Holy sweet mother of God.
I saw one of these once in a Spike & Mike festival a few years ago, and it blew my brains out through my nostril. I didn't know anything about the author at the time. This is similar. Basically, as a synopsis, think pixel flash animations that are heavily inspired by anime/manga doujin games, as seen through a lens shaped like the teddy bear that bleeds milk from the sequence in the psych hospital from Akira.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FSdoDjcI ... re=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZYKe3lg8 ... re=related
The videos link to a full version of the animation, which is a lot faster and less pixelated, and worth seeing if you like it.
Do NOT attempt to search for the man's personal blog while on anything other than your own personal computer and internet connection. It's worth seeing, but just don't do it. Not only will you lose your job, you may go to jail depending on the cultural sensitivities of your employer. That being said, I think "mad genius" is not too strong a phrase to lay on the man's ouevre, at all.
I saw one of these once in a Spike & Mike festival a few years ago, and it blew my brains out through my nostril. I didn't know anything about the author at the time. This is similar. Basically, as a synopsis, think pixel flash animations that are heavily inspired by anime/manga doujin games, as seen through a lens shaped like the teddy bear that bleeds milk from the sequence in the psych hospital from Akira.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FSdoDjcI ... re=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZYKe3lg8 ... re=related
The videos link to a full version of the animation, which is a lot faster and less pixelated, and worth seeing if you like it.
Do NOT attempt to search for the man's personal blog while on anything other than your own personal computer and internet connection. It's worth seeing, but just don't do it. Not only will you lose your job, you may go to jail depending on the cultural sensitivities of your employer. That being said, I think "mad genius" is not too strong a phrase to lay on the man's ouevre, at all.