Childish RPG Protagonist Will Only Drink Potion-of-Healing If It’s Cherry Flavored

COASTAL TOWN 一 Childish RPG protagonist and humanity’s last hope for peace, Tredgar Stormslayer, has expressed a general dislike for all healing potions, unless they are cherry flavored. 

“Shut the fuck up and listen to the words coming from my mouth. I am a grown fucking man. I know what I like and I know what I don’t like. Honey-Lemon? Disgusting. The only people who claim to like Honey-Lemon are losers who think that’s a more ‘mature’ choice than cherry,” said Stormslayer. “Potion brewers nowadays can extract flavors from all these mystical fruits like grangleberries and fangerines but nothing will ever come close to classic cherry. I mean, there’s a reason kids love that shit.”

Shopkeepers across the land have heard tales about the protagonist and his peculiar taste buds. 

“Even though this shop may seem specifically tailored to supply heroic travelers with weapons and items for battle, we also have a loyal customer base of working class families. So when this asshole came in and bought out our entire stock of cherry flavored healing potions, I got an earful from the community,” said local shopkeeper Gilgorram Giller. “I don’t really have much faith in this guy to save us from the rapid spread of the Doom Wretchers, but at least I’m finally selling my overstocked sippy straws with these potions.” 

A coalition of creatures named the Doom Wretchers have also expressed confusion after facing the protagonist in battle.

“One night, we were camping and then we heard someone rummaging through our chests that were filled to the brim with potions. We sounded the alarm and this mammoth of a man drew his weapons. I was scared shitless,” said Zaaark, son of Zaaarkus. “But we ended up beating the absolute shit out of this guy. At one point he pulled out one of the potions he stole from us, drank it, spit it out, and then said ‘Yucky!’. Listen, I get that Doom Wretcher taste buds and human taste buds are biologically different, but I thought we could at least agree that strawberry flavored medicine is palatable.”

“Most guys we fight stop mid-battle to chug multiple health and magicka potions. It really sucks; we hate it,” Zaaark explained. “So it was kinda nice fucking this guy up.

At press time, Tredgar had tragically perished after refusing a bowl of Energizing Salad because “tomatoes are nasty.”

‘Pokémon Legends: Arceus’ Is Really About The Monsters That Don’t Fit In Your Pocket: Humans

Here at Minus World, we love talking about Pokémon Legends: Arceus. At the time of this writing, forty percent of articles on the site are dedicated to the game. Once this is published, that number will jump to fifty percent, and the trend will continue on like that as both the number of articles on this game and the number of Minus World articles in general both approach infinity. 

Just like the game’s intrepid researcher protagonist, every time we publish a new article on Arceus, we come to understand it more deeply: observing the game’s eating habits, charting its migratory patterns, noting the color of the horizontal stripes adorning its bushy tail. Soon, you’re going to need a whole separate pasture just to fit all of our thoughts about this goddamn game. (Step aside, the 432 Psyducks I caught last night!)

But enough talk about the Pokémon themselves, because this article is actually all about the true monsters in this game that DON’T fit in your pocket — that’s right, I’m talking about HUMAN BEINGS

I’m sorry, were you not prepared to read a take that staggering? Apologies if I just threw off your whole weekend, you might need to clear your calendar just to chew on this for the appropriate amount of time. If I’m getting too Galaxy Brain for you, it’s only because that’s how seriously I take my responsibilities as a four-star member of Team Galaxy. (I just need to catch 572 more Psyducks to nab that fifth star!)

Let’s back up a little. When parents in the ’90s first heard about the Pocket Monsters craze — yeah, that’s right, this article jumps backwards in time just like the game — they all assumed the exact same thing: that it was pronounced “Pokey-Man.” At the time, we chose to mock our parents and condescendingly mimic them for the decades that followed. But at its core, the “Pokey-Man”’ phenomenon is a clear indicator that human beings expect themselves to be at the center of every narrative. 

How can we blame our naïve parents? What good is a story anyway if it’s not about a guy named Pokey-Man or Digi-Man or Mystical Ninja Goey-Man? It’s only human nature to seek out reflections of ourselves in the stories we tell. Arceus provides a reflection of mankind with brilliant clarity; no matter what you name your player character, it’s clear that they are meant to represent the full embodiment of Pokey-Man himself. (Of course, this also applies if you chose a female player character, but this paragraph would immediately fall apart if I tried to make it gender neutral. I’m talking about mankind, here, like I’m an astronaut on the Moon — that’s just how important this all is.)

I never said it was a flattering reflection, though, just a clear one — the headline here is still that the people are the real monsters in this game. Nearly every Pokémon game begins with a professor warning you not to wander into the tall grass where monsters are hiding; in this game, you are the monster hiding in the tall grass. Each game in the series requires you to level up your Pokémon to increase their powers, but Arceus is the first game that requires you to level up and increase your powers. They can call my progress metrics “Research Points” and “Ranks” all they want, but it’s all just exp and levels at the end of the day, and my monster man needs them all so that he can do whatever the human equivalent of learning Hyper Beam is.

Of course, this is all bubbling beneath the surface as part of the game’s rich subtext, the same as how the monstrous nature of man has always been bubbling beneath the surface of all culture throughout recorded history. No one is doing or saying outwardly monstrous things in this game, unless of course you count the silent consent towards the looming threat of the industrial revolution about to unfold in the game’s world. We all know that soon, the pastures where captured Pokémon roam free in clean air will be a thing of the past, replaced by telecom systems designed by Bill of Kanto to store millions of Pokémon in computer memory and to be able to send them across the planet in a microsecond. 

Not long after that, the people of Johto will discover the delicacy of eating Slowpoke tails. And what about Grimer and Muk? Did you stop to consider that those Pokémon don’t even exist in the game’s world until humans generate enough pollution to give unnatural life to them? Bet you won’t find that in the game’s research journal!

Perhaps the most terrifying and legendary monster of all in the Pokémon universe is man itself.  It’s a bittersweet irony that this game presents to the player, from the first moments, that humanity is evolving. But all you can do is sit back and watch in horror, because holding down B won’t change a thing.

Kid at Disneyland Regrets Asking Sora Actor What His Character’s Deal Is

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Nine-year-old Disneyland visitor Kevin Stevens was unsatisfied in his long-anticipated trip to the happiest place on Earth after getting caught up in a 45-minute background speech from an actor dressed as Sora from Kingdom Hearts.

“I thought his key sword was cool, and I wanted his autograph for my booklet, so I asked him who he was,” Stevens said. “He looked like he had been waiting all day for someone to ask him that. This man immediately launched into a long explanation about the Zone of Enders, Riku, Anssem, and Donald Duck. Dude, I’m nine. I asked him if I could leave, and he grabbed my wrist, like really hard, and said ‘not until we defeat Xemnas and the Council of Shadows!’ then started running really fast away. He started talking for what felt like forever, and was foaming at the mouth endlessly monologuing about ‘Birth by Sleep’ or whatever. I cried out for my mommy and he whipped around and accused me of being a ‘Heartless’ and drew his sword on me, until thankfully Buzz Lightyear and Gaston tackled him to the ground and started hitting him really hard. I think he’s done this before.”

The actor playing Sora, Daniel Clemens, gave his side of the story.

“I’m there representing Kingdom Hearts, one of the greatest franchises ever, and this kid thinks he’s better than me,” Clemens said. “I’m sick of the disrespect I get. The actors for Donald and Goofy never acknowledge me in the park, and they pretend like the events of Kingdom Hearts: Melody of Memory never even happened. Like, hello? We went on a ton of epic quests together. They’re acting like they have amnesia. I mean, what is this, the siege on The Castle That Never Was? Sure I was a bit flummoxed by this particular interaction, but like a true Kingdom Hearts fan I remained incredibly vitriolic and immediately defensive to the very end.”

At press time, sources reported that Clemens actually has no official or professional affiliations with Disney, and merely hopped the fence in full costume.

$150 Million Advertising Investment Pays Off as First Person Downloads ‘Raid: Shadow Legends’

CALDWELL, N.J. — Plarium Games employees celebrated today, when three years after its release, and at a cost of $150 million in advertising, the first willing, unsponsored download of 2018’s Raid: Shadow Legends occurred. 

“Look, I’m not gonna lie and tell you we thought it would take nearly four years,” said Mason Grimble, president of Plarium Games. “But nevertheless, we can finally start down our roadmap of the future, and hopefully continue to pick up a new fan or two along the way. I think everyone will soon realize that our grindy, repetitive, lifeless, dull, insulting, bland, hack ‘n’ slash game is the exact type of thing that deserves their time in this, the era with more gaming options than ever. For real.” 

The gamer, identified to the media as Dennis Walker, a 17-year-old high school junior at nearby Grover Cleveland High School, surprised his circle of friends when he revealed that he was going to give Raid Shadow Legends a shot last weekend. 

“When Dennis said he was gonna try fucking Raid: Shadow Legends, I thought he was just fucking with us,” said Anna Beltran, a friend of Walker’s. “Like oh, he’s gonna make some funny post or something out of it. But no, I guess he just heard one too streamers do paid ads for the thing and finally caved. Hey, it happens to the best of us. One time, I got so drunk I enrolled at the University of Phoenix.” 

It wasn’t just Walker’s circle of friends that his download drew the attention of, as he has been hounded by reporters ever since making the decision to play the game. 

“Why is everyone making such a big deal about this?” he asked gathered members of the gaming media earlier today outside of his parent’s house. “I just thought I’d give the game a shot after seeing it before roughly three fourths of every YouTube video I’ve watched for the last few years. Doesn’t look like anything special, really. I’m sure not gonna pay for anything in-game, I’ll tell you that straight up. I’ll probably check it out and then just play the new Rocket League mobile game some more. That thing fucks.”

As of press time, Plarium Games announced development on a sequel to the game, titled Raid: Shadow Legends 2: Please Play This One Too, Dennis Walker

Gamer Just Stares at GPS App Entire Time He’s Driving

HAWTHORNE, N.J. — A gamer driving his family across the country has recently been revealed to have spent the entire trip staring at the GPS app on his vehicle’s display. 

“I really was concerned at first, but goddamn if he didn’t drive better than I’ve ever seen,” said Aileen Clark, wife of Barry Clark, the gamer in question. “When I first noticed it I pleaded with him to keep his eyes on the road, and then he just asked me what I thought he was doing, and insisted that I trust him. He kept calling it a ‘mini-map’ as if there was some larger map somewhere. I gotta say though, we’ve never made such good time. He was passing cars even. How the hell does that work?”

Despite her initial skepticism, Aileen says Barry drove the entire first leg of the trip, 8 hours and 522 miles, flawlessly and in record time, all the while never once looking away from the digital navigation that was guiding him. While his wife was impressed, many motorists made their thoughts on the matter clear.

“I don’t like the idea of sharing our roads and major highways with gamers,” said Glenn Turner, a trucker that didn’t approve of Clark’s system of driving. “I mean, it’s bad enough I have to worry about self-driving cars, now we’re sharing the roads with kids that played GTAV for years before they ever touched a set of car keys? I’m so, so scared for the future.”

While many saw Clark’s ambitious approach to driving as a harbinger of dangerous times to come, he insisted it was a safe and effective methodology. 

“Honestly, I get why it seems scary, but I’ve been gaming longer than I’ve been driving,”  he said, addressing the fact that he will under no circumstances look away from the GPS display when the vehicle is in motion. “There’s so many distractions out there on the road, I’d rather just stare at the screen and pretend I’m playing one of the older Forza games or something, and focus on the good fundamentals of driving. It actually makes it really fun!” 

As of press time, the trip’s timing had been derailed after Clark went on a tirade against the ‘pay-to-win’ vending machines he discovered at the highway rest area they’d stopped at.

Disney Announces Fuck It, They’re Just Gonna Make ‘A New Hope’ a Third Time

LOS ANGELES — Following low viewership for its series The Book of Boba Fett, Disney announced today that they’re just going to say “fuck it” and remake the original Star Wars movie again.

“Whenever we feel like we’re backed into a corner, we know that we can just pull out ole trusty: making A New Hope again. We did it with The Force Awakens and we’re gonna do it again. Script’s already done, it was written in the ’70s,” explained Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy. “We’ve been testing the waters a bit and people seem to only care about our new stuff when we shove CGI Young Luke Skywalker into an episode, and he looks creepy as hell like that, so if anything, it just proves how hungry everyone is to watch A New Hope again. So that’s what we’re going to do. No more Boba Fett, no more anime cartoons, no more Obi Wan show… let’s give the people what they want: the Empire built a Death Star and there’s a young hopeful loser who might have the Force.”

Star Wars fans have lit up online, excited about the news.

“At first I was kind of annoyed, but then I realized that The Force Awakens was the last time I enjoyed a Star Wars movie. So I dunno, I guess I’m excited what kind of Death Star they make this time,” said sci-fi fan Jeffrey Bull. “I was thinking that my dream wish for a Star Wars movie would be something about Darth Vader, but then I remembered that they already made like six of those. The Star Wars movies just haven’t been working for me ever since they stopped remaking A New Hope. Hell, even yelling at the actors on Instagram until they delete their accounts hasn’t given me quite the rush it used to. So, ultimately, I’m just happy to see them return to their root. No, I didn’t mean roots.”

The new film, tentatively titled An Old Hope, is set to begin filming later this year and release in 2023. So far, no casting news has been released for living actors, but Disney has released the full cast of dead actors, which includes the CGI likeness of stars like Carrie Fisher, Peter Cushing, and Harrison Ford, who is not dead, but has threatened to kill himself if they make him appear on set.

Weed Successfully Hidden in ‘Guitar Hero: Aerosmith’ Case for 13 Years

MESA, Ariz. — Hiding marijuana in a copy of Guitar Hero: Aerosmith has garnered absolutely no attention whatsoever, graphic designer Stuart Driscoll recently confirmed.

“When I was 17, my mom was watching me like a hawk,” Driscoll explained. “I knew Aerosmith’d be a safe spot to stash a joint, but the fact that no one has ever asked to play it with me is starting to feel a bit eerie. It’s been 13 whole years. Not only am I high as fuck, but I’m getting a bit too good at ‘Walk This Way’ on Expert.”

Driscoll’s ownership of the Xbox 360 title stemmed from a brief flirtation with the 1975 album Toys in the Attic in high school, which his friends called “further proof” how high he was.

“I used to light up with Stu when his parents were away,” acquaintance Daryl Finn recalled. “He’d give me this sly look and pull that shitty game out of his Kmart DVD rack, like he was a secret agent hiding microfilm in a bookcase full of Tolstoy. He’d stash everything in that case. I think he kept condoms clipped into those instruction manual holder tabs on the inside, so, y’know… they should still be in pristine condition.”

Upon request for comment, Activision reiterated their commitment to making games that “easily fade into any environment” to aid in secret storage, referring to Guitar Hero: Aerosmith as “a testament to our success in that area.”

“Our company is dedicated to the discreet needs of teenagers everywhere,” the press release boasted. “We took one of the hottest youth-oriented franchises of the era and released a version of it about geriatric glam-rockers whose last studio album four years prior was a blues tribute called Honkin’ on Bobo. You could install an aircraft landing light in that case and no-one would spend half a glance on it. That’s the Activision promise.”

Although Driscoll admitted that his uncle almost busted him “once or twice,” he was able to distract him successfully with a strategically placed Guitar Hero: Van Halen.

Photo by Philip Rood.

Arlo Rejected From the Muppets for Being a Gamer

REDDING, Calif. — Following their discovery of his lengthy series of videos on various niche gaming topics, the Muppets have announced that YouTube personality Arlo is no longer being considered to join their troupe based on the fact that he is a gamer.

“Well friends, I can’t say this decision is one that I agree with,” Arlo said in a disappointed tone of voice usually reserved for disappointed reviews of new installments in the Paper Mario franchise. “I thought I was a shoe-in for the Muppets. I mean, look at me. I fit the part. I’ve got the big googly eyes, the blue fur, everything! But sadly, I guess the world just isn’t ready for a gamer Muppet. Their loss.”

The decision may have come as a surprise to some, based on Sesame Street’s moves towards inclusion and adding more diversity into their Muppet line-up, but sources say that there is still much ground to cover for gaming media personalities in popular culture.

“Arlo is a great guy, but let’s be honest, gaming YouTubers just have a certain stigma attached to them,” said Kermit the Frog. “He clearly knows his stuff, but I just don’t know if I can trust the judgment of someone who didn’t enjoy Paper Mario: The Origami King. I mean, sure, it’s not exactly like the old Paper Mario games, but does it need to be?”

Arlo said in his 40-minute video on the subject that despite the outcome, he has closure about what the future holds for his career without the Muppets.

“At the end of the day, I’m still gonna keep bein’ me,” said Arlo. “I don’t have to be a Muppet to release a great in-depth Zelda trailer analysis, or to explore my hopes and dreams for a Luigi’s Mansion sequel, or to bring public awareness to the ongoing problem that is joycon drift. Can the Muppets do any of that important work? I mean, seriously Nintendo, you gotta fix these things! I’m practically begging you! I know you’re watching this!”

At press time, the Muppets were scrambling to fill a second unexpected vacancy in their troupe after Fozzie Bear’s controversial appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience went viral.

Wizard Community College Delivers Acceptance Letters by Seagull

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio — Municipal cuts to magical education have forced Lemonpeel Community College for Witchcraft and Wizardry’s communications team to begin sending letters by seagull, according to those familiar with the situation. 

“Sure, Owls are the standard, but there’s no rule that says you can’t use other birds,” said Lemonpeel registrar Ronald Knutson. “And frankly, Owls aren’t really worth the price. It’s entirely a prestige thing. Seagulls may be loud, dirty, and annoying, but they’re what we have. Hopefully kids feel just as excited when they see one of these fuckers knocking into their windows at 7 a.m. with an acceptance letter.”

Knutson explained that the school chose seagulls because the birds were already around campus, so “you might as well just snatch ‘em.”

“One of the perks of going to a college near the ocean! They’re like the rats of the beach. And trust me, we tried duct taping the letters to rats at first and it was a nightmare,” Knutson noted. “Honestly it was like killing two birds with one stone because we were spending a fortune on chicken wire and trash can lids to keep the gulls away from campus. Not to mention, we were throwing stones at them; I didn’t realize that was just an expression until recently, actually. So now we just catch ‘em and put ‘em to work like everybody else.”

When asked if the faculty used magic to catch the birds, Knutson said no.

“Magic? What?” he said. “No. God gave us each two big hands for a reason.”

Despite Knutson’s positive outlook on the seagull situation, some students and faculty have questioned if the trade-offs are worth it. 

“I don’t even think I was supposed to get that letter,” said Lemonpeel sophomore Kelda Samuelsson. “Neither of my parents are wizards and I still have yet to actually cast a spell. I tried telling some of my professors, but they said it doesn’t matter. One of them told me that like 50% of the bureaucratic positions at the Ministry of Magic don’t even use magic. It’s just Excel spreadsheets, for the most part. So I’m just gonna keep going until someone tells me to stop.” 

“I’d say one in every five letters gets delivered to a muggle,” said Potions professor Daniel McTaggart. “A few years ago we let a house elf graduate. It was a total accident, but apparently that’s actually a pretty progressive thing to do, so we ended up getting a ton of praise. Meanwhile, the campus is covered in seagull shit.” 

According to close sources, there have been further challenges as well.

“The worst was when the gulls broke into my lab and drank a bunch of intelligence potions,” McTaggard said. “They, uh… well I guess I don’t know that they’re even really seagulls anymore. They’re something more.”

When asked if the school will consider returning to owls to deliver their mail, Knutson shuddered. “I guess that’s up to the gulls.”

Mother Worried Romantic Comedies Giving Daughter Unrealistic Media Career Standards

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Local mother Kate Greenberg expressed concern that the romantic comedy films enjoyed by her daughter Naomi, 13, might be giving her dangerously unrealistic media career standards, sources report.

“She came home from school yesterday talking about how she couldn’t wait to be an editor of a fashion magazine by age 30, like in that Jennifer Garner rom-com I watched with her last weekend,” Greenberg said, adding that Naomi has begged her for Chanel boots like the ones Anne Hathaway wears in The Devil Wears Prada. “I had to sit her down and explain that even if she does manage to snag a job writing for a reasonably respectable website or magazine in her 20s, she’ll probably have to spend many years working her way up to editor, and also probably won’t arrive every morning to her two closest co-workers sitting on her desk, drinking coffee and faithfully waiting to hear about the latest happenings in her love life.”

Greenberg was unsure how early to start the conversation with her daughter about how every woman’s media career is beautiful, not just the kind that Hollywood presents as the norm.

“She keeps talking about how when she’s a successful reporter for a glossy monthly, she can’t wait to spend half a year researching a single story and giving it the in-depth treatment it deserves,” Greenberg said, noting that assignments like that barely exist anymore, let alone as part of a stable writing job that can support rent for a one-bedroom apartment with a dishwasher. “I think it’s great to aspire to that — I’m just worried that those movies are planting the seeds for lasting insecurities when her first few years trying to make it as a journalist in New York City don’t immediately land her her own Sunday column.”

Greenberg’s concerns have been echoed by sources in the psychological community. Dr. Alexa Roberts of the Society of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology told reporters that romantic comedies can instill harmful career image issues in teens who haven’t yet developed the self-confidence to love whatever media job they end up landing.

“These films portray cushy editor or staff writer roles as the only possible options to achieve happiness, when in reality many women enjoy fulfilling media careers as sponsored content creators, SEO experts, or the authors of those ‘Everything Wrong With ‘Matrix: Resurrections’-type articles,” said Dr. Roberts, adding that seeing just a single Vanessa Hudgens-type protagonist churning out Marvel explainers could do wonders for young women’s mental health. “It’s so important that our girls see their future careers represented in all manner of rom-coms, chick flicks, and date movies.”

At press time, Naomi was mentally preparing to fall in love with the handsome-yet-workaholic architect she hoped to profile for her first major feature.

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