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https://blacknerdproblems.com/the-2023-video-games-forecast-report/

So despite being the in-house resource for video games, I actually play staggeringly few games as I tend to take an extremely myopic approach to playtime. As such, as 2022 was wrapping up when I was thinking about the games that I was excited for in 2023, one half of my brain was thinking about the momentum-based possibilities offered by Strand incoming in Destiny 2: Lightfall.

The other half of my brain was in a dull humming state thinking about the new divine entities we were going to meet in Hades II. And there’s a fair argument to be made that there are a lot of people who are excited about these games as much as I am, but there’s an even fairer argument to be made that other people may think it may behoove me to know more about other games coming out in 2023. As such, I did some sleuthing and research and would like to present a list of games that may speak to you.

Eminently Available Originals

One Piece Odyssey

Available now, PS4/PS5, Windows, Xbox Series X/S

The first piece on the list is actually already out, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t give One Piece Odyssey the first spotlight. This isn’t widely publicized knowledge, but near the beginning of the pandemic, a new friend somehow managed to convince me to watch One Piece. All of One Piece. All 1000+ counting episodes of one of the longest running pieces of fiction that has ever existed. And I had watched some of it before, recognized the first few arcs, and after using a dedicated filler guide and enduring Skypeia, I found myself utterly engrossed with Water 7 and Ennies Lobby. Slowly, over two years, I have managed to get current in the anime and the manga, and lemme tell you it’s a lot of content, but it’s a lot of very good content.

All of this to say, I’m now part of the fandom and as such, I promote the content of the fandom. From the initial game play trailers to the first reviews, One Piece Odyssey manages to blend the source material with the classic trappings of the JRPG, with some unique twists in the form of a Scramble Area Battles as different members of the Straw Crew play out their turn by turn skirmishes in clusters, much like an episode of the anime, while random “Dramatic Scenes” increase the tension by playing off familiar character tropes. Between Eiichiro Oda’s direct involvement and getting to revisit iconic arcs, it’s an exciting prospect for fans and just looks like it’s gonna be a good time.

Forspoken

Available January 24 for the PlayStation 5, with an eventual Windows Release

There’s been some trepidation about Forspoken since its early access came with mixed results, to say nothing about the overtly on the nose dialog. But here’s the thing. It’s an isekei game with a Black woman character and the core movement, and spellcrafting looks freaking credible. 

The beautiful open world is full of classical fantasy creatures, and it’s hard not to be enthralled with the variety of beautiful set pieces and the adaptive magical system. The fluid traversal has a very satisfying sense of kinetic action and while some of the self-aware meta nature may throw you off, the game looks like it has a solid core and captures the same sort of energy you’d expect a company made of former FFXV development members. While it is a PS5 exclusive, it will eventually meander over to Windows, but it’s still something that should be on your radar this January.

Season: A letter to the future

Available January 31 for the PlayStation 5

I swear there are non-Playstation exclusive games on this list, but the sense of awe that you get watching Season is truly something else. The first trailer for Season premiered during the 2020 Game Awards, and the relaxing anime-esque relaxing aesthetic as our protagonist bicycled through picturesque world evoked a season of grandeur.

Armed with a couple means of recording her experience, our protagonist is seen meandering throughout an expansive world while dulcet tones play in the background as they document landmarks, relics, and record the oral history of the world’s inhabitants. I’m just a complete sucker for this anthropological driven journey that asks the player to identify what they think is important to preserve. It’s a story about the stories we choose to tell and the lessons we strive to teach, and we’re only going to get a glimpse into this world, so we gotta make it count. This release caps January and shows that the gaming industries is trying to start the year with a strong showing.

Farther Out, There Be Even More Sequels Awaiting

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League

Available May 26 for PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S

Now we’re going to jump forward to a May 2023 release with Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League. I debated for a while whether or not to call this is a sequel, and ultimately decided that since it was an established part of the Arkham Universe it fit well enough, and certainly the high-octane spirit of Arkham Knight is prevalent.

The Batman action RPG niche of yesteryear was filled to a satisfying effect by WB Montreal’s Gotham Knights, which was a fine game if you didn’t actively compare it to the Arkham games, but it unfortunately lacked that luxury. Rocksteady’s return to the Arkham universe with a different set of playable characters and the chance to fight the Justice League head on promises to be a welcome return to form. The wide cast of character promises a wide variety of gameplay changes while getting to see characters like the Flash and Superman in an un-tethered form.

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom

Available May 12 for the Nintendo Switch

Even though it’s not my cup of tea, Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is without a doubt one of the most influential games that has come out in the last decade. Dozens of games have tried to emulate the gravitas of its open-world aesthetic, Switch sales rose with its popularity, and also attempted the gargantuan task of trying to converge on the several timelines that exist within in the Zelda chronology. 

To say Tears of the Kingdom is a highly anticipated game is kinda like easiest shot to call with the return to Hyrule and the addition of floating islands. We actually know staggeringly little about the game other than it’s coming out, but we can safely assume there are more secrets, more options for transportation, and just a continual sense of epic scales and the chance to explore a post-Ganon Hyrule and rebuild the once great kingdom. Honestly, I got a social media feed full of people manipulating items and game physics in truly mind-boggling ways, so I think everyone wins really.

Payday 3

Available sometime in 2023 for all platforms

The last game on the list is the only one without a set release date, but it’s also the one I am personally most excited about. During one of the extended content droughts that plagued the original Destiny, I picked up Payday 2 with some other folks in the BNP community. While the shooting mechanics were rough as hell, the outland-ish heists and coordinated squad team play with the criminal veneer felt really, really #$%@ing fun. Putting on the mask and tactically completing missions ranging from standard bank robberies, to stealing all of a mall’s merchandise by airlifting out of a Christmas tree, to infiltrating military bases in a frozen tundra.

In the land of consoles, there were clear hardware limitations, but that didn’t stop the game from being a blast to play with friends as we each leaned into different archetypes of robbers. Payday 2 confirmed that I have never and will never understand how stealth works, but it did confirm that I make for a pretty good tactical tank and capable of making sure the crew gets out clean. With a fresh coat of paint, updated systems, and even more wild scenarios, I don’t need Payday 3 to do much other than release so I can put the mask back on. You can expect the Black Nerd Problems crew to open-up shop and stream the carnage the moment we are able to.

Hard to Predict Anything Past Six Months

This is far from a comprehensive list of video games coming out in 2023, but given the pedigree of the long established franchises and the various sizes of swings coming from all sorts of studios, I’m very much looking forward to this year in gaming and whether or not this forecast reflect the actual playtime I’ll have come December. But until then, catch me honing my Titan for Neomuna.

Want to get Black Nerd Problems updates sent directly to you? Sign up here! Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, and Instagram!

The post The 2023 Video Games Forecast Report appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.

January 20, 2023

The 2023 Video Games Forecast Report

https://blacknerdproblems.com/the-2023-video-games-forecast-report/

So despite being the in-house resource for video games, I actually play staggeringly few games as I tend to take an extremely myopic approach to playtime. As such, as 2022 was wrapping up when I was thinking about the games that I was excited for in 2023, one half of my brain was thinking about the momentum-based possibilities offered by Strand incoming in Destiny 2: Lightfall.

The other half of my brain was in a dull humming state thinking about the new divine entities we were going to meet in Hades II. And there’s a fair argument to be made that there are a lot of people who are excited about these games as much as I am, but there’s an even fairer argument to be made that other people may think it may behoove me to know more about other games coming out in 2023. As such, I did some sleuthing and research and would like to present a list of games that may speak to you.

Eminently Available Originals

One Piece Odyssey

Available now, PS4/PS5, Windows, Xbox Series X/S

The first piece on the list is actually already out, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t give One Piece Odyssey the first spotlight. This isn’t widely publicized knowledge, but near the beginning of the pandemic, a new friend somehow managed to convince me to watch One Piece. All of One Piece. All 1000+ counting episodes of one of the longest running pieces of fiction that has ever existed. And I had watched some of it before, recognized the first few arcs, and after using a dedicated filler guide and enduring Skypeia, I found myself utterly engrossed with Water 7 and Ennies Lobby. Slowly, over two years, I have managed to get current in the anime and the manga, and lemme tell you it’s a lot of content, but it’s a lot of very good content.

All of this to say, I’m now part of the fandom and as such, I promote the content of the fandom. From the initial game play trailers to the first reviews, One Piece Odyssey manages to blend the source material with the classic trappings of the JRPG, with some unique twists in the form of a Scramble Area Battles as different members of the Straw Crew play out their turn by turn skirmishes in clusters, much like an episode of the anime, while random “Dramatic Scenes” increase the tension by playing off familiar character tropes. Between Eiichiro Oda’s direct involvement and getting to revisit iconic arcs, it’s an exciting prospect for fans and just looks like it’s gonna be a good time.

Forspoken

Available January 24 for the PlayStation 5, with an eventual Windows Release

There’s been some trepidation about Forspoken since its early access came with mixed results, to say nothing about the overtly on the nose dialog. But here’s the thing. It’s an isekei game with a Black woman character and the core movement, and spellcrafting looks freaking credible. 

The beautiful open world is full of classical fantasy creatures, and it’s hard not to be enthralled with the variety of beautiful set pieces and the adaptive magical system. The fluid traversal has a very satisfying sense of kinetic action and while some of the self-aware meta nature may throw you off, the game looks like it has a solid core and captures the same sort of energy you’d expect a company made of former FFXV development members. While it is a PS5 exclusive, it will eventually meander over to Windows, but it’s still something that should be on your radar this January.

Season: A letter to the future

Available January 31 for the PlayStation 5

I swear there are non-Playstation exclusive games on this list, but the sense of awe that you get watching Season is truly something else. The first trailer for Season premiered during the 2020 Game Awards, and the relaxing anime-esque relaxing aesthetic as our protagonist bicycled through picturesque world evoked a season of grandeur.

Armed with a couple means of recording her experience, our protagonist is seen meandering throughout an expansive world while dulcet tones play in the background as they document landmarks, relics, and record the oral history of the world’s inhabitants. I’m just a complete sucker for this anthropological driven journey that asks the player to identify what they think is important to preserve. It’s a story about the stories we choose to tell and the lessons we strive to teach, and we’re only going to get a glimpse into this world, so we gotta make it count. This release caps January and shows that the gaming industries is trying to start the year with a strong showing.

Farther Out, There Be Even More Sequels Awaiting

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League

Available May 26 for PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S

Now we’re going to jump forward to a May 2023 release with Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League. I debated for a while whether or not to call this is a sequel, and ultimately decided that since it was an established part of the Arkham Universe it fit well enough, and certainly the high-octane spirit of Arkham Knight is prevalent.

The Batman action RPG niche of yesteryear was filled to a satisfying effect by WB Montreal’s Gotham Knights, which was a fine game if you didn’t actively compare it to the Arkham games, but it unfortunately lacked that luxury. Rocksteady’s return to the Arkham universe with a different set of playable characters and the chance to fight the Justice League head on promises to be a welcome return to form. The wide cast of character promises a wide variety of gameplay changes while getting to see characters like the Flash and Superman in an un-tethered form.

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom

Available May 12 for the Nintendo Switch

Even though it’s not my cup of tea, Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is without a doubt one of the most influential games that has come out in the last decade. Dozens of games have tried to emulate the gravitas of its open-world aesthetic, Switch sales rose with its popularity, and also attempted the gargantuan task of trying to converge on the several timelines that exist within in the Zelda chronology. 

To say Tears of the Kingdom is a highly anticipated game is kinda like easiest shot to call with the return to Hyrule and the addition of floating islands. We actually know staggeringly little about the game other than it’s coming out, but we can safely assume there are more secrets, more options for transportation, and just a continual sense of epic scales and the chance to explore a post-Ganon Hyrule and rebuild the once great kingdom. Honestly, I got a social media feed full of people manipulating items and game physics in truly mind-boggling ways, so I think everyone wins really.

Payday 3

Available sometime in 2023 for all platforms

The last game on the list is the only one without a set release date, but it’s also the one I am personally most excited about. During one of the extended content droughts that plagued the original Destiny, I picked up Payday 2 with some other folks in the BNP community. While the shooting mechanics were rough as hell, the outland-ish heists and coordinated squad team play with the criminal veneer felt really, really #$%@ing fun. Putting on the mask and tactically completing missions ranging from standard bank robberies, to stealing all of a mall’s merchandise by airlifting out of a Christmas tree, to infiltrating military bases in a frozen tundra.

In the land of consoles, there were clear hardware limitations, but that didn’t stop the game from being a blast to play with friends as we each leaned into different archetypes of robbers. Payday 2 confirmed that I have never and will never understand how stealth works, but it did confirm that I make for a pretty good tactical tank and capable of making sure the crew gets out clean. With a fresh coat of paint, updated systems, and even more wild scenarios, I don’t need Payday 3 to do much other than release so I can put the mask back on. You can expect the Black Nerd Problems crew to open-up shop and stream the carnage the moment we are able to.

Hard to Predict Anything Past Six Months

This is far from a comprehensive list of video games coming out in 2023, but given the pedigree of the long established franchises and the various sizes of swings coming from all sorts of studios, I’m very much looking forward to this year in gaming and whether or not this forecast reflect the actual playtime I’ll have come December. But until then, catch me honing my Titan for Neomuna.

Want to get Black Nerd Problems updates sent directly to you? Sign up here! Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, and Instagram!

The post The 2023 Video Games Forecast Report appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.


January 20, 2023

Trains of Thoughts II: Playbill Scrawlings from the Filipino American Correspondent

https://blacknerdproblems.com/trains-of-thoughts-ii-playbill-scrawlings-from-the-filipino-american-correspondent/

Now.

I am a sucker for what I call “Narrative Appropriateness.” When the sequences of events in a story, or in a life, manage to hold mirroring significance to each other. When the universe decides to showcase that it has a sense of humor and makes you think about how everything is somehow connected, how out of all the tracks you could have chosen, you have found yourself at this particular stop pondering similar questions whether by design or happenstance.

Francis Manupaul’s Superman is still my favorite rendition of the character.

This time five years ago, I wrote my first editorial for Black Nerd Problems, titled Trains of Thought on Asian American Representation in Comics where after reading a series of disparate articles, I mused on what all of it meant to me, weaving in different anecdotes about the ways I sought representation.

For the better part of December 2022, I had been working on this particular piece, this missive, this meditation on what it meant to be a mixed Filipino American writing for this site called Black Nerd Problems, trying to once again weave all of the disparate threads together to tackle an assortment of topics. 

As such, it is somehow fitting that as I was struggling to figure out how to start the sequel. I was fortunate enough to see A Strange Loop, a musical about a fat, gay Black man writing a musical about a musical about a fat, gay Black man writing a musical about… You get the jist of it. And we’ll talk more about A Strange Loop later, but it’s only fitting that five years after I started writing for Black Nerd Problems, I get to experience a phenomenal play about the Black experience via musical theater, because I very much owe where I am today because of musical theater. 

A Strange Loop - A New Musical

Then.

Circa 2011, I was a junior in public high school in what, at the time, was the sixth richest county in the United States, which not so coincidentally was also predominantly white. I was one of a handful of Asian American students, and critically for this part of the story, one of the handful that was in the choir program but not part of the theater program. As such one day, I was asked if I wanted to audition for the winter musical, Thoroughly Modern Millie. At that time, I did not have the same level of media literacy I do now, but in an effort to try and be sociable, I said why not. Thus, the course of my life was irrevocably changed because of a racist movie turned play.

Modernmillieposter.jpg

Way Back When.

The original Thoroughly Modern Millie was a 1967 musical romantic comedy about the titular Millie moving to 1920’s New York City with the intents to find a wealthy businessman to wed; however, as it turns out, the hotel she was staying at was run by a Mrs. Meers, a extravagantly villainous woman who was selling her tenants into sexual slavery while employing two and I quote “Orientals” to help with this endeavors. “Fun” fact, Oriental #2 was originally played by Pat Morita in one of his earlier roles, a piece of trivia that continues to haunt me ever since I found out about it from the Wikipedia page.

Thoroughly Modern Millie.jpg

Now, for whatever reason, this movie was adapted to a musical in 2000, where the Chinese henchmen are afforded the common decency of names and redemption arcs, as Ching Ho has a happy ending with a Ms. Dorothy, and Bun Foo testifies against Mrs. Meers and becomes a stenographer with his 60 words per minute typing speed.

Then.

The younger iteration of me did not quite grasp the nuance of the different racial dynamics in Thoroughly Modern Millie, or any piece of media really. Looking back, I am thankful that there was at least an effort to make sure the roles were cast racially appropriate insofar as having the Chinese henchmen played by Asian Americans, although current me has many feelings about having spoken more Mandarin and Cantonese than Tagalog in their life as a result. And I am eternally grateful for being taught to love the stage and the performance. So much of who I am now I owe to having the opportunity to write for Black Nerd Problems, which I owe due to getting into slam poetry, which I owe due to getting into theater on a whim.

Now.

As of the time of writing this, I have written over 700 articles for the site. I’ve run the gauntlet across media types and formats. I’ve covered comics, television, movies, anime, and video games. I’ve been a writer, a coordinator, and even an editor for a brief time. I’ve conducted interviews, hosted streams, and helped cultivate an ever-growing discord community as a byproduct of wanting to play more Destiny, an anecdote we’ll circle back to shortly.

Then.

In 2013, I end up going to a predominantly white university and, in wanting an extracurricular to balance out an aggressively technical engineering degree, I tried several different arts programs. After failing to get callbacks to any theater production or a cappella groups, I managed to find friends with the slam poets and also managed to have the distinction of getting to compete in all four of their monthly slams, and managed to get last place in each and everyone that year. But every loss just gave me more drive to become better at both writing and performing, and as such it took over my life for the next three and a half years, and I’d argue I got good at the game called slam.

I was fortunate to be in the collegiate and adult scene during its heyday, where every school and venue was diligently recording all of their performances. And on a whim, I cold-messaged one of the writers whose work wow’ed me and we exchanged conversations about our different schools and writing and became acquaintances to friends to best friends to even stage partners for a while. During this era, they became involved with BNP and through them, I managed to get an introduction with the Editor-in-Chief of BNP who as it happened was also a fellow Guardian.

Now.

Due to the loot treadmill nature of Destiny 2, a nontrivial part of my life is anchored in the ritual of routine. With the weekly loot refresh happening every Tuesday, week after week, I complete a series of pinnacle activities from nightfalls, dungeons, and raids. And because of this fact, I end up playing with my EIC at a fairly regular pace to the point where I probably spend more time in a voice chat with him than a lot of my other friends. But dating back to King’s Fall where we would be each other’s clans subsitute raider, to the eventual co-leaders of our unified clan post the attrition of time, we held court over a wide variety of activities. The perils of Rivensbane, the independent trauma of Reckoner, the arduous tasks of Shadow, the six months for me and two years for him journey to Descendent, and a litany of Grandmaster complete that used to be hour long affairs that we now confidently march through empowered by knowledge and a well-balanced team.

And certainly, one of the funniest things that has happened a(n) (in)direct consequence of our Destiny endeavors is that we now have a thriving Discord for nerds, which is a sentence that I almost certainly wouldn’t believe had I not recounted it several times to various audiences. But what started as a pick-up LFG evolved into Saturday game nights evolved into a sprawling server of channels and threads where folks discuss all manner of content.

https://i.imgflip.com/4cgugi.jpg

Then.

When Black Nerd Problems posted their listing for new writers, I read the posting and was immediately piqued by the language of the post. It was a call for comic book reviewers. Any person of color was welcome to apply. At this point in time, I had seen the site from its very start, and its articles were part of my regular reading list. This was when I grew to adore both the comedic and critical tone the writers of the site were able to take, and I grew interested in 1) how much media access they had and 2) how much insight this continual access could provide. BNP had a few guests non-Black PoC guest writers in the past, so it made sense to me that they would be open to me, but I still remember the nervousness of asking my EIC over the old school PSN Party chat if I could apply. This was late 2017, and after struggling to write a comic book script for years, I figured the best way to learn the medium would be to immerse myself it and saw the opportunity present itself.

Superman

To this day, I remain thankful that they did and after a test review of Tomasi and Gleason’s Superman #35, I found myself reviewing Superman #36 the next month, my very first article for the site. From there on, I took every series that seemed remotely interesting. I added to my list and devoured content. I was determined and apparently voracious as I became well-versed in almost every single major publisher at one point or another, and apparently I was good enough to get solicitations for interviews and perhaps more quickly than I realized at the time, but I started reveling in learning the art of pop culture critique and being a part of this community.

Way Back When.

The “mixed kids have mixed feelings about things” is a mantra I learned to repeat and unravel in college. It’s hard to realize how much white-ness pervades every aspect of American society, because hiding how deeply it is entrenched is embedded into the structure. You don’t actively realize that when you read books you automatically picture a white protagonist protecting the honor of a white love interest. You lack the vocabulary to express why you’re so enthralled with Jackie Chan Adventures or the prince of a 90’s Cinderella adaptation.

Brandy reprising her role of Cinderella in new Descendants movie - Polygon
It’s because it is one of the few times someone remotely similar to you was the love interest.

You make the mistake of telling your immigrant mother that you identify as white in middle school because white is the majority of the people around you, the majority of the friends you made, and the vast preponderance of culture you consume. It takes years to unpack that. It takes people talking about the absence of themselves in media and in media critique to even begin to question it. 

Now.

It would probably be a little self-indulgent to list my “great hits,” but at the same time, I’ve been fortunate enough to be given responsibilities that made me confident enough to seek more for myself. I’ve gotten to write about finding kinship with Superboy, analyzing the nostalgia and evolution of a sequel series of a beloved 80s sports franchise, proselytize about a Japanese high school boys’ volleyball club, and the startling sincerity of satire. I’ve been misquoted by Rotten Tomatoes about my opinion of Iron Fist Season 2 and also gotten to talk with a lot of really cool people about how they make a wide variety of art and how passion is at the core of the difficult work. 

The niche I’ve found here helped me realize that while I’ll always have a fondness for poetry and fiction, the thing that I excel at, the thing that I thrive in is critique and nonfiction. You know, it makes some level of sense that the technical writer takes great pleasure in learning how different things came together and function, and then explain these things in a variety of prose with multimedia, but the path I took to get here was a little meandering I must admit.

Then.

When Black Panther released, it was also around the time that Black Nerd Problems was hitting its 5th anniversary of being a site that exists and flourished from (and this is a direct quote from our About page) “a flippant conversation” between the founders “complaining about the lack of minority representation in DC Comic New 52.” Those three some years ago, it still felt like I was a guest in the space. There was some distance in the fact that I was not in fact a Black nerd. But the thing is that Black Nerd Problems always aimed to provide more perspectives and more viewpoints, to expand the scope and let the people of color talk their truths, and it’s nice being afforded some space here.

Now.

I am not the first, nor the only non-Black person of color to write for this site, although I do hold the distinction of being one of the more prolific writers. And with those 700 some articles, there is one thing I found to be true.

There is something about the specific becoming universal. Generalizations are a terrible way to approach writing, and it’s in the process of discovering the particulars, the pertinent details that we uncover the truly worthwhile things. It comes from speaking directly to the target audience regardless of the other viewers. 

When I walked out of A Strange Loop, I knew I had just seen something that wasn’t exactly for me, but it was still something I could respect and draw equal parts wonder form the deft display of repetition and callback and exasperation at the non-trivial number of all-White folks laughing, clapping, and cheering at all of the worst possible times.

But for me, a non-binary Filipino American pop culture consumer and aspiring nonfictionalist, it did two things:

  1. It made me want to write.
  2. It got me thinking about this time in high school where the theater kids asked me if I wanted to audition for a musical.

And there’s something about narrative appropriateness that I just vibe with, y’know?

End of Line, Start of Another.

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The post Trains of Thoughts II: Playbill Scrawlings from the Filipino American Correspondent appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.


January 20, 2023

HBO Max’s ‘Velma’ Could Have Had it All

https://blacknerdproblems.com/velma-review/

Wooooo, there has been a lot of talk as well as misinformation about this show. However, we goin clear all that up right here in this review. Here’s all you need to know about what’s goin on in Velma on HBO Max.

Velma Dinkly (Mindy Kaling) is a teenager that loves mysteries. She’s big into feminism, not following the crowd, and she loves her mom. The show centers around the mysterious disappearance of Velma’s mom, Diya Dinkley. Whether Diya disappeared or abandoned her family are the two questions that run rampant throughout the show. I was rocking with this mystery being the thread through the entire season. This isn’t the Scooby-Doo gang that we are use to and that’s alright (when executed right). Velma is South Asian, Daphne (Constance Wu) is East Asian, Norville/ Shaggy (Sam Richardson) is Black, and Fred (Glen Howerton) … is still white (sorry to that man).

Velma doing math
image from Warner Media

Now, What’s the Issue with Velma?

So here’s the thing with Velma. The Velma Dinkley portrayed on the show isn’t a different take on the character. It’s Mindy Kaling at the forefront not Velma Dinkley. Mindy Kaling is a producer on the show and this was a great chance to have her put out content that took a different approach from her other projects. However, that isn’t the case with Velma. We see this character fall into a lot of similar tropes of South Asian representation that is present in Kaling’s other projects such as The Mindy Project, Never Have I Ever, and The Sex Life of College Girls. We have a South Asian Velma self-deprecating as a core part of her personality. It may seem humorous, but it quickly becomes tiring especially with the way other people, I have no other way to say this, shit on her and treat her throughout the show. We also see her pine after a Fred who is horrendous toward her. I just need it to make sense.

I was really into how the main cast is diverse as well as the supporting cast too. We even see a side character, Gigi, step up with a small character development arc of her own (more on that later). However, since the writing for the show feels more like rehashing of Twitter conversations, the series doesn’t have solid legs to stand on. There are solid little earnest moments of the show that caught my attention and made me wish they were more fleshed out. Honestly, If the world building happened as often as the pop culture/woke references then this would be a different show.

Velma starring at Fred
Image from Warner media

If we’re being really real, Velma thinks it’s doing the work that Harley Quinn did. Harley Quinn was over the top, but their world-building and character development was so good that it excused anything campy that appeared on the show. Velma doesn’t do any of that work. In the small moments when you think it will, it gets snatched away. Now, there were some funny moments on Velma. I’m not trying to sit here and act like i ain’t chuckle at all (even if it was mostly in my head).

Journey to the Center of the Fandom

Norville and Daphnee looking at a crystal

I’ll repeat that the Scooby-Doo gang is back together, but they are not the characters we grew up with. Daphne is an entire menace, Fred is an entitled rich white wylin’ out, and Norville is the most put together person of them all. All this is fine, and we don’t need a dog name Scooby present at all…if the writing and world building were up to par. If the show had stronger writing, I think the fandom would have been more accepting of these changes to the characters. It’s a shame, because the animation looks pretty good on this show too. It gives a real Venture Bros feel at times with its look.

Honestly, the show could have been a lot better, and I’m not in covering all the issues folks have been speaking up about the show. I really do wish the sincere moments of the show were focused on more. I’m not going to lie, the show opened up with two roaches having sex, and it set the tone for me for the entire series. I already knew what to expect off that alone. I do think folks should check the series out for themselves and come to their own conclusions. Oh, I also witnessed a rumor start where Scooby is a Black woman dating Norville/Shaggy. That is entirely false. That character is named Gigi and her journey is actually one of the nice things the show gets right. Her self-discovery journey is a small sincere moment that kept me viewing the series.

Velma is live on HBO Max. As of right now, there are two episodes out already. Check it out for yourself and see if you agree or disagree with our take.

Velma screaming and Daphne scowling her
Image from Warner Media

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The post HBO Max’s ‘Velma’ Could Have Had it All appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.


January 19, 2023

Every Star Wars Project Coming in 2023 (Nerdist News w/ Hector Navarro)

https://nerdist.com/watch/video/every-star-wars-project-coming-in-2023-nerdist-news-w-hector-navarro/

While fans anxiously await the return of The Mandalorian, Hector Navarro is here to look ahead at all the projects on their way from the galaxy far, far away. From the High Republic to Ahsoka’s spinoff, here are all the Star Wars titles you can look forward to in 2023!

More Star Wars News: https://nerdist.com/topic/starwars/
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Image: Star Wars

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The post Every Star Wars Project Coming in 2023 (Nerdist News w/ Hector Navarro) appeared first on Nerdist.


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