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Lego Hobbit Buy Loot

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Filed under: Comics & Books, Con Culture, Fantasy Realms, Movies, Retro Fix, Sci-Fi Café, Superheroes, TV — Leave a comment Ever thought about checking out what is in those monthly surprise boxes that have become more and more popular in the past few years?  Some of our friends have been buying Loot Crate and Nerd Block for several months, and when our friends at Wizard World dropped us a note about their new Comic Con Box we decided it was time to check these out.  We got in on the first three Wizard World Comic Con Boxes and three boxes from Loot Crate (we haven’t checked out any other companies’ boxes yet).  So what did we learn? Loot Crates run about $20 including shipping per month per box, and Comic Con Boxes roughly $37 including shipping.  Each contain coupon opportunities, some with downloads, app opportunities, and similar items in addition to the main draw of the boxes–the shirts, comics, and collectibles.  You can sign up for one or multiple months and can terminate membership so long as you do so before the next box ships. 




Customer service for these is very easy-going and helpful to explain if you think you messed up your ordering.  Themes are pre-announced, so you can skip months with themes that don’t interest you. The companies each insert random bonus items in boxes and have a deluxe box opportunity worth hundreds or even thousands of dollars that some lucky subscriber will get.  And if you film your “unboxing” and upload it to YouTube you can be eligible for other prizes, and other contests are also available throughout the year.  We didn’t get the big prize pack in our three months of boxes but did get a good bonus item in one box and in another we got a 1 of 2 variant that ended up being a rare insert.  The bonus item came with a Comic Con Box, and it was an authenticated, personally autographed photo of actress Karen Gillan in her Nebula garb from Guardians of the Galaxy.  Her autograph can sell for $70-$85 so this was the big win of all the boxes.  A close second was a Greg Horn rare variant cover for the recent issue of Wolverine #1 also in a Comic Con Box. 




It also was selling online for around $70-$85. Of the regular boxes we were most impressed with Loot Crate’s “Cyber” theme box.  The exclusive Terminator Genisys half-scale skull was just dead-on for our love of sci-fi and borg tech.  And that’s the thing about these boxes:  The broader your interest in pop culture, the more value you’ll get for your dollar because each company varies the licenses/franchises in each box.  You can easily add up the price of each item and tally more than the price of the box but ultimately it is your own taste that will be the judge of value.  If you have a spouse or friends or kids to share with or friends to trade items with, or if you’re accustomed to selling on eBay, then it can be easy to make these boxes a “win”.  Expect to see plenty of “trinkets” and the kind of swag you might find at San Diego Comic-Con plus a few higher valued items in each box. So what exactly can you expect to find in the boxes? The inaugural May Comic Con Box was themed “It Begins” and included an exclusive “Running Dead”/Walking Dead parody T-shirt, a Zombie Hello Kitty Funko Pop figure, a K’Nex Plants v. Zombies mini-figure, a DVD of Dragon Age, a six part web series starring Felicia Day, a Walking Dead Funko Mystery Mini figure, Danger Zombies Run Gum, The Zumbies Walking Thread zombie doll




, an I CAN HAS WHITEWALKERS? kitty mash-up print (which is actually pretty well done), and one of two Greg Horn variant issues of Marvel’s Wolverine #1.  As we noted above, we received the rare variant.  This box is a big win for zombie fans and you can’t deny the cool shirt, rare comic book variant, and appeal of that crazy Hello Kitty mash-up figure. The June Comic Con Box was themed “Assemble” and featured an exclusive Pinocchio/Tony Stark mash-up T-shirt, a large, sturdy porcelain Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. mug, a HALO Metal Earth helmet model kit, a white plush moustache (cute but we couldn’t connect it to the theme), an oversized Lego luggage tag, a set of Avengers gaming cards, a mystery Marvel Mashem, a Marvel Secret Wars #1 variant cover comic book, and a Batman/Iron Man mash-up print.  This box seemed a tad light, and we saw a lot of the box’s value in the mug and HALO helmet kit. The May Loot Crate themed “Cyber” featured an exclusive Tron/Transformers mash-up T-shirt, an exclusive Terminator T-800 half-scale skull from Terminator Genisys, a Nerd Machine sticker sheet, a Borderlands Zero game mat, an exclusive Terminator Genisys brain chip key chain, future replicant corporate logo embroidered patch from Blade Runner, a reboot Battlestar Galactica target practice poster set, a glow in the dark circuitry pencil bag. 




For fans of all things borg, it goes without saying that this was the best box you could hope for. The June Comic Con Box themed “Adventure” included 2014 Comic-Con exclusive Spider-man and Iron Man NECA scaler toys, a free CGC grading submission at a Wizard World show, Zelda mascot danglers, a DVD of a European dubbed film called Antboy, an exclusive Doctor Who cartoon T-shirt, a chomping plastic dinosaur toy, an Adventure Time pet chew toy, a Marvel Ant-Man #1 variant cover comic book (roughly a $10 book), and an Indiana Jones/Star Wars mash-up art print.  We lucked out with this box, getting the rare special insert: the personally signed photograph of Karen Gillan as Nebula from Guardians of the Galaxy.  The special bonus autograph prize knocked this box out of the park from a value standpoint. The July Loot Crate themed “Heroes” included a hardcover copy of The League of Regrettable Superheroes by Jon Morris, a survey of obscure comic books over the decades. 




It also included a Vulcan hand sign air freshener for the car, a Q Pop classic Batman figurine, a Zelda wristband, a metal Batman multi-tool keychain, a mini-poster of Ant Lucia’s DC Bombshell Wonder Woman, and a cardboard “playset” made from the delivery box. We picked up an additional Loot Crate–an advertised special including contents of prior Loot Crates, for $15.  here), a Street Fighter headband, an exclusive Doctor Who fake game cartridge desktop art piece, a Hex Bug Nano Transformers Bumble Bee, two pieces of hard candy, a sheet of MLG stickers, an 8-Bit Zombie sticker, and a folded poster of all the Simpsons characters. So which, if any, should you subscribe to?  It all depends on how much you can or want to spend, whether you like surprises, and whether you have a broad interest in genre swag.  If you do, then the Loot Crate and/or Comic Con Box may be for you.While the PlayStation TV may essentially just be a PS Vita inside its casing, unfortunately it’s not capable of running every title that is available for Sony’s wonder handheld.




There’s no getting away from the fact that the PlayStation TV has no touch screen or rear touch pad but there’s still a lot that will run quite happily either just with the DualShock 3 or DualShock 4 or by using the emulated pointer available or making use of the DualShock 4’s touchpad for games that do need touch controls. When it comes to knowing what can be run on the console, here at Vita Player we’ll be testing as many titles as possible in order to bring you a “real world” checklist of what does and doesn’t work on the system and we’ll update this as often as we can as new games come along or patches are brought out making more titles compatible. Please note that all of the titles listed here are products released in the EU – there will be differences between territories in terms of PlayStation TV compatibility so please only use this as a rough guide if you live outside of the EU. For AAA titles, where possible we have based our tests on physical copies rather than downloads from the PSN Store.




There are many more games that do work in the EU but these are the ones that we have tested here at Vita Player and we will only include titles we have tested personally as a team. There will be rare occasions where we will test international versions of games. These will happen if games are only released in physical form outside of the UK or if we have been unable to source / test a UK copy but we will endeavour to obtain a UK copy of the game as quickly as we can. At the moment we do not know if compatability is locked to the version of the game itself or the region which the PSN account is registered to which is why we have pointed out these versions of the games that we have tested. There are titles listed here that we have logged as being compatible with the PlayStation TV that do not appear in the PSTV’s own version of the PSN Store which is missing a large number of available titles at present and isn’t representative of the full range available for the console. These are games that you will need to purchase on the web-based store or on a PS3 / Vita and then download them using a PS3 or PS Vita and access them by using your existing memory card on the PlayStation TV.




Alternatively, once purchased you can access them on your PlayStation TV through the Store and checking your Download List where your purchases will be available. One thing that we would like to stress is that you should not use the PlayStation Network Store or Sony’s previously published list as a definitive guide when it comes to PlayStation TV compatibility. Sony’s official list has not been updated since November 2014 (and this fails to mention many of the nuances we have found with our own tests that we believe need bringing to your attention with many games) and many games listed on the PSN Store as being incompatible are actually compatible with the console (both of the Joe Danger games and the digital edition of Killzone: Mercenary, for example). To ensure that our guide is as complete as possible, we have also included PlayStation Mobile titles which Sony have failed to mention in relation to the PlayStation TV both in their marketing or their own official compatibility list and despite the format being removed from sale this coming July there are a lot of great games that PlayStation TV owners shouldn’t miss out on.




Finally, we have also included titles that have now been deleted from the PSN Store but that we have also been able to test for those of you who may still have these available for your one of your current systems. If you are looking for a list of games compatible with the PlayStation TV in the US, our friends at Vita Reviews have compiled one and you can find it at http://vitareviews.net/playstation-tv-compatible-games-north-america/ Quick Links: PlayStation Vita – PSP – Minis – PS One Classics – PlayStation Mobile The three games in the Dissidia series are temperamental games and occasionally need a “workaround” to get them to load properly. We have posted a fix for this elsewhere on the site and you can find that here. From what we have found so far with PS One Classics titles, if the original games supported them, when running on the PlayStation TV they make use of L2 and R2, the vibration function of the controller and games also seem to support multiplayer functionality using two DualShock 3 or DualShock 4 controllers.

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