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Bravely Default

2015/03/17 By staze

Bravely DeflautIn my ever present quest for good handheld games, and being a big fan of JRPGs, I read about Bravely Default (yes, a terrible name, even if it is apropos to the game mechanic). The game art was done by the same artist that did Final Fantasy Tactics, as well as Final Fantasy V (and others), so it looked quite good. Reading a little about it, I also saw that it offered a job system (which is nice), a good story line, and a nice long playtime (I didn’t want to spend $40 on a game that was only 8 hours long). I wasn’t able to buy it locally, and Amazon had it out of stock, but I ordered it on Amazon backorder, and went about my day.

A couple days later, I got a notice that the item had shipped, and two days later, I was starting the game. Initially, I was a bit concerned as the game had me do an AR Card (back of the manual), and used the 3D to show a character in trouble. I don’t care for the 3D aspect of games. I didn’t have it on at all during Link Between Worlds. Thankfully, I’d find out this was largely gimmicky, and the game doesn’t use 3D during the rest of the game.

The game starts out with the main character surviving his home town being swallowed up in a sink-hole. After that, you quickly meet the second character, and with minimal effort, characters 3 and 4. At this point, you’re a full party, and the game gets fully underway. Story unfolds rather well, and in a very Final Fantasy way. World in danger, anti-spiritual group threatening, you are trying to unlock the some crystals to save the world.

The game play is very good, and with the addition of being able to adjust difficulty and random encounter chance, as well as adjust the speed of the battles, you’re able to really “grind” without a sweat. In fact, in chapter 3, I found a great place to grind with all (and only) undead enemies, and the use of a shield that casts Cura, you can just mass cast Cura, with no MP cost, and level like crazy. I leveled all the jobs available to level 9 in a few hours, and made character level 65 for everyone at the same time (which is a good 20-25 levels above where I should be at this point). Pretty cool. Later in the game, there are enemies you can just phoenix down, and kill, so for a few hundred bucks a battle, you can very quickly level with no difficulty.

The problem in the game, however, is the second “half”. You basically have to do the same thing, over, and over, and over again. And while this doesn’t take much time, since I had already maxed out my characters, it did get a bit tedious. If I had done it straight through, it probably would only take a couple hours to clear the last few chapters. After chapter 5, you can trigger a “false” ending, which basically skips to the end, and lets you fight one of the two main bosses, then just warps you back to before you triggered that ending. The true ending requires the repetition.

While I can rail about it here, why not just read this. Ultimately though, the game was a lot of fun. And the end was extremely easy using a pretty much game breaking combo ((Max out pirate and swordmaster for all characters. Set three of them up as either a pirate or swordmaster, and then set up your secondary abilities for the
opposite. The only support ability you must have is “BP Recovery” (requires Red Mage level 9). Now, the fun. Have all your characters max brave, then do “Free Lunch” on swordmaster, then “Amped Strike” 3 times. The last character should be a white or black mage, and then the opposite as their secondary. That last character should also have “Group-cast All” (also requires maxing Black Mage). That character then casts Poison on the party 3 times, then Ensuna. That means 6 BP for each character. =) Second turn, your three attackers can just cast “Amped Strike” 4 times each since “Free lunch” lasts 2 turns. Rinse, and repeat. Massive damage, and the last boss only hit me once. =) You may also want to adjust Agility using various items so your BP generating character goes last)).

All and all, I’d wholeheartedly recommend the game, and suggest anyone who enjoys JRPGs to buy it. While the second half is a bit tedious, if you just plow through, it’s not a huge deal. In the end, I had over 122 hours on the game, but some of that was using “cheats” to get money, or kill things without interacting with the game (I left the 3DS running a few nights in a row).

[xrr rating=4.5/5]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: 3DS, Bravely Default, RPG, Square Enix

(Fake?) Hakko FG-100

2015/03/16 By staze

FG-100I recently had my Hakko FR-300 repaired due to a bad heating element, and while I was looking at doing it myself, they mentioned calibration after replacing the element. So, I started looking for how much a soldering tip calibrator would cost (since many thermal probes won’t measure that high). Turned out, there are a ton of fake/grey market Hakko calibrators on eBay for less than $15 shipped from China ((I find the economics of buying stuff cheap from China hard to fathom… How does someone selling this stuff make any money once you factor shipping, etc)). Anyway, I bought one, and waited.

The unit arrived a couple weeks later ((shipped a bit late due to Chinese New Year)), and I must say, it is the most amazing fake I’ve ever seen. The box looked legit (included serial number), the packaging inside looked legit, and the unit itself looks identical to the real thing. The biggest take away is the “Made in Japan” on the back of the unit… which, isn’t very believable. I don’t want to take it apart to look at the soldering (since there’s some spring mechanism involved), but I’d imagine it’s scary. Anyway, the unit is extremely easy to use. You throw a sensor on it (mine came with 10), and then fire up an iron, wet the tip with solder, and place the tip on the sensor “middle”. My recently repaired/calibrated FR-300 read 401C when set to 400C. Cool (the unit claims accuracy of ±3C, and the FR-300 was calibrated to ±10F (approx. ±5C)). So then I tried my Hakko 936 (old and trusty)… setting to 375C resulted in only reading 320! Holy crap, my go to iron was over 50C low, no wonder reworking some joints seemed troublesome. According to the 936 manual, you’re supposed to calibrate at 400C. Turned to that, it remained over 50C off. Luckily, calibration is easy (small phillips screw trimpot under the main knob), and relatively quickly I had it registering correctly.

Final test was my Weller WTCPT tip controlled unit. It SHOULD always be maintain an accurate temperature. I fired it up with a 700F tip installed, and after a couple minutes, checked, and it showed 376C, or 708.8F, which is within spec since the tips are ±9F rated. It did cycle a bit on and off, but well within ±15F, which is fine with me.

While I wish I couple buy a real (or at least legit) Hakko FG-100, I don’t see myself calibrating my irons regularly and only have the two that can be calibrated anyway. =) For less than $15, I’d HIGHLY recommend one. Especially if you don’t know how accurate your iron is.

[xrr rating=4.5/5]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: FG-100, Hakko, Soldering

American Battery Company

2015/03/09 By staze

Update 1: Got an email from the ABC manager asking what he could do to make it right, again stating their “We’re the only company to warranty our products for 2 years”, which, statistically, means nothing. I would imagine after looking at failure rates, they saw >80% of SLA batteries they source failed after 2 years, so there was no reason to not increase their warranty. Anyway, I responded that they could offer a discount on a new product, or at the very least, adjust their process so they’re not asking out of warranty customers to fill out an RMA form. I’ll post another update if I hear more…

Update 2: Okay, they’ve redeemed themselves. The manager that got ahold of me yesterday got back to me today and said he was shipping me a replacement today. He did apologize for rigamarole that I went through. So yes, the original post is moot. Thank you ABC for coming through on this.

Update 3: Got the battery. Interestingly, looks like it’s better built than the original. Thanks ABC!

ABC RBC7Just over two years ago, I purchased a replacement battery for my APC Smart-UPS 1400. I’d used ABC batteries in the past, and hadn’t really seen anything wrong with them (or right, they just worked). Over the weekend, however, the battery that was, quite literally, a month and a half past it’s 2 year warranty, triggered an alert that it needed to be replaced.

I contacted ABC, and they said they’d consider the warranty, and had me fill out an RMA request. At this point, I had already told them when it was purchased, and that it was less than 2 months outside warranty. So, I filled out the request, and expected something positive to come of it (at least the option for a discounted replacement purchase). Instead, an hour later, I got a reply from the same person that had told me to fill out the RMA request, that they wouldn’t be able to help me. So, why the hell did they have me fill out the RMA request?

Needless to say, I have a very thin tolerance for shitty customer service (see some previous posts). When there are probably a solid dozen non-OEM battery companies out there wanting to get my business, why should I keep giving it to a company that doesn’t back their product when it fails JUST outside warranty, and doesn’t give any recourse, at all. I think Tommy Boy summed up this experience pretty well.

So, ABC is no longer someone I will be able to recommend, nor will I do business with them again.

Filed Under: Sys Admin Tagged With: ABC, American Battery Company, RBC7, UPS

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