Wednesday, January 21, 2015

DC Heroes Lego Pt 2

Yesterday I said there were two great sets from Lego DC Heroes, but I only got around to talking about the one, Green Lantern set. The other really cool looking and affordable DC set is called Brainiac Attack.  

This set is cool because of the mini-figs. Superwoman (girl? still? really?), Martian Manhunter, Supes, and of course Brainiac. Four figs is pretty nice, and the inclusion of B-Lister (sorry J'onn J'onzz) is fantastic. Usually you have to buy the big money sets to get those guys, like the Darkseid Invasion. That set features Green Arrow, Hawkman, & Cyborg, which would make for some pretty cool adventures, but the set cost $70.00 so out of reach for most. Brainiac on the other hand is $25.00.  

Oh and that Brainiac ship is pretty fierce looking. The other Superman adventure set from a couple of years ago, Superman vs Power Armor Luthor, was also cool for the exact same reasons as this Brainiac kit. The Luthor one featured Wonder Woman, and a bad ass Power Armor robot. 

As of right now the DC sets look fantastic, while Marvel really hasn't put anything of note out. Their Gaurdians sets have mostly disappeared from the shelves by now. They have a really cool X-men set, but it costs $50.00. The Age of Ultron/Avengers 2 stuff is leaked on the web, but nothing in there looks like it will be less than $30.00 except the little Iron Man vs Ultron bots. 

DC is really winning the fight in the Lego wars, even if Marvel is blowing them away in movies.

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

New DC Lego Sets



Like lots of people I grew up with Lego. I have many fond memories of my childhood Lego sets and the stories I told with them. My tastes, then as now, tended toward the sci/fi and fantasy realms. The Lego Space and Castle themes were my favs.

Over the years Lego developed some interesting marketing relationships and finally in 2002 they made the connection with super-heroes, releasing the first Spider-Man sets, tied in to the Spider-Man movie.

Twelve years later and Lego has featured a bunch of Marvel and DC comics sets. Their hugely successful Lego: Batman games opened them up to the rest of the DC Universe and really Lego has done a great job creating sets for kids that expose them to a good number of DC heroes as a low price.

This year features two fantastic sets from the DC Heroes line. One is the 76025 Green Lantern Vs Sinestro. Priced at $19.99 it is damn cheap in Lego terms. It comes with a Green Lantern, Sinestro, and Space Batman, who looks pretty robotic & I would probably use as an extra villain. There is a Green Lantern spaceship, which seems superfluous since GL can just fly in space, but maybe he needs it in the theme of the set where Sinestro has stolen his power ring battery. Also you can just have Bats fly the spaceship since I don't think he could withstand all the rigors of interstellar travel in that jet-pack suit. Kidding aside this set is pretty rad. Two heroes, a villian, and a jet for 20 bucks. Worth the price. You are saddled with another Batman fig, but GL and Sinestro more than make up for it.



Thursday, January 8, 2015

The Battle of New Orleans

Arrrgh!!
Two hundred years ago today what is considered by some the last battle of the War of 1812, or the Second American Revolutionary War, was fought in a low field along the Mississippi River a few miles outside of New Orleans, Louisiana. British General Edward Pakenham led a force of close to 11,000 British solider's sailors, and marines against General Andrew Jackson and a force of fewer than 5,000 men of mixed military background, including Choctaw Indians, Freemen of Color, the 7th & 44th U.S. Infantry, and most romantically Jean Lafitte's pirates.



The battle was the culmination of a series of attempts by the British to take the mouth of the Mississippi River delta and there by cut off the interior portion of the U.S. shipping and trading lanes. The British had landed on Louisiana soil several weeks before and were massing forces for a march into New Orleans from the east along the river. Gen. Jackson knew he was in a bad position, out numbered and out gunned by the British forces, and so he launched a night raid on their encampment on December 23rd. I do not think this raid was meant to dislodge the British, although Jackson certainly wold have accepted that outcome, but was instead meant to rile the British into early action against Jackson. Jackson's raid was I think an attempt to draw the British into a fight where Jackson chose the battlefield, rather than attempting to muster troops into an assault on the marching British Army and Marines.

Jackson chose a farm along the Mississippi just beyond English Turn. At the farm, Jackson built strong a defensive line stretching from the river to the marshy wood lands maybe a half a mile northeast. Across the river, he had a cannon battery aligned to fire into the river or the fields in front of his fortifications. The Americans were well defended their troops were mainly untrained volunteers.

The British army on the other hand were veterans of the Napoleonic War. They were well ready for a fight and had no expectation of easy victory or simple rout of the Americans. They knew well the effort that war took, and were prepared to make it.

Their plan was a good one. At dawn they would dispatch troops across the river and capture the lightly defended cannon battery. Once that was done they would begin the frontal assault on the American line, aided by cannon fire from across the river, that would basically fire into the read of the American line. Success seemed assured. Unfortunately for them the Mississippi River intervened, and the British crossing was delayed, partially abandoned and off-course. Not willing to risk jeopardizing the timing of a simultaneous cannon barrage and his own troops marching at the line Gen Pakenham began is assault before he heard those captured cannons fired.

Finally ladders!
The British forces made one other fatal error that could have swung the day. Lt.Col. Mullins, who was to lead the vanguard did not bring ladders to scale the American barricades. It is thought he may have done this on purpose in hope of being removed from the front of the assault and thus sparring his regiment the many casualties they would have faced charging first of the wall. In any case the delay crossing the field waiting for supplies caused the British troops to withstand cannon and rifle fire for much longer than anticipated and reuslted in the death of many officers.

Rough business
The battle was over by midday. The British assault force was in disarray and retreated. Gen. Pakenham and most of the commanders at the battle were dead. The American forces had held the assault of New Orleans at bay.

Three days later the remaining British forces gave up on trying to capture New Orleans, and by Jan 19th they had left Loisianna. The British though had not completely given up on their plans to reconquer America. They captured a fort in Mobile Bay and planned to attempt another assault on the Mississippi River Delta. News reached them in mid-February and the attack was called off.

Weeks later Napoleon would return from exile and the thought of continuing a war across the Atlantic seemed far less important. Lt.Col. Mullins would be court-martialed for his failure to be properly equipped during the assault.

There is a ton of stuff on line you can read or watch that will give you a more in depth history of the battle, and the implications it carried. There are a lot of New Orleanians who really hated Jackson despite his victory, and you can read about that stuff too. Best of all there will be a Drunk History in New Orleans which means you can see their version of events which will no doubt be the most memorable if not the most wholly accurate story.
Me giving the British two thumbs down at the Battle of New Orleans National Park