies, despite knowing that not everyone feels comfortable taking about it and can be seen as triggering when you talk about it all the time.


Q: Why do you think you contemplate death in this specific way? Where do your thoughts come from? How do you think other people perceive death, and why do you think they view it that way? What is your experience with how others see the Murdoch school shooting as a suicide? Would you say you see it differently?


Death is a delicate theme as it’s natural and will come to as all, the emotions find it hard to accept that one day even our most beloved ones will turn into a thing to be buried or cremated. Seeing how everyone will be subjected to this fate, it’s also public, having the possibility of being covered by the media. When I say media, I refer myself not only to news and shockumentaries, but also to movies and storylines than center themselves on the exploration of twisted and evil mindsets. Because of personal experience from loss or fear, some find it offensive, believing they don’t have the right to talk about it, to which I disagree. Life is made of good and bad moments, and society mirrors it. So, when it comes to differing fiction from reality, that’s up to the legal guardians and schools to doctrine the morals that should be followed. It’s their responsibility to teach the youth about the fakeness of the image instead of staying silent.



Q: What is it like to be in your second year of studying law? How did you decide to study law?


It’s been alright. It’s hard, not gonna lie. People don’t call it the Medicine in human sciences for nothing. I just decided right at the last hour as I’ve never been someone that had a clear idea of what I wanted to do, but I wasn’t gonna hesitate either. My mom’s a doctor so I thought of studying medicine, but when I saw my grades, it was clear that I would get a better shot at humanities.


We will end up interacting with jurists and lawyers in some way in our lifetimes, but somehow, it still feels a little alien like for most people. When you study it, you start to see notice law's omnipresence and diversity while it teaches you how to develop arguments and build a more confident and trustworthy way with words. To be honest, seeing the amount of looney tune-like arguments at the center of online drama, it just reinforces to me the importance of all these teachings.



Q: Why do you think you love dark and transgressive comedy, like Sam Hyde jokes? What is a Sam Hyde joke, and why do you say you enjoy it in moderation? You mention there's always a 'too soon' moment; why would you say that comedy is subjective?


I find it funny in the sense that jokes can be seen as a form of satire and mockery in all kinds of themes, including taboos that would never be mentioned in a conversation, without being taken too seriously. This definition also includes the type of humor used by comedians such as Sam Hyde who constantly makes sketches that use sensitive terms in order to get a reaction from the audience, like that one time in order to make fun of TED talks, he came up dressed up in a shitty costume and a PowerPoint full of offensive slurs and anime references, to which some found it to be too much they even left the room.


Now in terms of context and situation, that’s another story. Comedy is subjective and not everyone will find you funny and that’s ok. It can feel tiresome joking about the same kind of stuff all the time, so a change of pace is always good for me, hence why I say I enjoy it in moderation. There are moments when we can joke about 9/11, other times it’s better to take things seriously as I imagine people wouldn’t take that type of comedy in the aftermath of the tragedy nor those who had clear contact with the victims, moments which you can say are just “too soon” to joke around. Technically, no one should be private of free speech and it’s funny to piss people off occasionally, it’s mandatory to understand the context and situation where you’re landing yourself in, both for the comedian and for the audience as words can have a whole different meaning without it.



Q: Why do you say you can't get enough of Brain Rot? What is Brain Rot, and what makes it so stupid and over-the-top that you see it as the next step in meme culture, leading previous memes not to extinction but to evolution?


It all started with “21st century humor” in 2021, which was already random, and now, it’s the same thing but on steroids.


For anyone that has even the smallest contact with the Internet, memes are no strange thing. They’ve always been here, and they are here to stay. It starts as an inside joke about an already existing subject, stops when everyone moves on to another thing when it’s popular enough, only to come back when it finds a new way to become popular again. So, when people say memes are dead, I disagree. Just like in nature, “nothing is lost, nothing is created, everything is transformed”, and so as skibidi. It picked things from the past like Minecraft or Gmod and adapted it to this new type of comedy.



Q: How did you come to have a playlist with more than 3,600 songs? Why do you like to listen to a variety of music, and what different genres do you enjoy?


My parents had tons of records, and we would hear from Bob Marley to Massive Attack, Metallica to Guns N’ Roses, Dire Straits to Santana, Sade to The Police and Pink Floyd to Supertramp. With all this diversity, it was a lot to take in. At the time, I told people I was into alternative rock, which meant bands like Linkin Park, Coldplay and Evanescence. Yeah, it wasn’t specific at all. But after watching Mission Impossible II with that Limp Bizkit cover along with Bullet in the Head by RATM, I had dived into all kinds of metal.


Last year, I watched the movie Pi, which soundtrack caught me off guard with all the fast drumming and chaotic mixing. It sounded like nothing I had ever heard up until then. When I searched, I got exposed to the iceberg of drum n’ bass. After encountering this, YouTube recommended me videos with anime characters and tracks categorized as “breakcore” along with a song called “generic incelcore song” that introduced me to epunk. With this, I ended up where I’m today, having a playlist of songs ranging from rock, metal, punk, pop and dnb.



Q: Why do you think sports don't resonate with you, yet you still watch them when your country, Portugal, plays in the Euro or the World Cup?


While I don’t care much about the sports part, I feel like it’s worth watching something that represents the nation in a tournament with much vaster competition. It’s like if I don’t care for it, no one will. It’s one of those moments when you feel like you’re a part of a big union, even if it’s made up of mostly people you don’t even know. What do you call it? Patriotism? Love for the homeland? Idk, but it feels special.


Q: How did you become interested in experimenting with sonoplasty, making your own sound effects and ambiance? You often distort everything and use whatever you have in your room at the moment, whether it be Monster cans, M&Ms, scissors, clothing, or even trying some death metal growls, squeals, and screams to create hellish sounds.


After playing Half-Life, I became fascinated with how distinct their sound effects were. While they confirmed they had just gone to the sound library and chose already existing sounds to put in the game, it gave me the will to record my own audio files instead of just picking the same sound you heard a million times before. And seeing how copyright has changed over the years, now being unable to put the songs I want in a project without fear of legal action, it sounds like an even better option.

As for the sounds themselves, I try producing them with common tools as some of the biggest sound libraries in history were produced at a time when there was no way to transport the recording material outside the studio, thus having to produce it all by themselves alone with their creativity. That way, you can also use it to create an ambience, describe certain characters and so on. With distortion, who can produce even more unique and alien-like noises, being able to use in all kinds of genres, not just horror.



Q: You studied at a conservatory where you played the pipe organ. You stopped 8 years ago. Why? How did you come to play in your college's tuna (a group of students that play traditional music and serenades). How would you describe your experience with playing music? How did you become interested in traditional music, and what is it like being part of a group?


While it was fun to play, it was an instrument I couldn’t replicate at home, so I had to stay there longer to practice. I stayed there from 1st to 5th grade playing pipe organ, having choir and musical education classes, spending at least 6 hours there every day of the week, some having to wait a total of 3 hours to have the next class. As I was too young to have a phone at the time, I would get easily tired, thus having lower grades in some of these classes, only to head home at 9 pm at having to study for school tests. It reached a point when it was unbearable, so I decided to make a “gap year”. After that, I decided to give up entirely.


Now years later, I wanted to have some extracurricular activity in college instead of just studying, so I went to the tuna. I really liked it. Everyone is just chilling in that room playing, joking, smoking, drinking, you name it. As of now, I don’t play anything, I just sing. Learning an instrument takes time, and I still haven’t had time to do it.


I always liked traditional music as I felt like it was something sacred that people didn’t give the proper care it deserved. In Portugal, there was a time where the regulations had to change to add more national music because no one would play it, which is a shame. It has a simple organization, but it feels genuine. “Fado” is that equivalent of people playing a guitar and singing in the streets, giving life to the city, thus never sleeping.



Q: Your favourite food and beverages


I’m the kind of guy to eat whatever comes to the table, and I like both junk food and gourmet food. For beef, my favorite cut is rump steak, chicken legs, pork is belly (bacon), fishes are codfish and salmon and vegetables are mushrooms and broccoli. As for beverages, I’m a sucker for sodas and energy drinks, the best ones being Coke, Dr. Pepper, and Monster.



Tags:

15

Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - 1 month ago


@VIATHINE - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: How did you become interested in creating art and designing characters?


A. I always liked creating art ever since I was little, particularly cartoon drawings, having been inspired by childhood shows and movies. Realism never enticed me as much as the vibrant and expressive nature of cartoons and I'd constantly try to recapture that magic I saw on the screen in my sketchbook. It wasn't until I played a game called Fire Emblem Awakening that my interests began to veer towards character design, however. In that game, you'd unlock party members throughout the campaign, each with their own unique designs and personality, and I'd always be itching to see what the next one would look like and being very excited upon seeing them; it inspired me to start making my own characters instead of just redrawing existing ones. I wanted to show people my ideas and hopefully someday have others feel that same joy and excitement from seeing what I had to offer as an artist and character designer.



Q: What is your advice for building the habit of creating art?


A. I think first and foremost, you need that passion in you to create art. You absolutely do not want art to feel like a chore, it is something that cannot be forced. You need to ask yourself "am I doing art out of love or some kind of obligation?" because if it's the latter, you likely won't yield favorable results. There is no one-size-fits-all advice I can give to help people get into the habit such as "draw in your sketchbook once a day" because everyone's routine is different but I do think that something we artists all have in common is we love doing what we do and that's enough to fuel our drive to create.



Q: How have Tyson Tan and Tom Fischbach inspired you?


A. Tyson Tan is my art idol, really. I said earlier that games and shows inspired me to do art but Tyson Tan's work is the final nail that got me to lock in if that makes sense, it's what made me go "this is what I want to do for real." He specializes in drawing robotic anthropomorphic characters in a way that perfectly blends organic and mechanical design elements and a lot of his work draws inspiration from Chinese themes and mythology, which really resonated with me since I'm also Chinese. I love cute things but I'm also a big fan of "cool" stuff such as robots and Tyson's work taught me that it's possible to seamlessly merge the two.

Tom Fischbach is another artist whose work played a big role in shaping my work into what it is today; I stumbled across a post of his on Deviantart by pure happenstance titled "Tkturials- Digitigrade Legs Guide," which was an in-depth guide on how to draw digitigrade legs for furry characters. The idea of having a character walk on their digits, mimicking their animal counterparts, was a concept so foreign yet fascinating to me that I wanted to practice drawing it; I browsed more of Tom's art for inspiration and used his style and Tyson's as the basis for developing my own over time.



Q: Can you share the story behind your username: VIATHINE?


A. This is a weird one and actually not the first time I told this story. I was in Shanghai, I had just finished having mushroom soup dinner and was waiting outside the restroom for my friends and had nothing else to do so I started brainstorming names for my OCs. Viathine was one of them. In hindsight these were very goofy so I never ended up using any but for some reason, I didn't want to get rid of Viathine so I reused it as a username. One byproduct is the name now reminds me of mushrooms and I pray that you, the viewer, don't start associating me with mushrooms after having read that.



Q: How did you discover the Newgrounds website? What inspired you to join the community? How do you feel about the site now compared to when you first joined?


A. Newgrounds is a site I was always aware of but knew little about up until recently. Not even I can remember the chain of events that lead me here so I guess you can just chalk it up to fate, hah. I don't regret it though, I've only been here for a month but it's already starting to feel like home. There's this strong sense of community on Newgrounds you can't quite find on other platforms and it's very refreshing.



Q: How would you describe your experiences playing League of Legends?


A. Aptly put, I don't like it. I mostly just play it to socialize with my friends and when they forcibly send skins to my account to guilt me into playing with them. Two good things I did get out of League, however, is the treasure trove of inspiration from its champion and skin designs as well as meeting an amazing and influential artist in a match by pure happenstance. That's the person who convinced me to start putting my work online this year and it was the best advice I ever took.



Q: In your opinion, what makes a video game good?


A. I'm not versed in game design enough to gauge the objective quality of a game. I just think that if you enjoy playing something, it is good to you.



Q: What inspires you to study character designs from video games?


A. I think it has to do with games being an interactive form of media. When I play a game, I myself am put into that world and so I'm more likely to "understand" the characters in it. I mostly look to games for inspiration because they allow me to evaluate their designs from various angles, figuratively and literally, that other media cannot offer.



Q: What makes a good show?


A. Very similar to my previous answer regarding games, animation and storytelling to a lesser degree aren't my forte so I don't think it's my place to judge a show's quality on an objective level. I simply engage with the media that makes me happy and inspires me to push my art in new ways, that's all there is to it. Never let people tell you you're wrong because you enjoy something. Ꮚᵔꈊ’Ꮚෆ



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Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - November 19th, 2024


@23i - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: What is it like living in Sweden?


Sweden is a good country, but like all western countries we get increasing wealth inequality which causes both child birth rate declines and increasing difficulty getting into the housing market for first-time buyers. The municipality is not doing too well deciding to spend $500 million on a healthcare system from 1997 which when deployed didn't work and for instance removed words in the diagnostics comments such as "no bleeding" became "bleeding". Now it has been withdrawn from production and will probably not be deployed 2024, if ever. So it feels good paying a lot of tax knowing that it's being spent responsibly.


However, there are good things about it as well. Our air, nature and in general happiness is good. I am about to become a father and I think that's one of the best feelings in the world. I really hope my child can grow up in a good society though, and I will do my best to make sure my child is safe. I am really interested in attachment theory and I've been listening to Psychology in Seattle to get a better idea of what it is and how I can incorporate this into my own parenting. I'm excited nontheless.



- Hardware Story


Something I remember from when I was younger was the release of Battlefield 2. It was an incredibly beautiful creation, and I desperately wanted to play it on our computer that Dad had bought through his work. I decided to purchase the game at the nearest GAME store. When I finally got home, I took the disc out of the game case and placed it in the computer's CD drive. As the installation program started and chugged along, it felt so wonderfully close.


Once the files were in place on the computer, I found the .exe file for Battlefield 2 and launched it. As usual, the program seemed to create a black screen while waiting to load further. However, something happened - the game didn't continue loading but instead closed back to the desktop. It was my first experience of having hardware that was too weak for the software.



Q: Have you had many experiences with hardware issues? What are your thoughts on hardware in general? How do you feel about computers and technology?


I've been interested in technology for as long as I can remember. My first game I played was probably Super Mario Bros 3 on NES while getting my hair cut by my mother because it was the only way I could sit still. My interest continued but my parents, well mostly my father, was sceptical of technology and in particular didn't like that me and my younger brother spend so much time at the computer. We had some allowance though and that was really awesome. Either way, I had a chat with my father about my future and what I wanted to do. He told me that because I like computers so much I shouldn't work in an occupation where I sit at computers all day, because I will not do anything else. I felt like this resonated with me and it made sense. However, it wasn't the best of advice because this made me pursuit less optimal routes for me, and I ended up working in IT anyway after a detour.



Q: Your opinion and experiences of the Internet


As for my internet experience, I started out with the classic modem, connecting through the phone line simultaneously locking the phone line so no one could call in our out. One fond memory I have is playing Need For Speed 3 online with one of my classmates when I was around seven or eight, where we called each other on our father's mobile phones in order to chat. It was incredibly laggy and almost unplayable, but also glorious at the same time.



Q: The story of your username: 23i


My username stemmed from me discovering FL studio when my friend had it installed on his computer and I was at his place. I started producing and boy was I a beginner. At the very least I had played some piano from before so I had an idea of what notes fit together, but the mix was just all over the place. Either way - when I finished the song on his computer, I wanted to upload it somewhere. Since I had used Newgrounds for the majority of the 2000's, it was finally time to become a member so I could spread the music. 23i was really nothing but a random sequence of characters that I thought looked and sounded cool, so that's what it became.



Q: How did you discover the Newgrounds website? What inspired you to join the community? Do you feel differently about the site now compared to when you first joined? In what ways would you say the Newgrounds community has changed over the years, and why?


Alright here we go, haha. Some of these questions really make me think about how it was back when I first discovered Newgrounds as a site. I think it was searching for flash games while also learning how to install and use flash player. It was a hassle but once I got the hang of it I really enjoyed my time here. I remember playing Pico's school a lot and being really impressed with what people could come up with just using Flash 3. For me, the abstraction was a little too big for the time I was allocated by my parents to spend at the computer to actually be able to produce something worthwile.



Q: What would be your advice for creating music?


As for my advice for creating music, basically, do whatever you're comfortable with. Install some DAW and play around with the interface. There are tonnes of tutorials on youtube for instance now, and it should get you going. Or find a friend that has it on his/her computer and bother them until they help you make a song and learn in the process.



Q: What's the story behind you creating music for @Hyptosis's Relic?


Hyptosis Relic is really cool. I was actually approached by Hyptosis himself in DM asking if he could use my song A Figure Approaches. It was an awesome experience and I am still very thankful for Hyptosis DM and it's super cool seeing something I made in a game on the website that really meant so much to me over the years.



Q: Your favourite food and drinks


I love Kung Pao Chicken, but really, meatballs all day.



Q: What is your advice for being happy


For me, being happy is really about having your family close. It doesn't mean close in distance, but just close contact. I also make sure to keep myself active and in shape so I can play with my child(ren?) when they grow up, and in extension, live a happy and long life.




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Posted by BottleTopBillFanclub - November 18th, 2024


@BroatsShorts - @Aalasteir (Q) - Index


Q: You were inspired to become an animator after seeing Nicktoons for the first time in 1992, with your second major influence being Adult Swim during your high school years. Why do you think animation resonates with you? How do you distinguish between good and bad animation?


I suppose animation resonates with me because it's a stylized, colorful and exaggerated version of reality, and can communicate things in a really punchy and simplified way that I find really satisfying. I always had a wild imagination as a kid, and animation can replicate the stuff I imagine in my head. I also have ADHD and I feel like cartoons are a really soothing balm for the ADHD brain.


As for good and bad animation, it's largely a matter of taste. Things can technically be "poorly" drawn and animated but be fantastic. For instance, shows like Life and Times of Tim or Ten Year Old Tom are really deliberately rough looking, but I love the style and the writing and acting are great. Anything with a specific point of view that's executed well on its own terms is something I appreciate. At the end of the day I tend to especially gravitate toward shows with really punchy, poppy, memorable character designs & colors, and humor that is kind of absurd and weird and over-the-top - The Amazing World of Gumball, Invader Zim, and The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack are some of my all-time favorites.



Q: How did you develop your process of starting with a concept, writing the script, then recording a “radio play” of the dialogue, followed by creating an animatic? You move on to designing and painting backgrounds, exporting scenes for animation, compositing in After Effects, and finally editing in Premiere with audio. Have you experimented with different workflows, and how did this particular process come about?


It's just the typical process I've encountered while working in the industry. I've worked on a bunch of shows over the years (Rick and Morty, DuckTales, Final Space. Pickle & Peanut, Future Worm, Randy Cunningham 9th Grade Ninja, Animals [on HBO]) and I'm always really interested in the entire pipeline and observing how everything gets made at each step. A lot of people get locked into their particular bubble (character design, boards, etc.) and don't really venture outside of that specialization, but I always wanted to be able to do everything from start to finish on my own. I haven't really experimented with other processes because this approach really works for me.



Q: How did you develop your series Broats?


Broats was initially just a joke in my head combining Check It Out With Steve Brule and My Little Pony. Steve Brule always mispronounces "boats" as "broats", and to me that word sounded like a goat version of "brony". So after chuckling about that for a minute I realized it could be a funny name for a cartoon, and started working backwards from there. I initially pitched it to Cartoon Network, but the setup was a lot different. They were 3 goat bros living on a farm, and a human kid came from the city to take a job as a goat herder. The goats would follow him around and try to learn how to be cool like humans. They were more exaggeratedly "bro" stereotypes in this version, and the names Chad, Thad and Reggie were intended to sound like frat boy names.


CN passed on it, and a couple years later while walking through a farmer's market at the Americana at Brand (a famous outdoor mall in Glendale, CA) I saw a petting zoo set up with some goats. That was a lightbulb moment where I realized a much funnier premise for a Broats cartoon - the goats run their own petting zoo inside a mall like the Americana. I pitched that version to Nickelodeon and they greenlit a short, which was made around 2013. They also greenlit it for early development, but wound up passing on it. Eventually the rights reverted back to me and I decided to just make it myself, with some of the original voice actors returning for the roles of Chad & June.



Q: What are the defining attributes of a concept that you believe are worth developing into a script? What is your process for scriptwriting, and what would you say is the optimal way to structure a script for an animation pipeline?


For the current Broats shorts it's pretty simple. I usually get a specific, quick gag in my head. Like, with "The Cake Is Lava", my kids were watching tons of "Is It Cake" and "Nailed It!" and they also love "The Floor Is Lava." It was a simple, dumb gag that popped into my head. So if something like that occurs to me, I'll write it down, or make a post it note with the general title of it. I have a whole list of these little titles and descriptions on my phone.


When I need some new scripts I'll pull one of those and then open up a screenwriting app called Beat to flesh it out. As far as how to structure it, Broats is kind of different to trying to write a whole 11 minute script, which would have a different structure. With these it's often more like a comic strip structure, a quick setup and then a punchline. That said, as far as optimizing it for animation, I do consciously write and board stuff in ways that allow me to simplify the animation and minimize poses and movements and locations and such. I do really strive to be economical and do a lot with a little.



Q: What does it mean to be an artist?


Being an artist just means doing anything creative in order to express yourself and communicate a message. I'm pretty open to almost anything being art, if the intention and thought process is there behind it.



Q: Your advice for artists starting out


Don't wait around for someone to give you permission to make what you want. Just start doing it. I'm much happier with Broats now than when I was trying to make it at Nickelodeon (even though I'm not making any money off it now). At Nick I got so many notes and so many limits and so much pushback on my particular take on it, and then they cancelled it. Now I'm free to do exactly what I want with it. I wish I had just done it myself years ago!


If you do your own thing and make what you're inspired to make, it's all practice that'll make you a better artist. It can eventually help you get seen by folks that might be able to help you get work in the industry, as well.



Q: What are some common misconceptions people have about animation?


I think one misconception is that cartoons are somehow a lower form of art, and more base and shallow than other art forms. Even within animation, the stuff that more people feel comfortable recognizing and celebrating the value of are things that are clearly high art, like a Ghibli film, or a very somber and serious independent animated film. I think there is a tangible and high spiritual value in something like a really funny episode of Spongebob, or an incredibly executed joke in The Amazing World of Gumball. That stuff is sublime. It taps into some kind of divine energy. A lot of adults are just too insecure to allow themselves to recognize that.



Q: Why do you think there's this misconception that cartoons are somehow a lesser form of art? What would it take to change that perception?


I think most adults are very insecure. They don't feel secure in their "maturity" and are afraid that if they like cartoons others will judge them or see though them and realize that they're not actually "adults." I think they think they will be judged and ridiculed and ostracized from "grown up" society if they indulge in "childish" interests. I suspect a lot of them had parents that kind of beat any kind of imagination or creativity out of them, as well. In any case, I don't expect that perception to change much. It's their loss!


That said, I was talking to a friend recently and their take was that the generations coming up now are going to continue to appreciate cartoons into adulthood and maybe change that. I hope he's right, but even if he's not, I don't really care what other people think about cartoons. I just feel pity for them that they can't let go of their insecurity and enjoy themselves.



Q: What are some animated series and films that you would recommend, and why?


Ok, I'm going to recommend a show that seemed to get a lot of pushback when it came out. It's a show that I worked on a little bit, as well - freelance BG paint on a few episodes. Pickle and Peanut. I get why people judge it on the surface and assume it's going to be really awful, but it's one of the funniest shows ever made. The pilot is a bit shaky, but give it a few episodes to get the hang of it and you will not be sorry. If anyone has the animatics to this show, do the world a favor and leak them online. They are the funniest animatics I have ever seen in my life. They were almost funnier than the show sometimes because the drawings were so unhinged. Anyway, justice for Pickle and Peanut!



Q: What is bad advice that you think artists get and why do you think that advice is bad?


I don't know. I know a lot of folks have the mindeset of "draw every day as much as possible, fill up notebooks upon notebooks with sketches until you get good." It's not bad advice, but I don't do that myself. Maybe I'd be a better artist if I did! But I like to take time to take lots of breaks and enjoy other aspects of life that might inspire my work in between all the drawing.



Q: Art resources you would recommend


I don't have a great tip for this. My biggest art inspiration and references are just watching lots of cartoons that I like and playing video games. Do that.



Q: How did you get interested in the K-pop group aespa?


So in the Broats universe there's a kpop group called V35P4 that's a parody of the real life group aespa. I got really into kpop during the COVID lockdowns because what else are you going to do (besides also reading all of One Piece)? As a visual artist I was especially drawn in because of the wild visuals and colors and style of the music videos, which are really over the top. There's tons of groups I love, but aespa specifically have a really cool aesthetic to all of their creative output. They have a very iconic poster from their "Savage" era that was really easy to use as a reference that I felt people in the know could easily identify.



Q: What do you like about Xenoblade Chronicles?


If anyone has ever played Monkey Island and run into that pirate in the Scumm Bar with the big button on his lapel that says "Ask Me About Loom," that's me with Xenoblade Chronicles. For many decades Chrono Trigger was my favorite game of all time - I love JRPGs, but that one has some of the best characters, story and music. Then when I got a Switch I caught wind of Xenoblade Chronicles 2 and heard that Tetsuya Takahashi was involved, and that Yasunori Mitsuda had done some of the music. From the minute I turned on that game I was completely hooked - it felt the closest to a '90s SNES JRPG in spirit of anything I had played in decades. Absolutely loved it, and it replaced Chrono Trigger as my fav game and soundtrack. Since then I've played the first Xenoblade and Xenoblade Chronicles 3, as well as all the DLCs, and have a budding collection of art books, soundtracks, and amiibo. I am beyond hyped for Xenoblade Chronicles X Definitive Edition to drop next year.



Q: Why do you think you like One Piece and Pokémon?


I've always loved anime. Even as a little kid I watched stuff like Unico, and when I was older I got hooked on DBZ and Tenchi and everthing else on Toonami and Adult Swim at the time. When I moved to LA I had a friend with a garage studio whose walls were completely covered in One Piece figures. He told me it's the greatest manga/anime ever, you gotta check it out, etc., but of course, like most people I balked at the sheer volume of backlog. I knew that once I started it I would like it, but I put it off for a decade until just before the pandemic hit when I finally began reading the manga. Once the lockdown started it was like, welp, I guess I can really catch up now! It really is the greatest. All those annoying people bothering you about it are right.


Pokemon I mostly love for the character designs. When it first came out on gameboy, I actually didn't like the gameplay (blasphemy, I know). Like I said, I loved Chrono Trigger. I heard it was an RPG like that, and I was disappointed that it was mostly about collecting and battling (battling was my least favorite aspect of JRPGs) and very light on story. But I love the character designs so much I eventually got into the games as well, but they take a backseat to just enjoying the artwork of the creatures.



Q: What is boba tea, and why do you like it?


Boba tea is tea with chewy tapioca pearls in it. It originated in Taiwan in the '80s, but now it's a worldwide phenomenon. I first had it when I visited my brother in college in the early '00s - it was almost nowhere in the US back then, as far as I know. They were calling it "bubble tea." Anyhow, I was a big coffee guy previously, and thought tea was watery and weak tasting, but here in LA there are such great tea places that I actually switched over to milk tea. I'm pretty picky about it. There are only a handful of places that really make a legit good milk tea with high quality tea brewed really strongly, and to be honest, I personally rarely add boba to it. Similarly, I only really like a good, fresh boba made in-house. RIP to Cha Bei-Bei, which used to be the absolute greatest boba & milk tea in LA. Currently Motto and Chapresso are some of the better options in the greater LA area.


In the Nickelodeon days of Broats Chad was super into coffee - a reference to how coffee was allegedly discovered by goat farmers who noticed their goats eating the berries and going bonkers. In the newer Broats shorts I switched the characters over to boba, because it's more fun, more specific, and it's more true to my own taste nowadays. The tea shops around me know me by name because I'm in there all the time.



Q: What has been your experience with skateboarding?


My experience skateboarding has mostly been being really bad at it and not able to do any tricks. I can do a small ollie if I'm standing in one place. But as someone who was a kid in the '90s it is burned into my psyche as being cool, and I still enjoy skating around. When I worked at Disney TVA I would bring my skateboard to work and skate all over the campus. When Pokemon Go! came out that was a really fun combo - skating around the Disney campus & catching Pokemon. Anyway, to me the visual of these goats skating around a fancy mall was really funny, so they skateboard. Recently the new Scott Pilgrim show did a bit of Lucas Lee skating the Americana at Brand mall and I both loved it and was kinda bummed about it because it's so similar to what I wanna do with Broats.



Q: How did you get interested in astrology?


When I was a little kid I had a little hardback children's book about astrology with like, one page spread on each sign & like one or two sentences about them. I'm a leo sun, and it said something corny like leos are leaders, and that's it. But I was always interested in mysterious and mystical kinda stuff, so it remained on my radar. When I got really deep into tarot and astrology was during the 2015 leadup to the 2016 elections, when the world was starting to look really scary and I wanted some sort of thing I could lean on to try to see a little more about where things were heading. I think a lot of other people had a similar experience - when things get scary and overwhelming in the world you reach for something to help you though it. I actually wound up pulling back from it a bit in 2020 because the astrology of that time was just really intense and depressing, and I was just like, ya know what, I'd rather not know! I'm just gonna read One Piece until this is over.



Q: What tarot decks do you own, and what have you learned about yourself through tarot? 


I own a few decks, but I realized quickly that the only one I get really clear results with is the classic Rider-Waite deck. It's just the most clear imagery for me, and some of the newer ones, while beautifully illustrated, kind of water down the message for me personally. I suppose I've learned about myself through tarot, but mostly it's just a good philosophical framework for processing the world in general by breaking it down into archetypes.



Q: How to become a certified Hellenistic astrologer?


There's an astrologer named Chris Brennan who has a podcast called The Astrology Podcast. He has an online course you can take to get certified, so I did that a few years back. He's got a fantastic book on Hellenistic astrology that serves as the textbook for the course.



Q: Favorite food and drinks!


Like I said, I love milk tea. But it's gotta be a very strong black tea, like a ceylon or assam, brewed very strongly. A very minute bit of sweetness, brown sugar or maple syrup, and then something thick like whole milk and or cream so it doesn't get watered down. That's peak milk tea.


Favorite food - I spent some time in Italy as a kid, so a really well made and simple pasta with tomato sauce. I lived in Napoli so it's gotta be that southern Italian style with pretty much nothing in it but olive oil, garlic, tomatoes, salt and basil. Adding anything else is blasphemy.


But I love food in general, especially international cuisine, so living in LA is like paradise cuz it's got everything and you can get it pretty authentic in the right neighborhoods.



Q: How would you describe your experiences of playing and writing music in a band during high school and college? Do you carry that experience with you when creating music for your shorts? What software, instruments, and VSTs do you use in your process? What is your philosophy and overall perspective on what music represents? Finally, what have you learned about yourself through creating music?


My experience playing music in high school & college was pretty much like my experience doing any other creative original works - I felt like very few people cared or noticed or liked it! But there were a handful of fans that really did, and I largely did it for myself because I liked it. When we were doing the Broats shorts at Nick they asked if I wanted a composer, and I said yes cuz I didn't trust my abilities and wanted a pro. It turned out I didn't vibe with the music they were presenting and I wound up writing all the music myself, ultimately, with the composer we hired just helping record it with in their studio.


I'm not that technical, equipment wise, I just use garage band and plug a guitar and bass in, use the distortion presets in there. I lay down some drums with the keyboard. It's really simple and bare bones, but I think it works. Again, I grew up in the '90s so a lot of music back then was just that. I was a huge Weezer fan, and the Broats theme is loosely based on "El Scorcho" by Weezer.


I don't know what my philosophy is on what music represents, I just want it to have a kind of fun, irreverent vibe that matches the tone of the show, and feel a little bit '90s as the show is somewhat a spiritual throwback to old Nicktoons and CN shows.


Through creating music, I have learned nothing, lol. Just to make what I like.



Q: If you were to create an inspirational catchphrase, what would it be?


Goat for it!



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