Friday 20 November 2020

Entry for ATA Scientific's Encouragement award

 My entry for ATA Scientific's Encouragement award:

Question: 500 words or less: A previous entry into the Eurovision song contest was composed by a computer using Artificial Intelligence (AI). Since most songs are related to human personal interactions such as love songs do you think an entry should be accepted from an emotionless machine? How would you feel about an affectionate song dedicated to you and composed by a robot?

 

Answer: The proposed question is basically asking ‘Are AI songs equal to human songs?’, but what this question is really asking is ‘Do humans have permission to emotionally connect with art that has been generated by an indifferent, synthetic creator?’. Being emotionally moved by something created within the intangible nodes of an unfeeling artificial neural network says more about the human condition than it does about AI’s ability to convincingly reproduce decades of ‘music-by-spreadsheet’. Music made in this way is specifically designed to financially mobilise as many of the four consumer quadrants as possible. Record labels have streamlined song-writing down to a soulless condensable formula, which means that songs are compiled by a committee based on market treads, loaded onto a standardised conveyor belt, and packaged all with the specific purpose of making people feel something. If they feel something, they buy, stream and consume music. It is already robotic. AI has just automated this process.

Giving oneself permission to emotionally connect to music constructed by an artificial neural network requires us to admit to ourselves that we are also machines (albeit meaty waterbag ones). We the meat-bags, have standard involuntary emotive responses to key inputs, with emotionally-charged music being one. Be it machine or record label, the standard emotional output would be the same if listeners were blinded to the composer. If we can let ourselves be emotionally touched by music spun out from the constantly churning studio conveyor belts, it is no small leap that people will feel the same regarding AI-generated music. 

So how would I feel about an affectionate song dedicated to me, composed by a neural network? Honestly, I don’t get a choice in the matter.

Sunday 9 August 2020

Thoughts on Planescape: Torment

Just finished Planescape: Torment. What an experience. The combat wasn't anything special, but dialogue, writing, mystery and subsequent investigation, overarching lore and ideas were deep, thought-provoking, complex, funny, tragic and satisfying. A great story told in the perfect medium for it.


SPOILERS:

  • I am hoping there will be a quest where you have to kill as many shades as you have died in this current life. That would be awesome. AHH YOU DO. COOL AS.
  • It sucks a little bit that there was no evil/neutral equvilant of the tears of Salieru-Dei
  • Yves is one of the best sections of the game. Just swapping cool stories. I love it
  • I love the lore of Ravel Puzzlewell
  • The Modron Cube - I could play an entire game like this lol. The Clue! and Magical Item! Not the actual maze...
  • "Nordom" is like yes man from NV
  • Lol, getting mazed.
  • This really updated my journal
  • Karach blades, what a great idea.
  • One thing I really loved was that past reincarnations ended up being so much of the world's lore. A story about a man making a wish, being told he had already made the first two. and that first wish was the exact same wish he did for wish number 1. All these mysteries tied back to The Nameless Ones past. So cool.
  • I love how 'find the journal' was basically was basically a red herring. Need red herrings!


Friday 31 July 2020

Notes on naruto and shippuden

Just watched all non-filler episodes of Naruto and Naruto: Shippuden. I took some notes:


  • How the writers of Naruto treats Sakura is fucking embarrassing. What a joke. Her entire character is how much she loves Sasuke. She just gasps on the sidelines the entire time. Her role is pure wankery, exposition. They should be ashamed of how she is written in the first season.
  • In general, the show fails at lack of telegraphing. A ninja will pull out a quadruple switcheroo on something and the viewer will be constantly going "WTF!", there is no way to guess what is happening beforehand
  • The first season is also very short on animation. A lot of static images. It still works, but it's not too complex or technically sound. The animation is clearly done on the cheap for the first season at least.
  • The battles are great. They are like chess matches
  • Naruto is stupidly annoying. Why does he tell everyone about his Hokage dream. I wonder if he has undiagnosed ADHD? He seems to talk about irrelevant things to people who don't know anything about him or his problems.
  • "Sorry I'm late, I'm afraid I got lost on the path of life." - Hatake Kakashi
  • From S1 E21, the show is instantly better. The Chunin exams are already super interesting. Lots of new characters, interesting dilemma, high stakes. The animation quality is considerably better and more complex from this point on. I wonder what happened during this time.
  • Hinata is also such a fucking bad character. Why do they write such poor female characters? Her whole thing is loving Naruto. Fuck. In fact, every female ninja's whole character is just competing for Sasuke's attention. It's fucked up.
  • "The condition is"
  • "The condition is, to protect the life of someone precious"
  • Blowing out the cast to have way more leaf ninja was such a good idea.
  • Dattebayo! Believe it! Lol, Naruto's verbal tick.
  • Ino being excluded from Chunin third exam training and working in a fucking flower shop. Lol this show is cooked.
  • I am loving the politics of Naruto in S3. Interesting. The show just keeps getting better.
  • Konohamaru is a great name! I love saying it. 
  • One Thousand Years of Death
  • Naruto no-sells moves. He makes moves look weak and tanks everything.
  • During the Gaara fight, Sakura literally taken out of the fight and does nothing. Bullshit. They can't even let her contribute.
  • There are a lot of animation tricks used in Naruto, from Kakashi's mouth, meaning no animation required when he talks, Naruto running, reusing older animations.
  • Man, Kakashi, what a badass. Such a cool character. He's so chill
  • The price of entry
  • When Sasuke is leaving the village then knocks out Sakura, that is incredibly fucked up. She is now unconscious in the middle of the only road into town, and it's the middle of the night. Both Naruto and Sasuke express concern for her being out that late, yet Sasuke knocks her out? Shit is cooked bro. She could totally have been assaulted etc.
  • Rock Lee could have been the main character
  • Wow, Sasuke is the kind of guy to party at a strangers house then take random pills given to him. What a loose unit (when he chooses to go with the Sound Village Ninja).
  • Rasengan is badass. Chidori is cool
  • Episode 133, the animation quality is just out of this world, amazing. So reactive, so smooth
  • There was a lot of love poured into Naruto. From the animation, to the heart of a lot of the stories, even the music is just really great - the start and ending songs. 
  • One of the reasons I like Naruto, was that it isn't like Dragon Ball Z, where characters had to power up to beat opponents. Strategy almost never played a part, instead it was relegated to power level - surprise attacks or suicide explosions don't matter if your opponent can just tank it. To win in DBZ, you just drink a potion, get touched by a god and just gain a higher power level than them. Goku is just a filthy power-level grinder.
  • Sometimes life hits you with a rasengan
  • Was Jiriyah the toad sage inspired by Master Roshi, the turtle sage? Both taught their student a nuke attack, kamehameha and rasengan. Both are pervy sages. 
  • I love Guy Sensei and Rock Lee's relationship. It's not often genuine male affection and wholesome role models are shown in anime. The POWER OF YOUTH - the handsome devil of the leaf village.
  • Sakura's first real badass moment was when she fucking slayed the third Kazeikage puppet. Holy shit. Finally, she gets props she deserves. Finally. The entire battle was amazing. Finally - they treated Sakura right. What a badass.
  • Why didn't Team Guy just swap opponents when they were battling the clones from the 5 point jutsu? If Rock Lee cant beat clone Rock Lee, why not get Neji to beat clone Rock Lee?
  • There were many times characters should have died using suicidal but heroic tactics, but then they live. Choji should have died taking pills, Gaara should have stayed dead, Rock Lee should have stayed paralysed/injuired. It would have done way more for his character.
  • Kakashi: "There you are, hugging the earth like a worm"
  • The arc that focuses on Shikamaru and his teacher is so fucking good. It's just the best arc I've seen. Shikamaru is the best fucking character in the show. Rock lee is great too though, need moar.
  • This show cannot deal with female characters. Even this boss lady who is a warden of a fucking prison just fawns over Sasuke, and that is her character. What a shit.
  • I love how they try to make fights all different and unique. They aren't all on repeat. Except for Naruto, who does the same thing every time.
  • Jiriyas backstory is amazing. What a great development to an already cool character. His story is like a tale, or a legend. I love the idea that a guy is told his destiny, then follows the foretelling to try and make it a reality. It was fortold he would take an apprentice which would shape the world, so then he goes out of his way to teach and train people in the hopes that he fulfills his destiny. Had he not been told, would he have done this?
  • I love the inter-generational storytelling in Naruto. It really puts everything in context. The two Jiraiya ninja scrolls episodes are fucking awesome. I have liked the historical episodes.
  • I just noticed something, which is that when Naruto confronts Itachi and Itachi asks him why he is obsessed with his brother Sasuke. Naruto responds saying "He's more of a brother to me than he ever was to you". Itachi then smiles, which I realise now was a smile of happiness. I think he was glad and relieved that Naruto feels that way, because Itachi hasn't been able to be the brother he wanted to be.
  • All of Team Kakashi were trained by the sanine
  • 153 is a cool show format changeup.
  • Holy SHIT Shikamaru's speech to Naruto was fucking good. it was so on point.
  • Quotes from message boards: "kishi probably secretly imagines he is itachi or sasuke or something and hence he gives uchiha more screentime cause hes living out his gay fantasies" - babaGAReeb
  • Dude Naruto is so gay and he loves Sasuke. I think Sasuke loves Naruto too, he is just in denial.
  • Sasuke is an Uchiha-supremecist
  • Man, if they wanted to fix Sasuke, they should have kidnapped him and brought him to the magical waterfall where he could have fought himself etc. Would have been much simpler than war.
  • Wow, Naruto is really about nuke attacks and stuff now isn't it? Just who has the biggest nuke.
  • Changing his most said word to avoid the gourd, wow Darui is so fucking smart. What a cool twist
  • Wow, Naruto is really all about powerups and nukes now. Fucking hell. Where is all the tactics of lower level shinobi?
  • The sexism of Naruto is so pervasive. Even when they refer to all the Kages as 'The First Kazekagi' or whatever, yet Tsunade is always referred to as 'Lady Tsunade'.
  • Why are there so many Hashirama cells floating around? They are the HeLa cells of Naruto.
  • Is Madara also gay and loves Hashirama? 
  • Quotes from message boards: "All Uchiha are gay. They only had sex with women so they can have more gay Uchiha to be gay with."
  • Quotes from message boards: "You should have made this thread when Kishi had a chapter about Madara pumping white gunk infused with Hashirama's DNA from a naked statue of him into his backside and making plant-babies combining himself with Hashirama."
  • Quotes from message boards: "Hinata is the icon of traditional Japanese feminity: silent, obsessively loyal and obsequious to her man, oh-so delicate... an inanimate sex doll. Naruto is the icon of traditional Japanese masculinity: unrealistically ambitious, earnest, passionate, domineering and athletic. Their relationship is propaganda about classical sexuality."
  • Kakashi vs Obito. What a fucking amazing fight. No talking, no bombs, no fucking megazords, just amazingly animated hand to hand taijutsu.
  • Sakura massaging Naruto's heart is fucking metal.
  • I get original Team 7 being the last left standing during the Infinite Syukiyomi, but I wish Sai and Yamato were also present. That would have been metal. Sai could have stopped people falling in the lava with his ninjutsu, while Yamato could have saved everyone from falling. I miss Yamato, and his presence has been noticeable in the last few arcs of Naruto. His dream state shows how much this is what he wants; approval of Kakashi and to lead the amazing Team 7. I wish he'd been included for this segment of the show.
  • Also, the Ten-Ten episodes were fucking amazing. I wish we'd had 100x more of her and that type of episode. 
  • Having the resurrection jutsu was such a fucking creative but also shitty way of having the writer of Naruto have their cake and eat it too. Like, they get to resolve a whole bunch of things post-death. Classic fanservice. It should have only been up to people living...
  • The visit from the Sage of Six Paths was such a deus ex machina. So lame.
  • Interesting that Naruto stopped making 100000 shadow clones and now just makes 2 - 4. 
  • This Obito > Madara > Kaguya bullshit is bullshit. Pick one big bad. Just one.
  • Oh my god. I can't beleive I am writing this. Now the final bad guy is Sasuke? What the fuck? This makes no sense. How were they not drained after the last 3 bad guys? I love also how the Sage of Six Paths can't do anything about it now. lol. what a shit writing.
  • What the fuck is wrong with the writing, making Sakura still love and have kids with Sasuke after he turns into a homicidal maniac.
  • To be fair, Naruto made me realise what good quality animation is. The love and attention that can go into it. They really have a love for animation...when they want to.
  • There are a lot of fairly well written characters in Naruto. Primarily, Oorochimaru, Shikamaru, Pain to some degree, Itachi...sorta.
  • Oh my god the writers FUCKED Yamato so much. His dream was to lead team 7, so what do they do? Make him guard Oorochimaru as he freely walks about the village...after everything he's done. What the fuck
  • I think Ten-Ten has the best character design post-war time-skip. But they are all really good. Even her outfit is fiiire. Even Shino and Kiba look great. The outfits are also great.
  • Reincarnation in Naruto is FUUUCKING lame.
  • Honestly, Naruto is at its strongest when it's Naruto vs Sasuke. God damn, that animation of the final battle. When they are exhausted and barely able to hit each other. 10/10 animation. I love it. It felt so real.
  • Omg, Hinata and Naruto relationship comes out of literally nowhere. Wtf
  • I do not buy Oorochimaru's face turn. So cringe

Glad I watched Naruto, if only for the sakuga animation. The fight scenes, when animated well, are some of the best I've ever seen.


Monday 6 April 2020

LNP and good economic management: The party, the myth, the legend

Why is Australia's growth rate equivalent to that of a developing nation? 




Why are we second highest, globally in the household debt to GDP ratio? 


Why have we had significant wage stagnation since 2013?


Why do we have a complex-poor economy (ranked 59th worldwide), propped up on thermal carbon exports (an uncompetitive, dangerous and dying market) and overvalued higher education student fees?



Nothing screams 'gOoD eCoNoMic MaNaGeMeNt' like poor portfolio diversification.
Anyone who believes the never-proven myth of the LNP being 'better economic managers' should consider doing their own research instead of believing the political spin.


This LNP has a documented history of hucksterism. They take your money and pretend it is theirs. They use it to hand out money to corporations, influence votes and circumvent the democratic process. Tendered processes are often ignored or overruled. 


Does anyone remember the time the NSW LNP sold a power station for $1 million which was evaluated as a $730 million asset? I wish I could pull off sweet deals like that.


What sort of political party believes in corporate welfare handouts, but can't look after its most vulnerable members of society?



The Coalition have been unable to manage the Murray Darling Basin, the 2019 bushfires, or most importantly, climate change.




Despite all this, I am confident the LNP/Coalition will be voted in again, come next federal election. 

If I'm wrong about anything here, please correct me and send links! Cheers in advance.

All pictures are sourced from hyperlinks within this post. Please go to these sources and read them for yourself.


Some meanderings on Noam Chomsky; the human I most admire on the face of the planet.

If I could ever have the ears of the world, for even 2 seconds, I would tell them to 'Youtube Noam Chomsky'. Just listening to the man is listening to a powerful sage intellect break down and accurately describe, scary and true events and ideas with a polymathic knowledge bank, ranging from philosophy, history, political, social and biological sciences. I might be a bit of a fanboy, but I can't help but be intellectually inspired by Noam Chomsky. I just wish more people were aware of him and his work.

Noam Chomsky is a towerlingly thoughtful man and activist for humanity. He has realised that he has a limited amount of time with people's attention. He has distilled the most important message he possibly can; that is, talking about the largest existential (not philosophical existential but literal existential) threats to life as we know it, climate change and the stockpiling of nuclear arms. He is outward with his pragmatic priorities and I can't help but praise the work he's done and is doing and send anyone I can to watch and read his stuff. He has rolled with the times too. He used to write lots of books, as a way to get the message out. Now he also does a lot of recorded interviews. He is a legitimate powerhouse in terms of communication. His texts span complex topics and he manages to clearly explain while not oversimplifying, which is an incredible skill

What drives Noam Chomsky? What are his goals? A lot of people feel this way, but he's such an advocate and activist. He's taken political activism to an almost scary degree. He travels around the world giving sell-out talks and discussions and panels, now mainly via webcam. He is so fucking good as what he does, the ruling class are scared to even address his critisisms, because that will immediately draw attention to them and their heinous actions.

Does Chomsky listen to music? Would he even have the time, or the inclination? Why hasn't he retired? God, working till his 90's. I think he knows people will remember him and his message for a long time. He knows he is on the right side of history and doesn't need to be smug about it. It is required for him to perform his activism.

What is also inspiring about him is that he owns things when he doesn't know them and will admit to not being an expert or knowing about something despite demonstrating a semi-expert amount of knowledge across a diverse array of topics. Sometimes, but not often he will be blind-sighted by a question or topic, and bumble a bit, but it's not often he doesn't have a pretty good idea what the question was and how to astutely answer it. I aspire to be like this. He also often quotes the enemy. This is another admirable trait; knowing what drives them and being aware of their tactics and philosophy, while also in stark disagreement about their goals. Chomsky has this in spades. He's informed on a level that most people care to know even exists; he lives this thing. You can see it when he talks and it explains why he continues to work at an age where most are either dead or dying.

I wonder, does Noam Chomsky ever get scared about speaking out on particular things? Like, legitimately scared, offending extremely powerful organisations, governments, cartels etc?

Though, Noam Chomsky once said the space race was an "infantile competition to land a man on the moon" and "Taxpayers can be deluded into supporting the Roman Circus of the space race...", this is one of the things I disagree with him on, but that is all that springs to mind. I think he misses the larger, unintentional effect which was the spiritual win for humanity. A beacon of hope for the future. Looking up at the sky, seeing an extra-planetary body, knowing we can go there. Where else can we go?

Keep it up Noam. Though we've never met, I am flattered and humbled to have overlapped existences with you on earth. You've taught me so much and opened my eyes to so many things. You're the reason I have become invested in the intellectual pursuit of history and the politics which influence and shape our world. You helped make me a more informed member of society and for that I will forever be grateful. In turn, I don't always succeed, but I always try to do the same.

Thursday 26 March 2020

Ben and Stephs: Making Food Better

Steph and I wrote a cookbook which you can download for free.




File here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1V_RKJ5HiHC_88VWEiTFtiVZxSLvXy0rf 

Distributed under a a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0
International License, so feel free to modify, alter, share etc. Let me know if you'd like an editable version or photos.


Check it out, or don't. I'm not telling you what to do.

Monday 24 February 2020

Cloudbook: I wrote a lil science communication book




So I wrote a short science communication book about the main different types of clouds. I wrote it for my girlfriend because she's pretty into clouds and I tried to make it as much of a learning experience that I could. That said, I am pretty proud of it and I definitely think it would be suitable for all ages. Just FYI, I am a molecular biologist, so I may have made some cloud ID mistakes.
Download it here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1YXveWGGr63uW4LlqhVf5nuakIoegqV_I 
I spent two years taking photos of every cloud type I could, to put them in this project. All but two of the photos are mine, because I couldn't get many photos of them pesky cumulonimbi! Attributions are on page 2.
This was originally going to be a popup book, but I realised that taking a photo every week or so is definitely easier than learning how to make sweet popups.



You might notice I tried to use visual cues to represent similarities between terminology to help with remembering the technical language.
I have licensed it under a Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License so feel free to share it, print it, torrent it, alter it, hold yearly burnings of it etc. If you would like any of the RAW cloud photos, just shoot me an email at bd.vezina@gmail.com and I will be happy to send them. I just don't want to take up unnecessary bandwidth on my Google Drive.

Saturday 22 February 2020

Some rambling thoughts on science and why I love being a researcher

My job, and why I love it so much, is because I basically have free reign to just research and think about unanswered, fundamental questions. Literally everyday is a puzzle, and I can spend it reading other publications, thinking of experiments which will allow me to answer these fundamental questions, or performing these experiments to see what happens. It's such a legit job, just completely problem solving and with other smart, lateral-thinking people. I think anyone who has worked with me understands I am an ideas person. I think big, and I think creatively, I sometimes gloss over the finer points, but all in the purest intentions - to arrive at something new; an idea, a kernel, a brainwave. It's a sloppy, mushy process which doesn't fit into distinct classifications. The ideas are all mixed up together, sloshing about as they zip from neuron to neuron, rejoining old connections and conducting new ones. I think I always had that, but Rob (Moore, my PhD main supervisor) showed me how to focus my creativity just as he does, and it has made me such a better thinker. A PhD really is about philosophy; it doesn't matter what your thesis topic is.

This is why I should do all I can to preserve my current research career trajectory. Science is better off with me in it, and I am lost without it. I honestly cannot think of a more blessed job. I'd like to do it for more pay, I did complete a PhD and all (not saying that makes me better, but shouldn't there be SOME kind of advantage in doing one?), but I would honestly do it for free if I didn't have to worry about money. I love working on new projects. I love thinking about different problems and trying to come up with a creative way to answer the question. What people outside science may not understand (which is fair enough as their roles may not require it) is that being a researcher, your job is to literally think about really basic questions and think of creative ways to answer them. Sometimes it's 'oh yes I can do this experiment and it will answer the question'. Those are the best. They are fun to do. Other times answering a question involves doing a massive experiment, then analysing data for a long time until you can say whether or not the experiment even worked, or if you see what you thought you'd see. Those are shit experiments because so many things can go wrong and you won't even know where to start rationally troubleshooting. I would advise any future PhD/honours/masters students from signing up to those types of outer-space tier projects as the system can punish you for it. I mean, if you are confident with each technical skill and step, you should definitely go for it, but longform experimentation is an art commonly practised, rarely executed effectively. It's also why we rarely see these types of experiments in the literature, because the priority of most labs nowadays (due to the current funding model) is to push out as much easy, non-risky science they can, just to secure future funding to keep their heads above water.

I respected my PhD project because I feel like it was something worthwhile and a legitimate contribution to science. It hasn't been published yet (for several reasons I won't go into) but I felt proud that I worked on something and provided a substantial development in the field and my lab mates around me. The project was addressing a legitimate health issue, so it feels good to work on SOMETHING which will make life less painful for at least someone, sometime in the future. I am annoyed my PhD hasn't yet been turned into publications and I know it is adversely affecting my career, but a person's experience is not always written into the public record. I am, and have been a valuable lab member in every group I have worked with. I have made numerous unmentioned (and totally unnecessarily-not-worth-mentioning-because-its-just-common-scientific-courtesy-to-teach-and-help-develop-others-and-their-projects) contributions to others and their projects. Most of us do this, and get nothing in return. But that's okay, because you can then count on that person to teach you stuff in their expertise. That is why it's such a great environment to work in. I am inspired by colleagues almost every day. By a thought they had, by a piece of machinery they use to generate meaningful science, by their approach to scientific queries.

Why would you want to work anywhere else?

Friday 31 January 2020

Breath of the Wild review: 10/10


Breath of the Wild is one of the best games I have ever played. I finished all 120 shrines because I enjoyed it so much. About 109 of these shrines were discovered by organic exploration. BoTW is an intuitive romp and I loved almost every second of it. Firstly, the game fixed so many of the worst parts about Zelda games, namely the mandatory minigames if you wanted full heart containers (looking at you River Boat Cruise). The verticality, which is the game’s best attribute allows traversability of anywhere you could possibly want to go. The glider is a truly freeing experience, which means the layout and contoured world mean something. The map and landscape are a puzzle in itself, but one with many different answers; a truly liberating feeling in a world plagued with Bethesda-like sandboxes.
Another amazing attribute is the truly free way of resolving puzzles using the chemistry-physics engine. There is so much fun and variation to be had. Throwing metal weapons at enemies during a lightning storm, chopping down trees and rolling them over enemies, sneaking up on enemy camps and stealing all their weapons, igniting exploding barrels using fire arrows, using grass on fire for an updraft, freezing enemies then hitting them with a charged or lightning attack. Just an incredible amount of versatility built into the game which made many encounters an exciting experiment.

The things I would change/hoping for BotW2 in order of most to least important:

  1. More meaningful sidequests which maybe tell a story, rather than fetch quests. This was the weakest part of the game – there was no point in doing sidequests for the most part. There were several exceptional shrine/side quests (Eventide Island, Shrouded Shrine, The Three Giant Brothers, From the Ground Up)
  2. Improve dat framerate drop + draw distance
  3. Maybe on the controversial side, but RPG elements. Instead of changing clothes for +attack or +swim speed/climbing speed, maybe when you level up you can upgrade abilities which do that. Keep clothes for environments (cold, hot, electricity resistance etc), but many could be rolled into RPG upgrades which would also feel better as a sense of natural progression.
  4. Weapon degradation was cool but repairing weapons should be an option. Sometimes you get very attached to weapons (looking at you Savage Lynel Clubs). This can be rolled into an RPG element, but also could be standalone – a broken weapon stays in your inventory as unusable with an attack value of 0. You would need a weapon of equal type to partially repair it. Think Fallout New Vegas’ Jury-Rigging repair system (coincidentally my favourite game of all time). This way armour could also deteriorate over time. That said, I still had an inventory full of amazing weapons after killing Ganon. It would be cool to use items knowing I could repair them in the future. That way some of my rarer weapons (elemental weapons) would have gotten more use. Because I didn’t know when I’d come across a new fire weapon, I tried to reserve its uses. Had I the ability to repair it, it would have gotten way more usage.
  5. Grinding/farming resources for armour upgrades felt unnecessary and externally difficult due to inconsistent enemy loot drops. 


I am sad this game is over. I love this game. I am sad I can’t replay it with different choices though.

Score: 10/10