Tag Archives: Kota Kinabalu

Mountain climbing

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As a self-confessed geek, I’m not much of an outdoors or exercise person. I do take short walks around the neighborhood with my wife everyday so that Spidey can exercise and staying in general good shape is never a bad thing, but that’s as much exercise as I’m willing to put time and effort towards. Recently, however, we’ve been kicking around the idea of actually attempting to climb Mount Kinabalu, which as all Malaysians know is the tallest peak in Southeast Asia. We don’t have a set date yet, but it looks like it’s going to be a family affair with lots of people and generally planned for early next year.

I have no illusions about it being easy. Sure, it’s not mountaineering with rope and pitons, but even fit and sportive people generally claim that getting to the peak is an exhausting and arduous ordeal. This means we’re going to have to put in some regular training and that in turn means going to the Bukit Padang recreational area to climb the hills there. It doesn’t take a lot of time, but even less than 20 minutes of effort is pretty hard on you given how steep it is and how many steps you need to climb.

We originally planned on going twice a week, once on Sunday and again on Wednesday, but we’ve found that the traffic in Kota Kinabalu gets too bad around rush hours to make that feasible. So we’ve decided to go only on Sundays for leg muscle training and jog around in our neighborhood as endurance training. We still have quite some time to prepare so I’m not unduly worried, but given how punishing even 20 minutes at Bukit Padang can be, I have a newfound respect for the people who manage to complete the two-day climb up to th peak of Mount Kinabalu!

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Playing with toy soldiers

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I’ve been swamped at work lately and didn’t have the time to put up these photos. I’ve always had a fascination with miniatures, especially Warhammer 40k, but I’m well aware of how expensive and time consuming getting into the hobby will be. This is why something like BattleLore is the next best thing. It’s a simplified wargame that you play with plastic miniatures on a game board. My wife and I tried it out at CarcaSean last Saturday (handily they already had the board and pieces out for a game of their own).

My first surprise was that the miniatures are really, really tiny. I mean, I’ve looked at photos of them on the net, but you have to hold them in the hand to realize how small they really are. I guess the size is necessary to fit the more than 200 figures into the box and to keep the game board at a reasonable size. After all, each hex needs to be able to hold four infantry figures.

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The second surprise is that contrary to my expectations about it being a complicated game, it’s actually quite easy to set up and the game flows smoothly once you understand the basics. Granted, we’ve only played the first two scenarios, so we haven’t gotten into the Lore stuff yet, but we’ve had a very enjoyable and the number of scenarios makes this a very promising long term prospect. With all the extra Lore and War Council added in, this will be a game with plenty of legs indeed.

We liked it so much in fact that we’ve decided to buy a copy of it. We’ve said as much to Sean. The only problem is how to store the huge thing. I don’t think stuffing the miniatures back into the box once it’s been opened would be practical so we’re going to have to get a big table to put everything on. We’ll probably get around to that by the middle to end of this month. As you can see, Sean hasn’t bothered to paint his figures and I doubt I’ll ever get around to it myself. I can just imagine the difficulty of trying to point the tip of the brush at just the right spots on the little things!

In the meantime, it seems that my long ordered copy of Arkham Horror has arrived, so we’ll be going on Saturday to pick it up. So many games, so little time!

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More on boardgames

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Since my last post on the subject, I’ve been to CarcaSean a couple more times now, including a special Sunday session with a bunch of members. In all, my wife have tried the following games: Carcassonne, Carcassonne: Hunters & Gatherers, Settlers of Catan, Power Grid and Ticket to Ride. These aren’t exactly the Big Box games I’ve always wondered about but they’re not a bad start.

My wife’s favourite so far is Power Grid which is the most complex of these games by far. I don’t like it very much as I found it to be basically an extended exercise in arithmetic and it has too many maintenance aspects that you can easily forget to do or do wrongly (refilling resources, discarding power plant cards etc.) Judging from the game’s FAQ on BoardGameGeek, it seems we got a fair amount of stuff wrong too, but doesn’t improve my impression of it about being too fiddly and full of special, conditional exceptions in its rules. My own favourite at this point is Settlers of Catan. It’s stream-lined and elegant but still leaves plenty of room for strategy.

On a vaguely related note, the topic of wargames and their history popped up the other day on QT3 and the name of the father of wargames was someone that I knew, but completely didn’t expect. If we discount purely abstract games like go and chess, it seems that the inventor of what we can recognizably call wargames today is none other than H.G. Wells, he of The Time Machine and The War of the Worlds fame.

In 1913 Wells wrote a book he called by its full title Little Wars: a game for boys from twelve years of age to one hundred and fifty and for that more intelligent sort of girl who likes boys’ games and books in which he describes a complete set of rules for making a game out of toy soldiers. The book is now out of copyright so it is available for reading online here. It’s a rather simple game by modern standards and doesn’t even involve dice or anything similar to simulate chance. Rather when two units meet each other on the field, they’re presumed to be equally skilled and therefore eliminate one another. The really cute part is that artillery pieces on the battlefield are represented by little spring-loaded toy cannons that actually fire a dart-like projectile. Thus any toy soldiers that are knocked down by the projectile is assumed to have been killed by artillery fire.

Of course everything that Wells used was basically hand-crafted and would be impossibly expensive in our time. Even the landscaping elements he used to create his battlefields looked amazingly nice as the many photos included in the book show. Nowadays, most of us have to make do with cheap plastic and cardboard.

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Getting into boardgames

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I’ve been thinking about getting into boardgames for a while now but I’ve only recently started it doing it for real. I don’t really have much experience in this hobby. I was a fairly avid player of Magic: The Gathering and other assorted CCGs back in the day, but the only boardgaming I ever did was a few very memorable games of Space Hulk at the short-lived Temple du Jeu in Tours where I studied. Still, I’ve always kept half an eye on the field and felt a strange lust for those giant boxes filled with all manner of figures and dice.

It turns out that there’s a boardgaming cafe at City Mall here in Kota Kinabalu, which you can play the titles in their very extensive library for a modest table and food / drinks for each player, so my wife and I decided to give it a try. We played a game of Carcassonne with just the two of us a couple of weeks ago and on Saturday roped in my wife’s oldest brother to join us. We ended up staying a bit longer than expected and played a game of Carcassonne and a game of Settlers of Catan. We probably won’t be going every single week but I have a feeling that this is going to a regular source of entertainment for the both of us.

Right now, I’m thinking of buying a copy of Carcassonne: Hunters & Gatherers because it’s a great, easy-to-learn game to take out when we have family and friends visiting. I’m also thinking of ordering a copy of Arkham Horror, a highly regarded cooperative game that the cafe, CarcaSean, doesn’t seem to have in its library. According to what I’ve read it’s perfectly playable for two but would be better for more people. I’ve also been trying to connect with other boardgamers in town so that I can finally get into one of those epic games like Starcraft, Battlestar Galactica or Twilight Imperium. So if any friends want to give this hobby a try and are reading this, do let me know. We could always use more players!

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Living in Kota Kinabalu

Well, I’m been offline and out of touch for a lot longer than I anticipated, but I’m back online now. I’m working in Kota Kinabalu and will likely be staying here for a while. KK turns out to be a surprisingly vibrant, yet picturesque little city. As my brother-in-law says, you can get nearly everything that you can find in Kuala Lumpur here, but there are plenty of stuff here that you won’t be able to find in the Klang Valley, such as great beaches, clean air and fantastic scenic views..

The place I’m staying at is near the University Malaysia Sabah campus towards the north. It’s some way off from the city centre, but that’s more than made up for by the mountain views available here and the fact that the newly opened 1 Borneo, the biggest shopping mall in East Malaysia, is within walking distance of where we are. Mount Kinabalu is theoretically within line of sight from here, but it’s always covered in clouds so it’s not actually visible. Even so, the sight of the mountain covering the whole horizon is mighty impressive, especially so when the sun shines directly on it.

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