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Showing posts with label Websites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Websites. Show all posts

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Dragon Age Joins the Social Game War

You've already heard that Square-Enix just released games for Facebook. But now there's a new game coming to the social network giant. Electronic Arts (EA) will release the strategy role-playing game Dragon Age Legends on Facebook, this is a promotion for the upcoming release of Dragon Age 2 next year.


You will take the role as one of the trusted ally of Ravi, The Viscount of Kaiten, as you ventured into quests, battle Darkspawns (along with your Facebook friends) share loots and you will be able to unlock epic loots for your characters in Dragon Age 2 (for the PC/Xbox 360/PlayStation 3)

This isn't the first time EA has developed a browser game for Dragon Age, they also released Dragon Age Journeys as a promotion for the release of Dragon Age: Origins last 2009, completing the flash game will also enable you to import exclusive items to Dragon Age: Origins.

Players can sign in for a beta test at the Dragon Age Legends website and can receive info about the beta release. You can also visit the Official Facebook page here.


Dragon Age Legends will release its full game application on Facebook on Febuary, 2011, Dragon Age 2 will arrive on March 11, 2011

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Social Game for Square Enix


Square Enix, famous for their popular games like Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, has finally join the social gaming world at the most famous social network Facebook, their new social RPG is called Knights of the Crystals, from the title logo, you can sure that it has the Final Fantasy treatment.

Knights of The Crystals will let you venture into different quests, pick different job classes, battle against other players and join boss battles with your friends and share loots from battles. The game will also remind you of a certain social RPG but with better graphical presentation. Game artworks was designed by Ryoma Ito, who also made the character designs for Final Fantasy Tactics A2.


Knights of The Crystals was first released for GREE, a social network in Japan, similar to Facebook, this is not the first social game that Square-Enix has developed, they also released Chocobo's Crystal Tower which is a pet simulation game and Sengoku Ixa (Japan game only), a browser simulation game based on the Sengoku era in Japan.


To know more about the game, you can try it out for free at Facebook (Facebook account is required to play the game)

Monday, October 25, 2010

Chikara!!...Hats


If you are a regular in attending Anime and Gaming Conventions, heck you should have already noticed those Chikara Hats being worn by Anime fans or Otakus that suddenly sprouted like mushrooms, heck chicks even dig these cute and adorable hats. Chikara Hats are bonnet-like head gears that have designs of cute animals like a cat or a mouse and even on popular cute critters in some anime or gaming series. Some Chikara Hats have limited designs and would cost around 300 to 600 Philippine Pesos...



...But I just discovered one interesting shop. The guys behind Giggle Box offers the usual Chikara Hats, but that's not all, you can request for your own customized hats that you won't usually see in the market, like the Patapon Hat that I ordered (see picture below). Their prices ranged from 150-250 PhP and customized hats range from up to 500 PhP depending on the size and design. For now, they only have a Facebook page and they planning to offer plushies and other accessories in the future.


For more information, you can visit Giggle Box's Facebook Page

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Zombie Food Anyone?

Yeah killing an endless horde of zombies can be tiring, so what's the solution if you ran out of ammo? Well just do what the zombies do, eat them....

Well it sounds crazy, but one company just had this crazy idea and decided to sell zombie jerkies, yes zombie jerkies. Well of course they are not really made of real rotting flesh, they are basically beef jerkies with matching green goo oozing on the greenish meat and also comes with a Teriyucky flavor.


Harcos Laboratories, the guys behind the zombie meat also claims that their zombies "are fed only the best farm-raised produce", now that's a promising claim. They may look disturbing, but if you're into zombies, well what the heck :D

And not only that, they also sell Zombie Blood, with matching green blood color (but in reality these are caffeinated energy drinks)



For more info on these wacky but cool foods, just visit their site: livingwithbloodlust.com/zombie
(oh yeah they also offer Blood Energy Potion for those vampire wannabes, and also the much famous Mana Potions)

You can also join their Facebook Fan Page by visiting here: ZombiesAreDelicious

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

You are what you eat (and play)

MMOs or Massively Multiplayer Online games are becoming a daily ritual or habit to gamers these days, it's like you can't live without logging in to the game for a couple of hours and grind like hell. As a matter of fact, some even bring the MMO life into the real world, one such example is the food.



Some players from the hit MMORPG World of Warcraft just mastered their cooking skills and decided to bring it in the real world, well they may not be the best chefs in town but bringing notable food items from WoW to the real world looks interesting. Well some ingredients like Giant eggs, Kodo meat and Murloc eyes are not existent, but there are some alternatives to it.



The guys at Rock, Paper Shotgun decided to bring some of their favorite WoW food items into their kitchen. They picked their five favorites and decided to share the recipes to us, to learn more of the recipes, you can visit their page here.

Another player also decided to recreate the famous Westfall Stew (to some who played WoW and took the low level quest on Westfall will surely remember this one). You can learn more about it here.



And finally, there's one who decided to make a cookbook out of it, but you have to buy it.
the people behind Tauren Chef Cookbook decide to make a cookbook with over 60 recipes of some of the notable food items in World of Warcraft. You can also get a mini-cookbook for free as a teaser on their main course (the cookbook itself that is), you can visit the site taurenchef.com.

Well there you have it, probably you are all hungry after reading this and itching to test out the recipes.
'Till next time...

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Tetris that makes you dizzy

Tired of the same old Tetris game? Well this for a new twist in gameplay, but be warned though as this can make you really dizzy.

Introducing the First-Person Tetris, the Tetris game with the first-person view style of gameplay, it will make you feel like you are the brick falling down the screen, and if that wasn't enough, try playing it on night mode for a more challenging and yet dizzy experience.

Friday, January 15, 2010

A Gallery of Consoles

Do you know your Console gaming history? so have you ever heard of old gaming consoles like Tele-Spiel Las Vegas, Blackpoint and Spectrum 6? did you know that the very first video game console was the Magnavox Odyssey that was released on 1972? (I remember my dad had one when I was a little kid but didn't able to play it) and Microvision was the very first handheld console.

Talk about geek trivia huh? but if are interested in checking the different gaming consoles, and I mean all of the known gaming consoles, there is one site that will give you all the things you want to know

Consollection, a german site (it also has english language) which was created by Patrick Molnar features nearly 150 gaming consoles in a simple gallery, which features over 20 years of gaming goodness up to the current gen consoles, and not to mention the gallery is really impressive

When you click on a console image, it will open a console profile page where it gives you a short description about the selected console complete with release date, manufacturer and screenshot of the console as well as its box package.

To get an idea on what the galley looks like, I've posted a screenshot of it below and be mesmerize on the massive number of consoles, good luck on collecting each of these consoles if you want to be that die-hard. (click on the image to enlarge it)

Now that's a gallery!


So don't forget to check out this cool site
www.consollection.de

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Your own Gaming Box Art

Every gamer know that when making games, designing a box art for the game is also important, as this can help make it more attractive for customers to purchase it.
So if there's already Resident Evil 6 being released or even a game called Final Fantasy XXXXIX for the PlayStation 6 console, they should have a really cool box art. One site manage to made this possible.



VGBoxArt is a community website that has members post mock up boxarts from existing and even make believe video games. Consoles include PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Wii, PSP and even classic consoles are included in the list of boxarts available. Also, they also expanded to movie and music cover arts and poster covers.



Members can upload their own creations and share their ideas in the community boards, they can also comment on other user's boxart. They also have a Hall of Fame portion where some of the best boxart creations are posted here.



As of 2009, VGBoxArt has has over 15,000 members and over 17,000 box art submissions.

So if you are a person who's good in making box art covers, come and join in their community and post your best creations.

*Note: All of the box arts posted here are created by the members of VGBoxArt

sources:
vgboxart.com
wikipedia

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

May Pasok Ba o Wala?

If you're wondering what's the title mean (if you don't understand Filipino language) it means "is there a class/work today or not?"
If you're that person who always look for holidays or reason not to go to school or in the office and you're lazy to ask from other people, then this website is just for you

maypasokba.com
is a site that will give you update info whether there is a holiday today or the next day


Main Page


Another fun part here is that you can also contribute to the site if there is holiday in specific areas (city, school, company, etc.)


About Page



They also have contests that you can participate.
This is one useful that'll also give some humor, so if you want to know if there's any holiday for today, then check out maypasokba.com

Thursday, June 18, 2009

The 25 Greatest Sci-Fi TV Shows

Over the decades, fantastic exploits on television have only gotten better–and better-looking. Done well, sci-fi removes us from the mundane and into the realm of the fantastic. A writer's medium, it's acted as a metaphorical cloak for topical social issues; serialized, it allows us to spend years–sometimes decades–following characters, often with the same emotional investment we put into real life.

Hours of fiery debate, interns–and time travel via DVD have led us to assemble an indisputably disputable list of the top 25 sci-fi series of all time. Since that's a chunk of real estate that could easily get unwieldy, we decided to keep the focus on primetime, live-action series and miniseries. And while we're sure something great is lurking on the dial in Japan or other countries, we gotta be able to understand what we're watching


So here are the Top 25 Sci-Fi Shows of all time:


25. Dark SHADOWS
(ABC, 1966-71)
Horror, you say? Well, it's not like vampires and time travel are science fact, now are they? ABC's daring daytime soap–featuring bloodsucking bad boy Barnabas Collins (Jonathan Frid)–gave a generation of viewers some pre-"Twilight" bite, with Collins in perpetual search for his own humanity.


24. Smallville
(WB/CW, 2001-Present)
The adventures of a pre-tights Clark Kent (Tom Welling) is the most geek-friendly comic adaptation ever, crammed to the margins with inside jokes (Clark wears glasses!), guest appearances (Is that Doomsday?) and an encyclopedic knowledge of DC lore. Filmed with an appropriate sense of scope, it may also be the handsomest sci-fi series on TV.


23. Red Dwarf
(BBC2, 1988-99, 2009)
"Space madness" is the appropriate diagnosis for this lunatic series starring Craig Charles as Dave Lister, a last-in-command ship bum who wakes up millions of years in the future and millions of miles from home. His companions: a man who evolved from cats, a neurotic hologram and an unpredictable robot. All four are, like the show itself, brilliantly stupid.


22. The Incredible Hulk
(CBS, 1978-82)
Simple fact: Lou Ferrigno scared the bejesus out of us–guy looked like a bunch of doorknobs jammed in a sack. But the real muscle of the show was Bill Bixby as haunted alter ego David Banner, who made our hearts bleed every week in his quest for normalcy. His tortured soul could bench-press even the flimsiest plot.


21. Night Gallery
(NBC, 1970-73)
Encores are never kind to visionaries, and Rod Serling's post-"Twilight Zone" effort was no exception: Fans didn't know what to make of the genre-bending blend of sci-fi and horror. But when "Gallery" dropped anchor on great source material from masters such as Richard Matheson, there wasn't anything more disturbing on TV. "Zone" was light on its feet; "Gallery" turned the lights off.


20. Supernatural
(WB/CW, 2005-Present)
The Winchester brothers: middle America prom kings or demon hunters? Li'l from both sides. What fans had feared would be little more than an "X-Files" for tweens morphed into one of the dial's best chillers, a gothic soap opera with family bonding serving as the glue that keeps Sam (Jared Padaleki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles) from cracking under the paranormal pressure.


19. Highlander: The Series
(Syndicated, 1992-98)
If there can be only one, make it Adrian Paul: The actor's portrayal of gloomy, haunted Duncan MacLeod blows away Chris Lambert's big-screen relative. Though the series was formulaic–you just know heads will roll in act four–the isolation of immortality has never been so romantically realized.


18. Babylon 5
(PTEN/TNT, 1994-99)
With unparalleled creator ownership–he wrote most of the series' 110 episodes–J. Michael Straczynski's "5" dismissed the dopey, simplistic yarns of its era and presented nothing less than a televised novel, a sprawling story about a space station teetering on the precipice of war and peace, and a giant metaphor for Earth's own territorial teeth-gnashing.


17. The Outer Limits
(ABC, 1963-65)
Unfairly cast by some as a cheap knockoff of "Twilight Zone," "Limits" was essentially pulp mag Amazing Stories come to life: tales of benevolent and malevolent aliens, often with a twinge of despair, and the dangers of brilliance run rampant. Unbound by any network mandates for cheery speculative fiction, producers had few limits; fans had few complaints.


16. Quantum Leap
(NBC, 1989-93)
Viewers love to be in on a secret, and the idea that time-traveling Sam Beckett (the terrific Scott Bakula) inhabited troubled men (and women) gave good giggle. But where "Leap" really made strides was using the classic tenet of sci-fi to mask the medicinal taste of social tolerance: Beckett would jump into the literal skin of the bigoted, the persecuted, the downtrodden–and so would we.


15. The Dead Zone
(USA, 2002-07)
John Hughes alum Anthony Michael Hall starring in a moody fantasy about a tortured seer? Yeah, couldn't wait to miss it. But how could we know Hall's Johnny Smith–culled from Stephen King's novel–was pitch-perfectly brooding, haunted by his visions of an apocalyptic future courtesy of slimy Greg Stilson (Sean Patrick Flanery)? 
Or that we'd ache for him as he observed his beloved Sarah 
(Nicole de Boer) happily re-married after he slipped into a coma? Or that the stories would be genuinely gripping suspense yarns, full of dread calm, tension and even outright horror? What are we, psychic?


14. Angel
(WB, 1999-04)
Spinoffs of popular shows usually have the product quality control of peanut butter. One happy exception was Joss Whedon's "Angel," which granted the tortured ex-beau of Buffy his own detective agency with which to investigate paranormal doings in L.A. If that sounds like Hellblazer, it's a happy homage: The series has more in common with that influential material than even "Constantine" itself. As glowering antihero Angel, David Boreanaz is the oxymoronic vampire, a bloodsucker with the soul of a human. As sidekick Cordelia, Charisma Carpenter made the rare evolution from vapid bimbette to valued heroine. Full of imagination, "Angel" staked its rep on its characters. Smart.


13. The Prisoner

(ITV, 1967-68)
The strongest ideas are often the simplest, and Patrick McGoohan's acid-trip series announced its arrival with an easy premise: What if James Bond goes and retires? With everything he's seen and heard, is Her Majesty really about to let him roam around in the Caribbean? Not even. McGoohan's secret agent, having turned in his resignation, wakes up in a seaside resort, free to be anything he wants–except free. Is his own government holding him, or is the enemy? Alternately confounding yet visually stimulating, its brief 17-episode run is as rewind-worthy as any series ever.


12. The 4400
(USA, 2004-07)
According to Biblical promises, the Rapture will see a giant portion of humanity up and disappear come Judgment Day, leaving us sinners to rot on terra firma. But what if they came back? That's the central issue of "4400," which refers to the number of people who vanished as far back as the 1940s. When they spontaneously return, the government has a lot of questions. And when some begin displaying powers–telekinesis, premonitions–those questions become increasingly urgent. Like the best sci-fi, it works as a parable for our own fears of abandonment, isolation and ill-prepared authority–along with our innate ability to destroy ourselves better than any external force ever could.


11. Firefly
(Fox, 2002-03)
Remember when Calvin (of Hobbes, not Coolidge) imagined dinosaurs zipping along in F-14 fighter jets? That's the kind of genre-sexing concoction that may have inspired "Firefly," a much-missed series from "Buffy" creator Joss Whedon that fearlessly took on the oddball label of space Western. As commander of the titular cargo ship, Nathan Fillion's Malcolm Reynolds is an ersatz Han Solo: good-natured, but sternly protective of his command and crew–made up, in part, of survivors (and losers) of a galactic war against The Alliance–which ekes out a living however it can. Any show that can plausibly segue from a galactic dogfight to smugglers riding off into the sunset on horseback did something worth watching.


10. V
(NBC, 1983)
While sci-fi had long been home to thinly veiled allegorical framework, none had quite the scope and panache of "V," the miniseries that turned World War II into a spaceship parable. Like the Nazis, the "Visitors" were only disguised as humans; under their flesh, they were lizard-like creatures eager to slurp up Earth's water supply! And like their fascist inspiration, they used intimidation, propaganda and character assassination to achieve their goals. Though the aliens possess the superior technology, the series leads–macho Marc Singer and delicious Faye Grant–have one advantage: an indomitable will to survive. "V" stands as a singularly ambitious miniseries that ends on a surprisingly downtrodden note.


9. Jekyll
(BBC One, 2007)
Every bit the mutated monster of its title, BBC's sensational six-part miniseries flies from genre to genre without skipping a beat. As Tom Jackman, the beleaguered scientist who periodically transforms into the shameless, vicious Id boner he comes to call Mr. Hyde, James Nesbitt doesn't need to rely on expensive prosthetics or false choppers: Body language, a subtle hairline change and marvelous acting transform him into a cauldron of testosterone that's best regarded at a distance, as though he can bite. (And oh, can he ever.) Hunted by a shadow organization eager to harness his power, Jackman struggles to make sure his family isn't harmed by Hyde's mischief. Not exactly a sequel to the Robert Louis Stevenson story–in this tale, it's considered fiction–"Jekyll" is the best gothic-horror-romance-adventure-comedy you'll ever see. Catch it before Hollywood goes and mucks it all up.


8. The X-Files
(Fox, 1993-02)
Wouldn't we all liked to have had Mulder and Scully on the case for every strange thing that ever went bump in our nights. In a way, we did: Thanks to creator Chris Carter's "Kolchak" stepchild, the aliens, monsters and dark, creepy inexplicables that populated video shelves (and our imaginations) were finally audited by authority. Who could fear the Boogeyman with a couple of federal agents on its ass? As co-chairs of the FBI's laughed-at–and eventually, decommissioned–paranormal office, David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson did more than just let the mutated cats out of the bag: They told a gentle, subtle love story, helping ground the unlikely proceedings in emotions we could all recognize. Thanks to their obsessions, we were never left alone in the dark.


7. Star Trek
(NBC, 1966-69)
Musing about the legacy of "Trek" is a little like trying to find a new way to say the Beatles transformed music: Both are a monolithic media presence with few angles left to explore. All we can do is reflect on the show with 2009's eyeballs, surveying the landscape of film, television and books that have either been directly spun off from the mythology or owe a substantial debt to it. William Shatner's Captain Kirk is still one of the great boob tube icons, a hyena of emotion with a bedroom résumé to rival Bond's; Leonard Nimoy's Spock is still his logical counterpoint; the stories are still subconscious lessons in civic tolerance. Above all, "Trek" preached–without really preaching–that peace and prosperity are within our reach, and that being a galactic superpower comes with a series of responsibilities. If you cannot find food for thought for today's climate in Gene Roddenberry's fables, you're just not hungry enough.


6. Lost
(ABC, 2004-Present)
Fans should reconcile one important margin note: It was never about the island. Granted, a giant slice of dirt in the middle of the ocean that can disappear, summon smoke monsters and seemingly grant immortality makes for fascinating TV. But we're invested because the 
show invests most of its time in building, brick by emotional brick, the stories of the men and women who contend with its mysteries and challenges, most of them haunted by demons long before they ever took step on Oceanic Flight 815. "Lost" is that rarest of TV success stories: The anthology, with a revolving door of personalities and narratives, all of it affixed to the fulcrum of their sedimentary prison. No one is safe, and no one quite knows what the rules are.


5. Battlestar Galactica
(Sci-Fi, 2004-09)
"Galactica" confounded viewers expecting a rehash of the '70s bootleg "Star Wars" knockoff, and instead got a dark reflection of the country's post-terrorist era. As the anchor for a fleet of estranged humans desperately seeking solace on an undiscovered Earth, "Galactica" explored hot-button issues (ill-prepared authority, flexible morality, unspeakable evil) without reeking of preachy condescension. It all works because their reality isn't far removed from our own: No rubber monsters are afoot, you can fly only with the aid of a ship and crewmembers rarely bark out techno-nonsense for the writers' own amusement.


4. Buffy the Vampire Slayer
(WB/UPN, 1997-03)
"Feminism" was a dirty word for nervous, adolescent geeks prior to Buffy's '97 arrival. But Joss Whedon's biting wit and girl-power riff proved irresistible to genre fans. As a teenaged vampire mauler, Sarah Michelle Gellar was a bouncy confection of sex appeal and rabid independence; backed by her "Scooby Gang" of regulars, she stood as our last, unlikely hope for salvation against an army of pulp monsters. "Buffy" could've been a series of cheap gags, a vacuous one-joke premise that would sink like the vile 1992 movie. Instead, it's a coat-hanger for a rich mythology, indelible characters and possibly Hollywood's first hint that brash, comic-inspired projects didn't have to be dopey: Buffy, like the series itself, was much smarter than she looked.


3. Star Trek: The Next Generation
(Syndicated, 1987-94)
"Next Generation" had logged two strikes before it even aired: It was a sequel to a successful cult series with a beloved original cast, and it was committed to syndication, where bad ideas (and actors) go to die. That it went on to become one of the most successful sci-fi series in history is owed to producers' reverence for the source material and a cast that, incredibly, managed to outpoint Kirk's brood in the minds of many. As Captain Jean-Luc Picard, Patrick Stewart was the General Patton of the spaceways, a man so sophisticated that he made even the most ridiculous circumstances digestible; a further stroke of genius netted Worf, a Klingon that stood alongside the Federation without abandoning his savage roots.


2. The Twilight Zone
(CBS, 1959-64)
"The Twilight Zone" represents the first, best example of television's creative minds striking back at an oppressive standards and practices regime. Rod Serling, TV's first true playwright, was already an Emmy-winning success, but his compulsion to explore society's ills was never accepted. Out-smarting his suppressors, he disguised morality tales in the candy coating of science fiction. The result was a show about something–paranoia, isolation, prejudice–that had the flavor of a flimsy paperback thriller. When "Zone" was running on all cylinders, it granted itself the most fantastic conceit of all: immortality.


1. Doctor Who
(BBC, 1963-89, 2005-Present)
It happened around 1979: A villain bent on distorting time and improving his own standing at the expense of humanity has trapped the Doctor (Tom Baker). Erudite bordering on the effeminate, this evil agent regards the smiling, jovial Doctor with a mixture of bemusement and contempt.

"You," he says to the Doctor, "are dangerously clever."

And that's it. That's the sum total of the premise behind "Doctor Who," the British sci-fi series that has proven itself to be the most durable, most charming, most altogether fun excursion into the unknown on the dial to date. The Doctor's superpower is simply that he's an incredibly smart man, a "Time Lord" with an ambiguous past who uses an antiquated police call box (the TARDIS, or Time And Relative Dimension In Space) to surf through the ages like an astrophysicist Laird Hamilton. Armed only with his wits (and a sonic screwdriver), often accompanied by a female companion (the audience's gape-mouthed stand-in), the Doctor plunks himself into impossible circumstances and then finds a way out. Aliens want to vaporize Earth and then sell off the chunks to the highest galactic bidder? He'll deal with it. A villain wants to steal the Mona Lisa so he can sell the six duplicates to unsuspecting art collectors? The Doctor will buzz himself into da Vinci's pad and write "This is a fake" in black magic marker on each of the drafts. Wanna see the literal end of the world, five billion years from now? He's got your first-class ticket.

To call "Who" a science-fiction fable is a bit of a mislabeling: Because of his kinetic, restless whims, he can drop himself (and the viewer) into any genre. Horror. Fantasy. Romance. Current Doctor David Tennant has even expressed interest in adding a musical to the series' 725 installments.

More than 800 years old, the Doctor–we never learn his true name, hence his working title–has the ability to re-generate himself up to twelve times when critically wounded. The '60s played host to Doctors who were older, sophisticated and charged gamely through cardboard sets; the '70s employed Baker, who adorned himself with a free-flowing scarf that rivals the fabric of any Todd McFarlane cape ever drawn; the fabulously deranged resurrection of the series in 2005–after a 16-year hiatus–brought us Doctors Nine and Ten, with Number Eleven (Matt Smith) on call for 2010.

With his regenative lives running out, it's possible "Who" could finally disappear into the black hole of time. If it's truly the end, it will stand as sci-fi TV's most deliriously imaginative creation. But if anyone can figure out the perscription for TV immortality, it's the Doctor.


Saturday, May 23, 2009

Video Game Bento Anyone?

Japanese have a habit of mixing art and food to their kid's lunchboxes since God knows when.
And who would ever thought that making bento or home-packed meal in Japanese would be this tempting, especially if you're a hardcore gamer.

Annathered is been making video game inspired bentos for a while and she already made almost 50 (yes 50) kinds of bentos, from Katamari to Patapon and even some anime themed bentos like Deathnote and Doraemon.

Patapon Bento


Katamari Bento


Super Smash Bros. Bento


Ryuk from Deathnote

And believe me, making these bento takes a lot of time and effort. A big salute to Annathered on her bentos.

You can also visit her Flickr page to see more of her incredible creations and you can also check the full listings of ingredients that she used for her bentos.