Archive for October, 2008

Art Friday : A Peek into the Ancient World with Johnny Shumate

While games are a great way to simulate interest in the various (violent) periods of human history, they aren’t exactly the best way to learn history since most games (with the exception of the more hardcore wargames) are after all entertainment products which have to carefully balance between playability and historical accuracy (yes, even Rome : Total War – that’s why there’s the Rome Total Realism mod).

Since not everyone enjoys reading history books, I believe that illustrations do a better job at dispensing nuggets of interesting historical facts with a significantly smaller investment of time. And if it encourages you to pick up a related book to learn more, all the better :)

I therefore present today, one of my favourite historical illustrators, Johnny Shumate, whose impressive portfolio of warriors throughout the ages is a veritable treasure trove for history buffs who always wanted to visualize the warriors (especially those from ancient Greece and Rome) mentioned in books.


© Johnny Shumate

For example, you’ve probably read that each Phalangite of the Macedonian armies under Alexander The Great used to carry a 6 metres spear known as the sarissa. You can’t really envision how long and unwieldy a sarissa is until you see it been pictured in use.


© Johnny Shumate

The classic phalanx formation of the Greek hoplites (and in this case the Macedonian Phalangites as idenitified by their distinctive helmets).


© Johnny Shumate

Romans in combat with the Gauls. As pictured, the unarmoured Gauls were unable to resist a Roman charge for long despite their well-known valour.


© Johnny Shumate

One of the famous Scythian horse archers. Gobryas, one of the eminent Persians who had accompanied King Darius in his futile attempt to subjugate the nomadic Scythians, was quoted in Herodotus’s Book IV of The Histories as having interpreted the Scythians’ gift of a bird, a mouse, a frog and five arrows to King Darius as follows:

Unless ye become birds and fly up into the heaven, O Persians, or become mice and sink down under the earth, or become frogs and leap into the lakes, ye shall not return back home, but shall be smitten by these arrows.


© Johnny Shumate

The Battle of Kadesh during the 13th century BC – one of the earliest recorded battles of the world – the earliest being the 15 century BC Battle of Megiddo.

Some famous personalities of the ancient period.


© Johnny Shumate

King Philip II of Macedon, the father of Alexander the Great.


© Johnny Shumate

King Pyrrhus of Epirus who won two victories over the Romans at the expense of enormous and irreplaceable casualties, thus giving birth to the term Pyrrhic Victory.


© Johnny Shumate

Ephialtes of Athens. Neither the anti-Spartan Athenian politician, nor the Ephialtes who betrayed the Spartans at Thermopylae but an exiled Athenian officer in the service of Memnon of Rhodes, the commmander of the Greek mercenaries under the King Darius III of Persia. Ephialtes is pictured here sallying out from Halicarnassus in 334 BC to attack the Macedonian besiegers and their siege engines.

As mentioned earlier, Johnny Shumate doesn’t just only illustrate ancient warriors. Below are a trio of Waffen SS troops defending Berlin against the Red Army in 1945 and a Rhodesian infantry soldier with a FN FAL.


© Johnny Shumate

View Johnny Shumate’s portfolio of works at ImagineFX. Click on the images to view them at full resolution.

MORE @ THE DOWNLOAD MUNKEY:
David Andro – Military/Police Illustrator (GIGN, GIPN, RAID, etc)
Scenes of War – Concepts from Videogames
Call of Duty 4 Mini-Artbook PDF
Motofumi Kobayashi – Japanese Military Artist

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Games Thursday : Corpse Craft

This is old news really, but tomorrow is Halloween and this excellently polished game by Three Rings Design is just the perfect thing for getting in the mood :)

A puzzle-strategy hybrid, Corpse Craft combines the familiar match three gameplay of games like Bejewelled with rock-scissors-paper tactics of games like Ben Olding’s Warlords – Call to Arms.

By matching three or more blocks of the same colour in the puzzle grid, you collect stocks of flesh (white), energy (blue), blood (red) and scrap material (yellow) for churning out abdominable creatures made from dead flesh fused with vicious steel blades and whatnot. Despite their hideous appearances, these creatures were originally created to assist in menial tasks but are now being utilized in a murderous conflict between rival students at Dr Eygor Weardd’s Academy for Responsible Reanimation.

Due to the fact that there are no overpoweringly strong units (each unit counters another) and a well-thought out day-night cycle which instantly annihilates every single undead being unlucky enough to be caught outside during the day, Corpse Craft prevents the problem of single unit rushes and reduces the chance of a lopsided fight with two disproportionate forces.


Apparently, sunlight doesn’t only casue skin cancer, it makes delivery boys go Boom! too

Unfortunately, this also means the single player game often denigrates into a tedious war of attrition (at least for me) until either side gains a overwhelming advantage in resources and breaks through the opponent’s defenses by sheer weight of numbers. While I usually utilize a cautious style of play in strategy games to minimize casualties on my side, it doesn’t really work in this game since the only option here is a frontal assault by hurling your units straight into the meatgrinder. Don’t feel guility, they’re already dead in the first place :P

So why do I recommend it then if the gameplay isn’t that fantastic? Simply because it’s loads of fun until you find yourself out of a certain type of resource due to the random nature of the puzzle grid. Furthermore, the macabre unit designs are some of the more imaginative ones that I have seen in games recently. While not as hideously warped as the creations from the fertile minds of illustrators like Keith Thompson, these characters (and the music) do an excellent job of conveying the sense of dread, fear and despair of the glommy days and nights of the Victorian age that the game is set in.

Don’t know why I’m constantly reminded of Johnny Depp’s role in Sweeney Todd while playing Corpse Craft – must be those darn Street-walkers.

Play Corpse Craft.

MORE @ THE DOWNLOAD MUNKEY:
Halloween Jack O’ Lantern Wallpapers
Halloween Icons @ The Icon Factory
Tofu The Vegan Zombie : Zombie Dearest
Beat Back the Zombie Hordes in Boxhead : The Zombie Wars
CuteDeadThings Wallpapers

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Wallpapers Wednesday : Luminous Arc 2

Wallpapers for the Nintendo DS title Luminous Arc 2 : not too sure why Altus loves to make their fans work for the goodies like wallpapers.


© Altus

Complete a jigsaw puzzle to earn the download link for each of the three wallpapers or fiddle with the URL after finishing the first puzzle :)

Download the wallpapers from the official Luminous Arc 2 site.

MORE @ THE DOWNLOAD MUNKEY:
Luminous Arc Wallpapers
Afro Samurai Wallpapers
Blue Dragon FSK – Orchestral Scores, Wallpapers and More
Archaic Sealed Heat Wallpapers

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Military Tuesday : CIA A-12

A look into the design, development and operational history of the Central Intelligence Agency’s A-12, Lockheed’s high-speed reconnaissance plane better known in its USAF SR-71 Blackbird variant. The designation A-12 refers to Archangel 12, the twelfth and final major iteration of the original Archangel design which sought to fulfill ambitious performance and stealth requirements – a cruise speed of over Mach 3 (thrice the speed of sound), an operational range of 3,200 miles (>5000 km) and a maximum operating altitude of 90,000 feet (~27,500 metres).


Archangel-1


Archangel-12

The first test flight took place in 26 April 1962, two years before President Lyndon B. Johnson officially announced the existence of the OXCART program which funded the development of the A-12 as photographic reconnaissance platform through overflights of hostile territory (specifically the Soviet Union). In May 1967, the A-12 flew its first operational mission from Kadena Air Base in Okinawa to collect reconnaissance over North Vietnam. While successful, the A-12s would be taken out of service one year later after completing a total of 29 missions.

A marvel of engineering that was technologically way ahead of its time, the development of the A-12 led to the research and manufacture of special materials and fuels for the construction and operation of the plane that could withstand the intense heat generated from Mach 3+ flights. The pilots even wore fully-pressurized astronaut-style flight suits that came with their own oxygen supplies. (below)

An interesting offshoot of the A-12 program was the development of a YF-12A variant under project KEDLOCK to intercept Soviet supersonic bombers before they could approach the continental United States close enough to deploy their payload. On a similiar note, the Mikoyan-Gurevich bureau of the then Soviet Union did design and develop the MiG-25 ‘Foxbat’ to counter the same threat in the form of the experimental American supersonic XB-70 Valkyrie bomber. The Foxbat was successfully deployed for service while the XB-70 and YF-12A were not, both projects being scrapped in 1961 and 1968 respectively.


YF-12A

The other more well-known variant was of course, the above-mentioned SR-71 which served the USAF until 1999. The A-12 was decommissioned from service mainly due to the cost of operating both the A-12s and SR-71s concurrently with the SR-71 eventually being chosen over the A-12 for carrying a wider variety of sensors and intelligence gethering devices.

Read more about the fascinating story of the A-12 at the CIA site.

MORE @ THE DOWNLOAD MUNKEY:
Armada International’s Complete Guides
Tiger Stripe F-16C
Act of War : Direct Action Singleplayer Demo Impressions
Command & Conquer : Red Alert 3 Units – Past and Present Inspirations
John Wallin Liberto’s WWII Military Aviation Art

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Random Monday : Halloween Cubees

Halloween-inspired papercraft from BadCat Designs as featured on cubeelog, the official blog for Chris Beaumont’s Cubee Craft series.


© BadCat Design

A set of spooky-looking cats that require no glue and tape to assemble just like the other Cubees – simply print, cut, fold and enjoy! Count Catula is my favourite of the five Scare-D-Cats – always had a soft spot for pale aristocats in black cloaks with bloodshot eyes and pearl white fangs :) Moldy green Zombie Cat is rather cool too.


© Cubeecraft.com

There’s more Halloween Cubees (seven to be exact) at the official Halloween section of Cubee Craft where Jack O’ Lanterns, Werewolf, Frankenstein and a cute little ghost await you.

Download the Halloween Cubees and the Scare-D-Cats.

MORE @ THE DOWNLOAD MUNKEY:
The Monster Engine
Cool Papercraft Links From MIT
Cubee Craft – Marshmallow Man, Master Chief, Imperial Stormtrooper Paper Toys
Papercraft Paradise – A Paradise for Machine Papercraft
Papercraft World

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