Kotaku
OK, Tensions Between China and Japan Are Getting SeriousAnti-Japan tempers continue to flare in China. Japanese stores are being vandalized and looted, and Japanese factories are being destroyed. The images emerging from China can be described as unreal—shocking, even.


Last month, the anti-Japan protests started brewing in China over disputed islands (called "Senkaku" in Japan and "Diaoyu" in China). There are supposedly oil reserves near the uninhabitable islands, the control of which the U.S. transferred to Japan in 1972. This month, the Japanese government nationalized the islands, setting off China. These latest protests are even more widespread—erupting at over 100 cities across the country—as well as more violent and vicious.


According to AP, Japanese stores such as Aeon, Heiwado, Uniqlo have been vandalized. A Toyota dealership and a Panasonic factory in Qingdao were set on fire. Many Japanese restaurants—or Japanese sounding—restaurants have also been attacked by mobs.


Even the new Resident Evil movie has been marred by the tensions between China and Japan.


While Japanese companies are being targeted, many Chinese own these Japanese restaurants—as well as the Japanese cars that are being kicked and smashed. The violence has even resulted in an unfortunate loss: One 21 year-old Chinese college student was trampled to death during a protest in Xi'an City. Another Chinese person in Xi'an was dragged from his Toyota and beaten so severely that he might be paralyzed.


OK, Tensions Between China and Japan Are Getting Serious


There's speculation that the government is encouraging the protests—something that website China Geeks does a good job of explaining. Typically, the Chinese government does not allow its citizens to protest, because it fears a return to the incidents of 1989. What's more, the government doesn't *usually* allow the press, which is state controlled, to report on protests that do happen (or has the media downplay them). That's why, two ways it's possible to see how the Chinese government could be supporting the protests is that it's allowing them to continue, and it's splashing them all over the front-page news.


What's more, the official line, according to one insider, is that the government and the Chinese national media view this as a "peaceful protest". The protests, which are erupting across the country, are anything but. Riot police were called in near a Japanese department store in Shenzhen.


OK, Tensions Between China and Japan Are Getting Serious


It's important to remember, of course, that not all Chinese are taking to the streets and looting stores. As website Sino Stand explains about a recent protest at the Japanese Embassy in Beijing: "...it's hard to say how many people present at the protest were active nationalists, how many came because they thought it'd be cool or interesting, and how many just happened to walk by and stuck around." At the Japanese Embassy protest, pictures have surface on Chinese social networking sites of eggs being distributed to protestors (2 per person!) to throw at the embassy.


The anger at these protests doesn't seem to be directed only Japan. At the aforementioned Japanese Embassy protest, the crowd started chanting, "Fuck the U.S.A." Looters even smashed up a Rolex store and a Christian Dior.


OK, Tensions Between China and Japan Are Getting Serious


To avoid being vandalized, some Japanese owned stores are blacking out their names on signs, having staff wear patriotic armbands and playing nationalistic Chinese music. Some shops are even putting signs out front saying that the disputed islands belong to China. Former Japanese porn star Aoi Sora, who's widely popular in China, uploaded a picture of herself holding a sign that said the islands belong to China. That might keep her employed in China, but it could make for awkward trips home.


As with previous protests, Chinese people are also are hurt by this mob violence. It's Chinese people who work in the stores and at these factories. It's Japanese companies who bring their businesses to China. Japan needs China, and China needs Japan.


So what's with the protests? The Chinese government could be turning a blind eye to them as a release valve. What's more, this could be a distraction: Unemployment in China could be much higher than the official figures, the economy could be doing much worse than the government is letting on, and the party leadership is changing. (There are also banking problems, food safety problems, health care problems, and pollution issues, among many, many other woes.)


Japanese companies like Sony and Nintendo should be not be effected by these protests as they have Foxconn build their products—thus, these roving mobs don't have a "Sony" or "Nintendo" sign they can flock to and destroy. (Kotaku is following up with both companies.) Sony retailers in China could be targeted, however. "We all know these products are made in China, but with a Japanese brand, but it's just the way it is," Yan Long, a Sony laptop store manager, told AP. It doesn't have to be this way. It shouldn't be, either.


OK, Tensions Between China and Japan Are Getting Serious


(Photos: Sina Weibo)
Culture Smash is a regular dose of things topical, interesting and sometimes even awesome—game related and beyond.

Kotaku East is your slice of Asian internet culture, bringing you the latest talking points from Japan, Korea, China and beyond. Tune in every morning from 4am to 8am.
Kotaku

Perhaps wary of our weariness with "stuff built out of Minecraft blocks", reader MOZONE sent this video in almost apologetically. Which, it turns out, was an entirely unwarranted emotion. Because MOZONE, this is amazing.


He's gone and rebuilt Battlefield 3's famous Caspain Border map, brick for brick, then gone and made a sexy trailer for it.


About the only thing missing is a blocky rush for the tanks and buggys.


You can download the map yourself below.


Caspian Bored Release Trailer [YouTube]



Battlefield 3's Best Map is Now Also Minecraft's
Kotaku

The Greatest Calculus Test of All TimeSo Sahara gets her calculus test, opens it up and finds...oh, well, look at that. Pokémon. Right there, officially, as part of the test. If you're going to try and make calculus more fun, that's a pretty good way to get started.


Best. Quiz. Ever. [My Asian Genes Are Recessive]



The Greatest Calculus Test of All Time
Kotaku

Maybe Nintendo Needs a New MascotMario may be identifiable as the sun to the wider population, but there's a generation of gamers coming of age who grew up playing more Pokémon than Paper Mario.


To better appeal to their sensibilities, then, perhaps Nintendo could take a look at its choice of mascot. I'm not saying get rid of Mario. Maybe just... evolve him.


By Dean Lord [Redbubble, via Insaneley Gaming]


Kotaku

It's not as fast as the game, and not quite as Japanese, but for a bunch of Westerners playing dress-ups with some movie-making software this Jet Set Radio tribute is pretty good.


Real Life Jet Set Radio [YouTube]


Kotaku

League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look HumanBritthebadger is one of the best cosplayers going around. But even by her lofty standards, this League of Legends Orianna costume is a special piece of work.


The amount of detailing and engineering required to build something this at all, let alone get it in a state where you can wear it (while still looking like the character) is mind-boggling. Yet here it is. Looking astonishing.


We caught a glimpse of it in action at PAX East, but the thing is so good it deserves a second, proper look.


Also worth a look is another of her recent LoL outfits, for Sejuani (complete with Bristle).


You can see more of Britt's cosplay here. All photos below were taken by <a href="Bill Hinsee Photography">Bill Hinsee.


Fancy Pants is a look at the world of cosplay (costume play), where people dress up as their favorite video game characters. Sometimes it works! Sometimes it...yeah.

League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human League of Legends Cosplay That's so Good it Doesn't Look Human
Kotaku

Let's Talk About The Video Games We Played, Loved And Hated Last WeekA busy seven days chasing around after my kid then jetting off to Sydney meant I didn't get to play as many games as usual. Still, I got to play some, and turns out this week was a case of quality over quantity.


BLACK MESA - It's almost everything I wanted it to be. And, surprisingly, in some cases it was more. A herculean effort from all involved.


SID MEIER'S COLONIZATION - Dug up my old copy, moved it over to my new HTC One XL, spent a bus ride to Sydney engrossed in one of the best - and, it turns out, most timeless - PC strategy games ever made.


SLEEPING DOGS - The (sorry) sleeper hit of the year just can't keep me away. The further into the story I get, and the fancier my suits get, the deeper the game gets its hooks into me.


Kotaku

These Brave Men And Women Are Making a TON of Adventure Time GamesThere's an official Adventure Time game coming, yeah, but series creator Pendleton Ward really loves video games. And video games really love Adventure Time. So just one game isn't anywhere near enough.


Which is why Ward was one of the hosts this weekend of the Adventure Time Game Jam, an indie get-together where teams were tasked with designing their own Adventure Time video game. They had 48 hours to get the job done, and with time having just run out, some of the games look pretty neat!


There are platformers, Zelda clones, puzzle games, all kinds of stuff. You can check out some of the best entries below.


ADVENTURE TIME GAME JAM DAY ONE: A GALLERY OF WORKS IN PROGRESS [Venus Patrol]


Just Cause 2

The Just Cause 2 multiplayer project is one of the most amazing things I have ever seen in my 28 years playing video games. Here is a massive sandbox game that shipped without multiplayer of any kind, and which now has some that is redefining the very term "massively multiplayer" with up to 1800 people on the same, single map (that measures in at around 400 square miles).


What's even more impressive than the scale of the project, though, is the manpower behind it. The creators of Just Cause 2 Multiplayer are...two guys from Australia. That's it. Foote, the programmer, and Jaxm, the gameplay designer.


Foote says the project's creation has so far taken around 700 hours, most of that spent reverse-engineering Just Cause 2's engine to see how everything fit together. Now that it's been cracked (for the most part), tens of thousands of gamers have been testing it out over the past few months.


Ready for possibly the craziest part of all? The current ceiling of 1800 concurrent players are all handled on a single server. And that single server shows no signs of giving up any time soon, with the pair "yet to reach any real barrier or limitation preventing us from reaching an even higher player count than the previous public tests."


You can see now, maybe, why when people say it's a project that could reshape the way the industry approaches multiplayer gaming, they're not joking.


Just Cause 2 Multiplayer: Behind the scenes with gaming's greatest hack [Red Bull]


Call of Duty® (2003)

Black Ops II Has a Zombies Campaign?Call of Duty's zombie game modes have always been a multiplayer-only kind of deal, entirely divorced from the game's singleplayer campaigns. A product listing on Amazon, however, suggests that might be about to change.


As you can see above, the game's description includes the line "The inclusion of a Zombies in gameplay, both in as an option in multiplayer, and as a campaign option".


A campaign option? Wonder how that would work. Maybe it's a new game + kind of thing, and you can replay the game with regular bad guys replaced with zombies.


Or maybe by "campaign" they mean Spec Ops co-op missions.


Or maybe it's something really cool that...I don't even know about.


Call of Duty: Black Ops II


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