Kotaku

This PC Case Mod Is Perfect for Space Battles Iconic Japanese anime Space Battleship Yamato (localized and edited for the West as Star Blazers) comes alive with this special case mod.


The mod is on display at Akihabara PC shop, Olio Spec, and it was made with Yamato themed pachinko machine parts to achieve that flashy look.


ド派手な「宇宙戦艦ヤマトPC」 [Akiba PC Hotline!]



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.

This PC Case Mod Is Perfect for Space Battles This PC Case Mod Is Perfect for Space Battles This PC Case Mod Is Perfect for Space Battles This PC Case Mod Is Perfect for Space Battles


Kotaku

This Could Be the Greatest Halloween Costume of 2012It'll be tough to top this! Reddit user rdt156 posted this photo of his friend and his friend's daughter, dressed for Halloween. Dad is a Work Loader from Aliens, and I'm assuming the daughter is baby Ripley?


According to rdt156, the baby "was super content. Loved all the attention and didn't make a peep. When it was baby bedtime, mom took her home and he swapped her out for a stuffed monkey."


How can the dad top this? "I'm willing to put money down that he tops it next year," writes rdt156. Can't wait.


My friend and his daughter dressed as a Work Loader from Aliens. [Reddit]


Kotaku
At McDonald's in Japan, French Fries Are Causing All Sorts of ChaosThis October, McDonald's Japan has been running a special sale: all French fry sizes are ¥150 per order. So ordering large sized fries, which are usually much more expensive, is now a bargain.


It's not just a bargain, though. It's also a French fry frenzy that's pissing some people off.


The French fry sale is leading to a handful of kids holding their own "Potato Party", in which they order absurd numbers of fries, and then upload the images to Twitter or their own blogs.


When the sale first started earlier this month, one Twitter user uploaded photos of 23 orders of large fries, which were then dumped into trays. Those trays became the feeding trough for kids to devour over 13,000 calories.


Kids are kids—they do stupid stuff everywhere. But McDonald's is slightly different in Japan. The McDonald's staff uses "polite Japanese" when they take orders. That isn't to say McDonald's is a fancy restaurant in Japan—but that Japanese people tend to have a much higher standard of what they expect in food service.


That in turn trickles down through the rest of the society, and there are much higher expectations towards how people should act in public. Not everyone feels this way, but the attitude does tend to dominate.


When the images of the 23 orders of French fries started getting re-tweeted thousands of times in Japan, many people criticized the teens for their silly stunt. Some said the teens were acting stupid and that this was a huge bother for this particular McDonald's, while others were amazed to see so many French fries.


One theme that continued to appear in the criticism was how wasteful the whole stunt appeared. "Look, buying 23 large French fries is fine, but you gotta eat them all, you gotta eat every last one," tweeted one individual.


At McDonald's in Japan, French Fries Are Causing All Sorts of ChaosIn some cultures, you are supposed to leave some food to show that you are not hungry. In Japan, you are expected to clean your plate. Not doing so is seen as wasteful. And being wasteful in Japan is a sign of bad manners.


But in recent years, large food sizes have become somewhat of a thing in Japan—that's fine, but you are still expected to clean your plate.


After the image (pictured above, via 秒刊SUNDAY) of 23 orders of McDonald's fries went viral on Twitter, others started having potato parties of their own, like this potato party in Osaka. Here are kids in Okinawa with forty orders of French fries.


And things seemed to have hit a fever pitch when a group visited a McDonald's near Okayama Station and ordered sixty large fries. They covered their table with trays and video game ads. The sixty French fry cardboard boxes were stacked up, and there was even a little pink balloon that announced their effort to consume sixty orders of large fries.


At McDonald's in Japan, French Fries Are Causing All Sorts of Chaos


The photo gave the specific location of the McDonald's where the fries were ordered and was retweeted over ten thousand times in Japan in one day. Apparently, all the fries were gobbled up.


However, as Itai News points out, someone who's supposedly an employee of that McDonald's tweeted to the person who posted the photo, writing via Twitter, "Please stop, please stop".


At McDonald's in Japan, French Fries Are Causing All Sorts of Chaos


The supposed employee added that other customers had complained. The issue seems to have been that the French fry eating went on for three hours, with the group eating sixty orders of French fries. It looks like one table was used for the feeding frenzy, while the adjacent walkway was packed with their friends who watched. Basically, the supposed employee seemed most upset about the lack of courtesy on their part.


What's more the supposed employee pointed out that sixty orders of French fries the roughly the equivalent of one home crate of frozen fries.


"Plus, during our restaurant's busiest period, 11am to 2pm, there was no prior notice about such a large order [from you], and this impacted what food and what tables we could offer to other customers." The supposed employee asked them to be aware of the time. Though, this McDonald's really should have been more aware of what would happen when a group of kids order sixty large fries.


At McDonald's in Japan, French Fries Are Causing All Sorts of Chaos


The potato chaos wraps up on November 2 when the special ¥150 French fry sale ends.


マックのポテトLを60個注文で大はしゃぎ 「拡散希望!みんな来い!」→大混雑→店員「他の人に迷惑です!」 [痛いニュース]


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

If Only I'd Enjoyed Old Republic As Much As I Enjoyed This BookDespite still, somehow, being a big Star Wars fan, and also one who appreciates the work that goes into the lore behind a BioWare game, you'd think I'd have been first in line playing Old Republic. But nope.


Couldn't stand it. Which was a shame, because the game's official encyclopaedia, which I was sent last week, is terrific, and serves as a constant reminder of all the deep storylines and art and detailed worlds that I'll never ever see, but can now appreciate regardless.


It's a funny book. It's not really an art book, because much of imagery consists of in-game images and models (though there's still plenty of concept art). It's not really an encyclopaedia, because it's not just about lore; it's as much a player guide as a reference book. And it's not really a player guide because it doesn't deal in specific tips, just general guides to locations.


So it's going to be of most use to players of the game, then, but seeing as Star Wars is a universe familiar to most, there's nothing stopping even someone who's never played the game to pick it up and know what's going on.


Indeed, it can almost work in the opposite direction. There's a ton of cool stuff in here, especially on the history of the current conflicts raging the galaxy and of the Sith that makes for good reading; you've got to wonder whether coming out with this stuff first might have hooked Star Wars fans into playing the game.


It also makes you a little sad to see the state the game is in at the moment; there's just so much love and work that's gone into building these worlds and the stories you play through on them, it's a shame to think so much of it will go unseen and never experienced because the game they're a part of hasn't exactly been the blockbuster hit it was supposed to be.



If Only I'd Enjoyed Old Republic As Much As I Enjoyed This Book If Only I'd Enjoyed Old Republic As Much As I Enjoyed This Book If Only I'd Enjoyed Old Republic As Much As I Enjoyed This Book If Only I'd Enjoyed Old Republic As Much As I Enjoyed This Book If Only I'd Enjoyed Old Republic As Much As I Enjoyed This Book If Only I'd Enjoyed Old Republic As Much As I Enjoyed This Book If Only I'd Enjoyed Old Republic As Much As I Enjoyed This Book If Only I'd Enjoyed Old Republic As Much As I Enjoyed This Book


Kotaku

When I think "Minecraft", I don't immediately think "The Matrix", but I guess hbrunav, or he wouldn't have made this impressive animated short combining the two.


It really is impressive. I wish more people went to the trouble of actually animating something like this instead of just using machinima to get things done. I know, the latter is easier, but stuff like this has a certain charm you can't get re-using somebody else's assets.


The Minecraft (A Matrix Parody, A Minecraft Tribute) [YouTube]


Portal

Designed For Danger is a Portal 2 mini-campaign created by Patrick Murphy, which adds eight new levels and around 1-2 hours of gameplay to Valve's first-person puzzler.


These aren't just random levels, Murphy has actually carved a little alternate reality storyline out here, which, considering the pack is free, should make it worth a look for Portal fans starved of new content.


You can download the campaign below.


Update - While we're on the subject, I'm being pointed towards 12 Angry Tests, which looks even better.


Designed For Danger [Site]


Kotaku

Wait a Minute, There Isn't a Diablo III MovieReader Oliver spotted this DVD case staring out at him from the Hispanic section of his local Walmart.


I've seen movies try and cash in on current trends or blockbusters before, but never one this blatantly, or in such a bizarre fashion. El Diablo de Culiacan, released last year, isn't a fantasy movie at all. It's about drugs, and gangsters, and terrible acting.


But when one of the words in your cheap movie's title is the same as one of the year's best-selling video games, your marketing people do what must be done.





Kotaku

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodySeven days down. Eleven of the best pieces of cosplay in the world. One terrific Master Chief. One amazing Wonder Woman. One regrettable popular culture parody.


Hats off to the lady in the Monster Hunter 3 outfit, too, for cosplaying as, well, someone from Monster Hunter 3. It's always nice to see people skip the obvious franchises and choose the ones with the colourful costumes and the ridiculously over-sized props.


To see the larger pics in all their glory (or so you can save them as wallpaper), right-click on the "expand" icon on the main image above and select "open in new tab".


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.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on Narga-Lifestream.



The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on wawaivory3415.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on TASHAcosplay.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on AlexWorks.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on Aicosu.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on BlackRabbitArtisan.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on thecrystalshoe.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on Nebulaluben.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on laahmichelle.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on Martintoney2012.

The Joker Will Not Abide a Zelda Gangnam Style parodyAs seen on Meagan-Marie.
Kotaku

This is an Ada Wong Action Figure, Not a Doll, OK?Next year, Hot Toys will be releasing a Resident Evil figure based on the assassin Ada Wong.


Like other pieces from the company, when there's that much skin on display the figures tend to look more like a little kid's doll than a grown person's expensive collectible, but also like other pieces from Hot Toys, its poseable at a lot more places than the joints you can see.


Priced at $200, it'll be out in March 2013.


Hot Toys Ada Wong [Sideshow]


This is an Ada Wong Action Figure, Not a Doll, OK? This is an Ada Wong Action Figure, Not a Doll, OK? This is an Ada Wong Action Figure, Not a Doll, OK? This is an Ada Wong Action Figure, Not a Doll, OK? This is an Ada Wong Action Figure, Not a Doll, OK? This is an Ada Wong Action Figure, Not a Doll, OK? This is an Ada Wong Action Figure, Not a Doll, OK? This is an Ada Wong Action Figure, Not a Doll, OK?


Kotaku

Battlefield 3, unlike pretty much any other big multiplayer shooter on the market, is all about the moments when the scale of its maps and the variety of its killling machines come together to make something crazy happen. Or brutal. Or hilarious. Or all three at once.


This machinima video, titled "Moments", is all about celebrating that. Those times you stumble upon a stats-padding killing field, or see a fighter do something it probably shouldn't be able to do. The random things that Battlefield 3 does best, captured in a film that, admittedly, is about as far from random as you can get (but does a great job capturing the spirit of such events, and turning them into a very pretty video).


Moments - Battlefield 3 Machinima [YouTube]


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