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Everything posted by Kenji Murakami
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Thanks for reading; you're the first one to comment and I'm glad you liked it. Anything else you wanted to say? Chapters 61 - 70: SOM_61.htm SOM_62.htmSOM_63.htm SOM_64.htm SOM_65.htm SOM_66.htm SOM_67.htm SOM_68.htm SOM_69.htm SOM_70.htm
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--- If you cut here, you'll probably destroy your monitor --- ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI. Do files get embarrassed when they're unzipped? My life needs a rewind/erase button. Ask not for whom the bell tolls. Let the machine get it. A life… cool. Where can I download one of those? A printer consists of three main parts: the case, the jammed paper tray and the blinking red light.
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The nice thing about Windows - it does not just crash; it actually displays a dialogue box and lets you press OK first. Any system or program, however complicated, when looked at in exactly the right way will become even more complicated. Programmer: An ingenious device that converts caffeine into code. When you get to the point where you really understand your computer, it's probably obsolete. A computer program will always do what you tell it to, and seldom what you want it to.
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Those are really great looking, Cannibal. I like them a lot.
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Chapters 51 - 60: SOM_51.htm SOM_52.htm SOM_53.htm SOM_54.htm SOM_55.htm SOM_56.htm SOM_57.htm SOM_58.htm SOM_59.htm SOM_60.htm
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Chapters 41 - 50: SOM_41.htm SOM_42.htm SOM_43.htm SOM_44.htm SOM_45.htm SOM_46.htm SOM_47.htm SOM_48.htm SOM_49.htm SOM_50.htm
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Chapters 31 - 40: SOM_31.htm SOM_32.htm SOM_33.htm SOM_34.htm SOM_35.htm SOM_36.htm SOM_37.htm SOM_38.htm SOM_39.htm SOM_40.htm
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Chapters 21 - 30: SOM_21.htm SOM_22.htm SOM_23.htm SOM_24.htm SOM_25.htm SOM_26.htm SOM_27.htm SOM_28.htm SOM_29.htm SOM_30.htm
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Hooray for nostalgia. It's interesting seeing all these desktop images. Looks like you use XP too, Phantom.
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That's a whole lot of icons you've got there.
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Chapters 11 - 20: SOM_11.htm SOM_12.htm SOM_13.htm SOM_14.htm SOM_15.htm SOM_16.htm SOM_17.htm SOM_18.htm SOM_19.htm SOM_20.htm I'd like to get some comments on these. Thanks!
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Here's the first ten chapters of my first Guyver fanfic for your enjoyment. So, enjoy! SOM_1.htm SOM_2.htm SOM_3.htm SOM_4.htm SOM_5.htm SOM_6.htm SOM_7.htm SOM_8.htm SOM_9.htm SOM_10.htm
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Thanks, I'll try to get back on it soon. I'm just working on a lot of other things. I'm glad you enjoyed the story, though.
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It seems like a lot of People are reading the first story, at least. Does anyone care to share their thoughts?
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The main theories I use in my fanfics are that females can be optimized, but their forms are designed differently than the forms for males. Also, before X-Day they were a great deal more rare than their male counterparts. There were originally 10 female-type Zoanoids for every 100 of the male type. As for reproduction, I've mostly gone with the fact that certain traits are tied into chromosomes. If a female and male Zoanoid have a child, then the sex of that child determines the model of Zoanoid that child can be optimized as. Regarding pregnancy, I generally go with the idea that Dr. Balkus – and his ilk, of course – has worked out a sort of hormone-triggered Zoaform-suppressor. When one of the female Zoanoids is pregnant, they literally cannot transform. The issues with ‘that time of the month’ are a little more interesting. All of the normal functions of that time are intact, it’s just that female Zoanoids get a lot hornier during the times leading up to that time. Doubly so for a female Zoalord, since I figure that the Creators would have wanted to propagate such strong genes if they had stayed.
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That's a really good coloring job you did there, Cannibal. I wasn't quite expecting the green eyes, but I think they look good.
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I've been a VIP member since the days of the old Guyver Board, I really like the perks and the fee's not too much out of my pocket. I'd happily encourage anyone to become a VIP.
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I forgot this one on my last run-through, but I've also read Christopher Pike's The Midnight Club. I liked it, though it was really depressing.
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Well, I guess juicy details aren't everyone's thing. I never got into Stephen King. I've heard lots of good things about Philip Pullman, but I haven't gotten into him, either.
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For myself, I'm a fan of Tom Clancy's style; lots of juicy details I can sink my teeth into. I like K.A. Applegate's Animorphs series, it's strangely like Guyver in its way. In fact, I don't think I would have gotten so deep into Guyver if I hadn't started out with Animorphs.