It's happening again! https://desertbus.org/2024/
Each year I help out Desert Bus by making a poster of their antics, that then is sold during the run, gets a BIG version of it auctioned, and helps raise even more for charity.
Check out the start for this year!
So I know everything sucks and is crappy right now, but I have good news! We are only two days out from the most wonderful time of the year: Desert Bus time!
Once a year in November, the fine Canadian gamer comedians at Loading Ready Run shut down everything for a week and turn the whole studio into a vehicle designed solely for the purpose of raising money for Child's Play. Starting on Friday, November 8, they will begin playing Desert Bus, the world's most boring and tedious video game, round the clock until people stop paying them to do so. Every hour costs seven percent more than the one before it, and the marathon continues until the next hour cannot be reached. To make this epic struggle more palatable, they also spend the week entertaining the audience with games, skits, comedic bits, and pretty much anything anybody can come up with. In the seventeen (17!) years they have run this marathon, they have raised over 10.6 million dollars!
All right, you say, sounds great, but what is Child's Play and why do they need all this money? Child's Play is a charity that was founded by gamers in response to a half-baked thoughtpiece saying that video games were making kids violent and ruining their minds. They fought back not with words but with actions, raising money from their community to put toys and video games into children's hospitals, for the kids who most needed joy in their lives. Over the past two decades their mission has evolved from not just directly providing toys, but also sponsoring the creation of guidebooks to help therapists select the best toys and games for therapeutic purposes and providing grants for Child Life Specialists in hospitals to make sure that the kids are getting to be kids as much as possible.
So basically what I'm saying is, if you're hurting right now and you need distraction and fun and some hope that people are doing good in the world, this is it. They're streaming on Twitch starting at 6pm Eastern on Friday and going til they run out of money (usually about six and a half days in recent years.) It's (mostly) PG and a safe, inclusive space to hang out and maybe start feeling better. Plus it's for a good cause!
[image description: photos of a Breath of the Wild-themed hanafuda card deck, art rendered with hand-drawn inks and colors printed letterpress from linoleum blocks. hanafuda are a Japanese style of playing cards where the faces only use imagery, with no pips, ranks, or point values printed. there are 12 suits of 4 cards each, 48 total. in the classic deck design, suits are unified by particular flowers or plants; in this version the unifying elements for each suit are plants, creatures, or items from Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. suits of horses, Guardians, koroks, dragons, ex. there are also photos of the small linocuts used to print each color, one cut for every color on each card. cards are about 1 3/8 inch by 2 1/8 inch. end description.]
🎊🎊 tadaaaaa 🎊🎊 here tis, my craftalong project for Desert Bus for Hope 2024! the event starts Nov. 8th this year, and this card deck is up for silent auction starting 6pm PST on Saturday the 9th.
hanafuda!! very very fun to get familiar with this card deck and its games. i think about doing other formats of card deck all the time and always just have to wait for a subject matter that compels me to intersect with a structure that interests me. nintendo started out producing card decks, and maybe they have made LoZ hanafuda in the past—i didn't find one but i'm truly bad at web research—anyway there isn't one available now, only a 52-card deck with alternate Zelda art.
i limited the scope to BotW for lots of reasons, big one being keeping the suits tightly defined to specific things and places, & utilizing one singular map type/environment interface. even adding TotK seemed like a nightmare for keeping suit assignments tidy. each place is a specific location in-game (with some adjustments for better composition, like, Akkala tower is there behind Foothill Stable, but i made the angles of the view cleaner), and wherever applicable, items rendered with surrounding context are done as a specific location where that item appears in-game (the sword in the rock is a real place, where you can pick up a rusty sword and see the Great Plateau Tower beyond). i'll admit to some extra heavy lifting on Satori Mountain but i only actually cheated once: Silent Princess flowers don't grow at the Springs around the statues of Hylia. but that's it!! everything else is real.
the Brights are the Master Sword, Hyrule Castle, the Blood Moon, Hylia, and the Dragons; tanzaku are shrines and towers; instead of Boar-Deer-Butterfly it's Rudania-Naboris-Medoh; instead of sakura-viewing and moon-viewing parties there are…………oh no and oh NO parties?? (guardian stalker + hyrule castle, stalker + blood moon.) in these photos, the suits are laid out in order, January to December. I made a little guide to go in the box based on the one for Nintendo's Mario Hanafuda, which also includes instructions for playing Koi-Koi.
8 colors, 88 blocks, +1 very simple reduction cut for the Sheikah eye on the back side. the classic deck is completely blank on the back, but if i hadn't done the eye i think the deck would've been missing some kind of unifying umbrella. and if you're asking yourself, hey, even with overage it’s only 5 copies of each card, why not hand color the cards? i also asked this. i tried some things and unfortunately did not like the texture at all. Only 88 little lino cuts would do for my brain worms. each card is two layers of 120# cover cross-laminated together. the drawings went down first on each copy; the back sides were printed on separate sheets before lamination. laminated, pressed, colors printed post-lamination, then each card die cut out of the 3x3 inch sheet. i very much like the color palate that came out of it; since the pen drawings went down before colors i printed the grey first to find the bottom end of the value range, bookended it with the yellow, and filled in the middle. my favorite color of the bunch turns out to be the soft brown, or maybe the "gold" with no metallic in it.
i would say this card deck was about as much work as last year's tarot deck but it wasn't all the same kind of work—i didn't have to trawl through a novel of text for excerpts and battle feelings of intellectual inadequacy to have confidence in my reading comprehension, for instance. i had to learn how to draw, like, 20 things i hadn't drawn before, and carve 88 little lino cuts, but it's just not the same kind of effort. long hours, but largely calmer. the tiny but thicc little cards are so nice to hold. i am quite happy with the style of the illustrations i found, trying to make them recognizable objects, so small, and two-color. all in all very satisfying!! (confession: i logged quite a bit of footage from my own BotW playthrough to get reference material but i still haven't actually finished Medoh myself. or fought Ganon. i keep putting it off to mess around and get armor upgrades instead. gotta get to that finally.)
wip
under the cut: the body of the little game guide that went in the box, with instructions for Koi-Koi and explainers on the yaku.
It's Desert Bus for Hope charity stream time again! My Instant Crab Rave is a silent auction this year starting at 5am AEDT on Nov 14th. Check out desertbus.org for more amazing prizes and silly antics!