Friday, August 26, 2016

Ed Ranks the Top 10 Board Games

Boring, but still better than Battleship
10. Chess

Eh, Chess is just sort of dull to me. I know it's supposed to be this amazing game that we program computers to play. I know people put together chess problems as complex tactical puzzles to solve. Maybe I'm just not a fan because I would always lose at it. It's coolness could certainly be beefed up if it reverted back to its original Chaturanga and Shatranj versions - when it was more clearly a game of warfare. The Queen was a General, the Bishops were War Elephants, the Rooks Were Chariots. Good times.

Kinda the Same Game: Checkers, AKA Draughts. This is the version for stupid people.

9. Candy Land

Candy Land is fun, even though it starts to lose its appeal after you stop being 8.  Still, I think it evokes strong childhood memories for most people. Although we as a society have obviously moved on to have more delicious desserts than the ones that were popular when this game was first made in the 40s. Gingerbread, licorice, molasses and peppermint? Uh, no thanks. I want to know where the Kit Kat forest is. And it's sort of annoying that no skill comes into play, as victory is determined just by drawing cards. I guess that helps even things out for kids who are playing, so that everyone can win about equally. Lame.

Kinda the Same Game: Chutes and Ladders is sort of another "race to finish first" game where random chance (roll of the die, in this case) determines victory over any skill.

8. Scrabble

I'm sort of bad at spelling, and also bad at thinking of words. This makes Scrabble often frustrating, but still worthy of inclusion here. There's a lot of great strategy you can use in this game since the tiles have different values, and the different spaces on the board can double or triple the letter or word. Although playing the game typically always will include at least one or two sessions arguing about whether something is an actual word or not. It's best for a gentleman's agreement before you start playing as to whether proper nouns and swear words are acceptable. And you must all agree to put away cell phones as Scrabble cheating websites and apps are totally a thing.

Kinda the Same Game: There are several digital copycats to this game (Yahoo's now defunct Literati, the Words with Friends app), but for actual classic board games that were similar? Uh... I guess Boggle was also about making words in a grid, right?

7. Trivial Pursuit

Trivial Pursuit is great because I absolutely kick ass in useless trivia. I generally dominated everyone I played in this game, unless I was playing some weird specific branded version about a topic I knew nothing about. But in general, when playing the normal version (geography, entertainment, history, arts, science, sports) I could rarely be stopped. Which is why people stopped playing it with me. Of course, these types of games always lose their value as you repeat play more and more, as you've already seen all the cards after a while. Although I guess it's a good way to get people to constantly buy the new version.

Kinda the Same Game: As with Scrabble, this one has a million digital copycats. And there are tons of trivia games without the board element. If you want to interact with actual human beings, just go to a pub quiz.

Your life might end before this game ends.
6. Monopoly

Yeah, of course this is the most famous of board games after chess, and it's probably gotta be one of the best selling ones too. It was originally supposed to be educational about single tax theory - and actually demonstrate to people the negative aspects about land acquisition and private monopolies. But it, of course, captured the imagination for the exact wrong reasons that the inventors were hoping for, and Monopoly has become the beloved game it is because it so perfectly represents America's absolute love affair with cutthroat capitalism. So many aspects of it are iconic - the board, the colorful money, the pieces, the "get out of jail" card, passing go, and so on.  If I have one complaint about Monopoly (and this is what knocks it down several spots) is that it's just too damn long. It takes a million years to actually complete the game. Generally what happens is that it's clear one player has gotten a pretty good lead by hour 3, so everyone else just quits because it's time to move on with their lives.

Kinda the Same Game: Monopoly is THE definition of a game with an uncountable number of clones, both licensed and unlicensed. You can absolutely get Whatever You Want-Opoly out there if you look hard enough.

5. Mouse Trap

Mouse Trap was fun, kinetic, colorful, and 3D!!! It is most children's introduction to Rube Goldberg devices, and it captures the imagination. I sort of wish I had a copy of this game right now, because I want to play it.  All in all, it's not that different from other race-to-win games with no decision making (like Candy Land above), but then again it's for kids so it shouldn't be that complex.  If I have one complaint it's that it's exactly the opposite of Monopoly with regard to length. I vaguely recall a game of Mouse Trap takes like four minutes, and then it's just done.

Kinda the Same Game: I just said it was like Candy Land. There were also apparently other similar Rube Goldberg-style games called Crazy Clock Game and Fish Bait in the 60s. And children of the 90s will fondly recall The Incredible Machine on their PCs.

4. Risk

Why settle for having a monopoly over the real estate business in Atlantic City when you can instead set your goals to include WORLD DOMINATION?  Bring out your inner desire for Colonial dominance over Earth with this fun little game where you march armies across territories. Just make sure you get the version with actual cool troop pieces that look like troops, rather than those lame little plastic caltrops.

Kinda the Same Game: Risk is like Monopoly in that it has a million licensed versions.  But if you want to play a game like Risk but also feel that Monopoly goes by too quickly... then what you're looking for is Axis and Allies. It's about twenty times more complicated with shit like bases and industrial complexes, and good luck finishing a game in 40 hours. Another downside? Since it's set in World War II, somebody has to play as the Nazis. And how bad do you feel if you do that and you win? 

3. The Game of Life

A game that simulates every stage of life, but also conveniently whitewashes away the really terrible parts like death, so that's good! Is this game supposed to teach people that their success in life will be entirely due to random circumstances as if they were spinning a wheel or drawing a card? Because that's actually a pretty stunningly accurate and depressing metaphor for how random chance ruins or enhances our lives. Not to depress you or anything. I guess ending on "Millionaire Acres" is more appealing than ending on a cold, dark hole in the ground.

Kinda the Same Game: Careers is sort of the same game where you have to follow different life paths.
 
Things to murder people with. Fun!
2. Clue

Clue (AKA Cluedo) is such a fantastic game. What other game includes a brutal murder, a dead body, loads of weapons, dubious suspects, a mansion, and a whole lot of secret passages?  This game can be played over and over and over again and never stops being fun. As a child I imagined that my own house had secret passages in it too. And this game is so good that it's the only game that has ever produced a decent movie about it - because it's one of the only ones worthy of it. Battleship? Please. Don't make me vomit all over myself.

Kinda the Same Game: Remember how I just asked what other game included things like murder and mansions? 13 Dead End Drive is your answer.
 
Vul-Kar demands your scorched corpse as a sacrifice.
1. Fireball Island

This sweet ass game with a three dimensional board was just the absolute best. From everything I can tell, this game has been discontinued forever and I have no idea why. For those not blessed with being familiar with this game - you're on a tropical island and you're trying to steal a jewel and escape with it while avoiding the wrath of the angry god Vul-Kar, whose idol can spit fireballs at you. In addition to being such a visually appealing and kinetic game, it also has complex game dynamics that involve rolling dice and drawing cards. You can try to take out your opponents and miss, and you can also engage in strategies which involve taking out yourself as collateral damage along with your opponent. I used to play imaginary Fireball Island in my back yard and the street outside, pretending that my basketball was the fireball and throwing it at people or rolling it around. This is a game that absolutely needs to come back and bless future generations of children.  And it's also a game that could easily be converted into an amazing movie.  Will it be a little bit of an Indiana Jones copycat? Sure, but then again the game was also a bit of that.

Kinda the Same Game: There is no game like Fireball Island. Mouse Trap has some of the same 3D and kinetic elements, but it's not in the same ballpark.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Ed Ranks the Alphabet

26 - Q. This letter seems hardly necessary. What function does it serve that couldn't be served just spelling a word with "cue" or a "kw" instead? I know you might have that god/alien from Star Trek and that gadget guy from James Bond named after you, and that you're worth a lot in Scrabble, but that's not enough to move you up... even to 25.

25 - C. Speaking of which, I don't think we need both C's and K's either since they do the same thing too. If I had to sacrifice one, I'd get rid of C's because spelling all the C words with K's would be too kool for skool. I know this doesn't necessarily work for some of those "ch" situations like "charm," but whatever.

24 - V. Not to sound like a Russian or anything, but V and W might as well be the same letter too. Yeah, I know I can absolutely tell the difference between the consonant sounds, but I just don't care for V.

23 - U. Absolutely the worst vowel.

22 - W. Just because I don't like V doesn't mean I'm in love with W either. I can see why they saved these letters for near the end of the alphabet.

21 - P. Did you know that the Arabic language lacks the P consonant? They're not missing anything.

20 - G. It's just kinda boring. Even its NATO Phonetic, Golf, is boring.

19 - H. This one annoys me because a lot of British people call it "haitch."

18 - O. Not quite as bad a vowel as U, but still way below the other vowels.

17 - Y. Be a consonant or a vowel, Y. Just pick one and stop being so weird.

16 - N. Stop trying so hard to be like M. M will always be better.

15 - J. In the Latin alphabet, Jehovah begins with an I.



14 - F. Even though the best swear word starts with F, it's just a middle-ground letter. Not bad, just okay.

13 - I. The middle vowel by alphabetic order is also the middle vowel in my rankings and sits right in the middle of this list.

12 - D. This letter is better than all of the letters that came before in this list, but not as good as the letters that will come after. And that is about all I have to say about D.

11 - L. About the same as D. It's just okay.

10 - Z. Zee (NOT Zed!) is pretty cool. It's not used that regularly and we threw it all the way at the end of the alphabet, but it punches above its weight. We should use it more. Don't try to tell me that "rose" shouldn't be spelled "roze" if you want to pronounce it like that.

9 - B. What a great letter. It's symbol has barely even changed from the old Greek Beta and Runic Berkanan.

8 - K. The letter K usually represents the voiceless velar plosive. I have no idea what that means, but I inherently trust in the peer review process of Wikipedia.

7 - T. It's the most commonly used consonant and the second most common letter in English language texts.

6 - M. It's a widely-used letter that looks like a refreshing wave of water.

5 - R. This is the sound that pirates make.

4 - X. Z may punch above its weight a little, but X is like a Flyweight knocking out a Heavyweight. Could you totally just replace it with "ecks?" Yeah, I guess. But why would you want to? X is Xciting and Xcellent and Xtreme to the maXXX. 

3 - A. Vowels are totally necessary for language to work. And A is the second best of them and the third best letter overall. It comes first in the alphabet, so you pretty much have to learn this letter first.

2 - S. You can't make any noun plural without S, nor properly end 3rd person verbs.

1 - E. This is not only the best vowel, but the best letter. It's also the most frequently used letter in the English language. I mean the word "English" starts with it. It's probably most notable for its use in very important things like the beginning of two of the three words in "Ed Ranks Everything."

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Ed Ranks the Top 5 Game of Thrones Theories that He Just Made Up Right Now

5. Gendry will Win the Game of Thrones

The last seemingly legitimate king on the Iron Throne was Robert Baratheon. Gendry is Robert Baratheon's son. Why not? The supporters of Daemon I Blackfyre supported a bastard son for the throne.


4. Gendry is a Faceless Man

This is as plausible and likely as anything else that I have just come up with in the last few minutes for a series of jokes that you have likely already realized are just going to be about Gendry.


3. R + L = Gendry

He's about the right age, right?


2. Gendry is the Valonqar

The Valonqar is prophesied to kill Cersei Lannister. Cersei Lannister tried to have all of Robert Baratheon's bastard children, including Gendry, killed. It just seems like quality narrative book-ending that he would return the favor.


1. Gendry is the Prince that was Promised, AKA Azor Ahai

Azor Ahai, the Prince that was Promised, is a prophesy about a legendary warrior who will be (or already has been) reincarnated. He or she will rise up to defeat the White Walkers. He is the prince that was promised, and his is the song of ice and fire - which is the title of the entire damn book series and thus pretty important. The prince is also prophesied to be the blood of the dragon, and thus a Targaryen.  Well, Gendry is the son of Robert Baratheon. Robert Baratheon is the son of Steffon Baratheon. Steffon Baratheon is the son of Rhaelle Targaryen. Boom.

Man, is Melisandre going to be sooooo embarrassed when she figures this all out. What with her trying to sacrifice him to the flames and everything.

Monday, August 22, 2016

Ed Ranks the Top 10 Lists that He Will Never Do at Ed Ranks Everything

10. Ed Ranks Band-Aids that Nelly Should Wear

No matter how desperate I get for material for this blog, I absolutely never will put up a post that ranks a variety of Band-Aids that Nelly should put on his cheek. It doesn't matter whether I believe Disney Princesses, Dora the Explorer, Spider-Man, Sponge Bob, Batman, or Mickey Mouse would be the ultimate choice.

9. Ed Ranks Battles in the Crimean War

What ranks at the top? The Battle of Alma? The Seige of Kars? The Battle of Oltenița? The Battle of Balaclava? Does a higher death toll make it rank higher or lower? It doesn't matter, as I cannot forsee a situation in which I would rank such horrible human slaughter. It just wouldn't be right.

8. Ed Ranks the Anything Related to Race or Ethnicity

Just no. You should feel bad for even thinking it might be a good idea to do that.

7. Ed Ranks His Friends on Facebook


It seems like the damage to interpersonal relationships and other negative consequences that this would cause would far outweigh the minor comedic value that such a list would provide. Plus that list would be too long. The 64 crayons thing was already pushing it.

6. Ed Ranks the Twilight Novels

To properly rank these things, I would have to read them. Which is just a terrible idea.

5. Ed Ranks the Other Narcotics that Phillip Seymour Hoffman Could Have OD'ed On

Too soon. Have you no decency?

4. Ed Ranks the French Botanists Born in Montpellier

Everyone knows that Jacques Cambessèdes (26 August 1799 – 20 December 1863) was the best French botanist born in Montpellier, so making a list ranking him along with other French botanists born in Montpellier would just be a waste of everyone's time. That would be like making a list called "Ed Ranks Cocaine Snorting Mets Players" (#1 is Daryl Strawberry, duh - sorry Doc Gooden). The answer is too obvious. I know that a select few of you might be confused. You're probably saying, "Hey! What about Pierre Richer de Belleval? He was pretty good too!" But although Pierre Richer de Belleval was indeed the creator of the Jardin des plantes de Montpellier, France's first botanical garden, he was actually born in Châlons-en-Champagne. Don't be embarrassed by your mistake. It's one that anyone could have made. Try to not let the shame haunt you for the rest of your life.

So this is a thing that used to exist.
3. Ed Ranks Defunct College Football Bowl Games
This might not be too hard to do, and I can vaguely imagine a couple of jokes that I could make. But I simply do not care enough about college football to put any effort into such a ranking. Maybe this is the type of thing Univision will have Deadspin do in the future now that it has acquired it.

2. Ed Ranks Jeff Foxworthy's Jokes

Every Jeff Foxworthy joke is inherently terrible, so trying to assign a value to any of them is an exercise in futility.

1. Ed Ranks the Top 10 Lists that He Will Never Do at Ed Ranks Everything

Oh crap. Was this my #1 the whole time?  Now I've just undermined the entire point of this.

Sunday, August 21, 2016

Ed Ranks the Marshmallow Shapes in Lucky Charms

8. Hourglass

That yellow abomination is supposed to be an hourglass? I thought maybe it was a pot of gold or something, but not really a good pot of gold. It's an odd, uneven yellow blob with a small orange blob inside of it. Have the people who designed this actually ever seen an hourglass before?

7. Shooting Stars

Okay, I get what you were trying to go for here, but it only works if you assume that stars are orange at that the night sky is white. Yes. A white sky. Or is that white supposed to represent some cosmic dust trail? Either way, this horrible shape looks more like some type of infected tooth than anything else I could imagine.

6.  Balloons

Oh. That's supposed to be a balloon, huh?  The whole time I always wondered why half of the hearts were so oddly misshapen.

5. Clovers

The clover should be the best shape in Lucky Charms, but the clover isn't even a clover. It's a clover that's on a green leprechaun hat. Why don't they advertise this shape as a leprechaun hat? Because that's what it is. That would be like advertising the hourglass as "sand." Yes, there is sand in an hourglass, but the whole shape is (supposed to be) an hourglass. The same goes for this clover that is just a clover on a hat. Say it's a hat, damnit. What are you, General Mills? The General of the Army of Lies?  And how hard would it be to just make a damn clover shape? I'm pretty sure they used to.

4. Horseshoes

Yeah, it looks like a horseshoe. But that's pretty basic. It also looks like a "U",  so this could just be some leftover from a box of Marshmallow Alpha-Bits. And when have you ever seen a horse wearing purple horseshoes? Is this horse a 70's pimp?

3. Hearts

Yeah, it's a heart and it looks like a heart and it has the correct color that a heart should be depicted. And by that I mean the common depiction of a heart in art. Not an actual bloody human heart, which would be a little too graphic for me at 6:45 in the morning. Lucky Charms made the right decision here. Still, it's a bit boring and simple of a shape, right?

2. Blue Moons

This blue moon actually looks like a blue moon, which is a good thing. If I had any complaint, it's that the moon seems to have a nose. And yeah, I get it, little cartoon moons are often depicted with a nose. But why? It doesn't make any sense. What sort of strange double eclipse or binary star system do you have to be in to get some insane double shadow on the moon to allow this shape? I'm so confused. Why am I ranking this over Hearts again?

1. Rainbows

You promised a Rainbow, and you have achieved success. With how crappy your Hourglass and Shooting Star are, It's a surprise that you were able to make a marshmallow as dynamic as this. This is the only marshmallow that has three different colors, and it's still pulled off better than any of the simpler two-color or one-color marshmallows. There are always distinct lines and color separation between the blue, yellow, and pink. That makes me happy, so that I am able to eat my cereal in peace as I try not to think about how offensive it is that we just turn an entire nationality into a mascot and eat vaguely stereotypical shapes about them.


Just imagine how banned this cereal would
be if it were literally any other ethnicity.

Ed Ranks the Emails in his Spam Box

9. BEST SALE 41% VIAGRA & CIALIS
From: online_supp80@pharma.can

It seems like wang pill spam is so passe now. It's done. Like wearing crocs. And yet I'm still intrigued. I can get Viagra at $0.89 a pill or instead I could save up and get Viagra Professional for just $2.67.  What exactly is Viagra Professional? Is that like getting Windows Professional instead of Windows Home? Does this Viagra have Enterprise data protection? Remote desktop for both client and host? Is this a work-only version of Viagra that you're only supposed to use for a torrid affair with a co-worker or your office admin assistant?

8. Smile with Confidence Again
From: Dental Implants (worriedly.committeemen2@yahoo.com)

So spammers think I'm both impotent and toothless? Damn. I'll have you know my teeth are in great shape. And despite all those stupid articles that came out recently about how you shouldn't floss, I still do. Come on now people, you don't want to have to get dental implants, do you? At least not from Worriedly Committee Men 2.  I assume worriedly.committeemen1@yahoo.com was already taken.

7. Home Warranty Approval
From: Total Protection (JoeBerry173@yahoo.com)

This message was just a poorly photo-shopped stock photo of a happy white family in matching gray T-shirts placed on top of a stock photo of a house. Try a little harder to sell me on something next time.

Not the stock photo that came with
the spam, but it might as well have been.
6. Get the Legal Help You Seek!
From: Local Lawyers (vtaNd@timebetterrise.com)

Oh crap! A lawyer is contacting me! Did I black out and kill someone and don't remember? Oh no wait, this is my spam folder. Never mind. And the "buttons" that I was supposed to click on in this email weren't even convincing due to jpeg lossy compression. It's 2016, vtaNd, learn how to use a png or get out of my face.

5. Walk-Іn Ваthtubs. Finаnсing аnd Rebatеs аvаilаblе
From: Walk-in Tub Outlet (lance.zubia543@yahoo.com)

Walk-in tubs are pretty much just for the elderly. And while the elderly are easily tricked by scams in spam email, you also have to take into account that many elderly people are just as easily tricked by trying to figure out how the intertubes work in the first place. So they've already lost most of their target audience just by the fact that they've sent this scam via email. Lance Zubia should just stick to randomly calling land lines if he wants to trick the elderly.

4. Browse Photos Of Christian Singles In Your Area & Chat Today!
From: Christian Dating (ewCZ59f@timebetterrise.com)

No thanks. But it's good to know that the fine people at timebetterrise.com are both local lawyers trying to get me the legal help I need as well as experts on how to find Christian singles ready to mingles.

3. Looking for AffordabIe HeaIth lnsurance?

From: Obamacarelnformation (ee5EPVIQ43@timebetterrise.com)

This email looks suspiciously like it isn't from the Obama Administration since they spelled "affordable," "health," and "insurance" all wrong (but in a way that looks right with internet default sans-serif texts swapping lowercase L's and uppercase I's). Hey, wait a minute... timebetterrise again?! Oh you!

2. Salut my stranger!
From: Irushka Smile (nnksakai@yahoo.co.jp)

This 31 year old Russian chick must really be into me if she's sending me these photos of her and saying she wants to move to the United States to live with me. And she wants to know more about my home town. Two questions back to you though Irushka - 1) Why do you have a Japanese Yahoo account and 2) Is "Smile" a super common Russian surname? Because I'd think if it was then the James Bond franchise would have totally already had some Russian femme fatale with that name.
And a top of the day right back to you, good sir!

1. Trade Finance Instrument

From: cheeckhaili@gmail.com

Should I be taking trade financing advice from someone with the email address cheeckhaili@gmail.com? Obviously I should, since Cheeckhaili begins his email by saying "Top of the day to you."  WOW! How very polite. Is this how all Nigerian princes greet people? Because, if so, I really need to make more friends who are Nigerian princes. And if I keep wasting my time by looking at my spam folder, then I'm sure I can accomplish that goal in no time. At any rate, "Top of the day to you" opening an email makes any email a #1 email.

Saturday, August 20, 2016

Ed Ranks the Planets

8. Mercury
Too damn hot

Mercury is just too damn close to the sun. It reaches temperatures of around 700 K (427 °C; 800 °F). And a year there is only 88 days. What is wrong with you Mercury? Get your shit together.

7. Venus

You'd think a planet named after a sexy goddess of beauty and fornication would be cooler. Unfortunately its atmospheric pressure at the surface is about 92 times that of Earth's, meaning that if you visited Venus you'd totally be crushed to death by gravity. Satellites that the Russians sent to Venus were totally destroyed in 20 to 120 minutes. No thanks.

6. Neptune

Now that poor Pluto has been demoted and is no longer a planet, Neptune is the one furthest out. And it's just a big blue gas ball of boring. Plus a Neptune year is 164.8 Earth years long. Which means it would take FOREVER between birthday parties.

5. Uranus

Hehehe, Uranus.

4. Saturn

Saturn and Jupiter are both gas giants, and although Saturn isn't as big as Jupiter it at least has that awesome cool ring around it. That's worth something, right? Plus it has the moon of Titan, which is larger than crappy Mercury and also has its own atmosphere.

3. Jupiter

Jupiter is the biggest planet in the solar system, so it's got that going for it. It also has that "eye" which is a storm that's been raging on it for thousands of years. I guess the only downside is that it, like the other gas giants, are just big balls of gas so you can't really visit them.


2. Mars

We're totally going to colonize Mars one day, so you better get used to Mars. Mars is a floating rock in space so we can actually go to it unlike the gas giants. And unlike super hot Mercury or crushing pressure Venus, we might actually want to go. A little terraforming would be in order though. The only challenge - we do not want to piss off the Martians.

1. Earth

Earth has water, vegetation, life and all that other great stuff that other planets don't have. It's a shame mankind is going to totally destroy it all. Oh well, better get working on that Mars colonization soon.