MissKyo

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  1. Thank you! And it was the best Jello I ever had!
  2. Just make sure you tell me who you are if you send me a friend request. Otherwise I get super paranoid, like:



    Skype: dj.kyo

    Twitter: @CoHMissKyo

    Steam: It's either kjsrdjkyo or CoHMissKyo - not sure on that one. >.>

    deviantArt: rogueloreseeker
  3. We have just finished the last Hamidon Raid I will ever lead on Protector. Thank you all, so much, for coming out: you were amazing, fantastic, wonderful, and that was one of the smoothest raids I have ever been a part of.

    As I write this, I am still standing in Eden; I don't want to leave. I'm pretty teary-eyed right now. See, I've been running events in CoH, on Protector, for almost as long as I've been playing. I've been a server rep for just about every player-run organization we've got: the City Scoop, PvPEC, PERC. I've done costume contests, the Shadow Shard TF Marathon, Thursday Night Fights, Hamidon raids, all kinds of stuff. I love Protector, and I wanted to make it a better place.

    I have been playing City of Heroes since I was eighteen, and today I am twenty-three and it is the last birthday I will ever celebrate in Paragon City. This game saved my life once, a long time ago. It introduced me to some of the most important people in my life: my mentor, Steampunk Charlie, almost all of the KJSR.net DJs and Staff, Mr. Grey, who accidentally invited me into the most loving and accepting family I have ever known, Boarderline Insanity and my Teamsters coalition, the folks of Protector TFs and Protector Vigilance and the Kitchen. My fiance, Mionas, and I had our first "date" badging in Independence Port, and as I already mentioned, he almost didn't get to propose to me because I was leading a Hamidon Raid on New Year's Eve.

    I know Paragon City better than any real-world place where I have ever lived. I have felt more at home there than I ever have in the real world. My family is here, my friends, my community - I may not know some of you well, but I'm sure I've teamed with you at least once or twice; some of us may have differences of opinion, but you are still a part of my extended family and my home, and it wouldn't be the same without you.

    I will never stop telling the stories that were born in Paragon City, even if I put new faces on them so that those who have not loved this game as we have can't recognize them. I will never forget the late-night task force runs, the hours and hours and HOURS I've spent roleplaying and exploring here, or the things I have learned from playing a hero. I may forget your names, but I will never forget the impact you have had on my life. Five years is a long time.

    I'm going to grieve for this game, but even more for my home, for my community, and the stories we will never tell, the task forces we will never run, and the ingame events we will never dream up and accomplish. Protector, the "little server that could", I love you, and I will always love you.

    Thank you for making this one of the most memorable birthdays I have ever had. It has been an honor and a privilege to know all of you, and I'm going to miss you terribly.

    Love, Kyo
  4. Thank you! Let's hope everyone gets some birthday Jello tonight on the Hami raid!
  5. See you fine folks tonight in the War Zone and then in the Hive!
  6. See you ingame Wednesday night! Between now and Friday I've got four more 50s to make...
  7. We'll get it. Bring nukes, pets, temps, Incarnates, and whatever else you've got - I plan on trying to get my hands on every advantage I can pull from the game on at LEAST two of my characters (Tam Washington, my Night Widow, and Arx Invictus, my Stone/Fire Tanker) so I can swap as need be.

    Spread the word, bring friends, and let's see if we can't bring down the goo one last time!

    Also, my favorite Hami memory ever (true story): My fiance, Mionas, almost didn't get to propose to me on New Year's Eve because he wanted to do it at sunset and I was leading a Hami raid that ran late. Yeeeeeep. Hamidon, and City of Heroes, will always hold a very special place in my heart because it gave me a really great "almost didn't because" story.
  8. Bumping this to remind folks - I haven't forgotten, I've just been wrapped up with the rest of the Teamsters coalition trying to finish as many stories as we can.

    Well, they're never really finished...but we'd like to leave our characters, and the City, better than they were when we met them.
  9. Depending on when, I'd be game to try it...I've got a fire/dark/fire dominator with permadom and Incarnate abilities I could bring. It'd be useful to have the Rebirth with +HP, I think.
  10. MissKyo

    Tyrant Thursday!

    The Spearhead Division is a SG of Praetorian Resistance members we've been working on since Going Rogue was released, and this will cap off their story nicely - I'd hate to have had them fighting Cole's goons this long without ever giving them the opportunity to face Cole himself in a Final Boss Battle. We'll be there with level shifts on, and we hope that folks will come out and help us make this a successful run - it'll likely be the last one we ever do, on these characters at the very least.
  11. It seems like WE'RE living up to everything on that page more than they are. Let's continue to show them what it means to live the words they've written - they could obviously do with a lesson.
  12. Assuming we're all still here by then and they haven't kicked us out early...

    My birthday is on Wednesday, November 28th, and I would like to run one last Hamidon Raid on that day after Rush the Rikti is over. I'm asking people to bring your Incarnates, your Warburg nukes, your whatever-you-have, and join me to take out the Jell-O just one more time.

    Oh, and wear your Hamikinis.

    And prepare your fish puns.

    And...you know what? You know the drill. I'll see you there.
  13. Is a scholar and a gentleman...and runs a heckuva event.
  14. I signed up for myself, Mionas, and Crim, since we all live together - figured I'd spare someone some postage by noting that we're all at the same address anyway, no sense mailing three cards separately.
  15. I'll try to get the screenshots for this up later - we had some great costumes! - but here are the times and the winners for each themed TF. Every TF had a tie so the 300 million inf I had planned to give away for each one was divided equally amongst the winners of each.

    Dr. Quaterfield - Task Force Seaborg - 3 hours, 20 minutes, 6 seconds - @Mionas, @Ceus, and @ Archivist

    Sara Moore - Task Force Hope - 1 hour, 31 minutes, 19 seconds - @Archivist and @General Idiot

    Justin Augustine - Task Force Ptah - 1 hour, 9 minutes, 48 seconds - @Mionas and @Ceus

    Faathim the Kind - Task Force Veyro - 2 hours, 11 minutes, 45 seconds - @Mionas, @El D, and @Ceus

    Total TF Time: 8 hours, 12 minutes, 58 seconds (if my math is correct)

    Thanks for coming out for this for the last time, guys. I had a blast.
  16. I thought I was done crying for now, but apparently not.

    Thank you - all of you! - so very, very much. You gave us a wonderful, amazing world, where we really could be anything we imagined, and I can never thank you enough. Best of luck to you all!
  17. Protector's Day of Vigilance - one of the coolest events I've ever been involved in!

    The Player Auction. I was surprised I went for as much inf as I did. I still am. I think Rasta won me and I don't remember if he ever got his task force.

    Representing the server for the PvPEC and then PERC.

    Meeting those of you I met in person, either because you visited me or because we met at a con or a get-together - you're all fabulous folks.

    Grey accidentally inviting his global friends list to an unknown little global channel called "Boarderline Insanity" - and inadvertently introducing me to my best friends and online "family".

    The most important memory I have of Protector is thanking everything good I logged in "one more time" and met Steampunk Charlie ingame. I don't know where either of us would be today if we hadn't met that night and despite everything I am still so very, very grateful we did.

    Oh, Protector. In the end, the server I picked at random became my home. I never left, even when I kind of wanted to, and I'm so glad I didn't.
  18. The community, devs and players. I feel like I'm losing my family.
  19. Quote:
    Originally Posted by Eldritch_Knight View Post
    You still haven't accepted my friend request, and I sent it last year!
    I still don't HAVE a friend request from you. Anywhere. O.o
  20. I wrote this for the City Scoop in 2009 and I wanted to repost it now because...well, because there will never be a better time, will there? Thank you, Paragon Studios, for all your hard work. Thank you, CoX community, for being you. Just...thank you.

    How City of Heroes Changes Real Lives
    Presented by Kyo-chan


    I have to tell you how this article started. I was in the grocery store with my mentor, Steampunk Charlie, and an older woman with a walker accidentally bumped a display and sent a lot of oranges rolling to the floor. Without thinking about it, I helped her out and picked them up for her. Afterwards, we talked about it-and I realized, a year ago, I would never have helped a stranger like that. It’s not something I like to admit to myself, but it’s true. Charlie said, “It’s because you’re a Hero of the City!”


    That got me thinking. I realized that for many people, City of Heroes is not just a game. To some, it’s a very large part of their real, everyday lives-not just because they play it, but because playing it has somehow changed their lives. To celebrate the upcoming City of Heroes anniversary, I asked readers of my Get Involved! series to send me the ways in which City of Heroes had changed their lives, be they great or small. Only three brave souls replied.
    These are their stories.


    CelticTitan said: “How has CoH changed my life? Well, most of all, I met my wife on CoH. We started out as friends of course, but our conversations went quickly from small talk to real life situations, past relationships, etc. One day, she blurted out “We should totally date!” and it went from there. Since then, I’ve moved 1700 miles across the country to be with her and May 31st will be our first anniversary. Goes to show, ya never know where love will pop up.


    And then there’s how CoH helped me. Before I found CoH, I was really ADD and OCD. I’d been able to keep them under control through school just by slamming my head into my books the whole way through college. Consuming one book after another. But after that, I didn’t really have anything left to focus myself on. So, I became all kinds of a pain in the butt at work, either spacing out or being way too much of a control freak. Always going to either extreme. Thankfully, I got involved with 2 different SGs. One was full of original beta testers who were MAJOR min/maxers. They showed me how to build my characters so they’d be the fastest and most powerful. That plus my first 50 was an empathy defender. It was so great for my OCD to have to stare at the team box, watching health and buffs, for hours on end. I’d be meticulously watching for buffs to wear off, keeping an eye on team mates’ activities. I had a blast.


    My other SG was an RP SG. They were VERY active and VERY creative. We’d be running our story lines in SG chat so we could interact with each other make our stories have more depth. So, I used my ADD productively. I found that I could focus on the stories in SG chat, the team box, team chat, various Global channels (for GM spawns, TFs, etc.) all at the same time! And, seriously, who doesn’t want an emp defender who can pay attention to a hundred things at once. I even had time to watch how everyone else played their characters. I saw their strong points and weaknesses, which was extremely helpful when it came time to find other toons to make.


    Handling, and darn near curing OCD and ADD all at once is one heck of a trick! They should really put CoH in the pharmacies! “


    From Sister Flame, a young Heroine of the City, as told to her dad, _Wyll_: ““My name is Sister Flame, I am eight years old and I am a super hero.

    My dad tells me that I began my heroic career as a crime fighter when I was four and a half years old. Dad was playing City of Heroes and I asked if I could play. He picked me up, put me on his lap, and he showed me how to move his hero around Atlas Park. Once I had the hang of it, Dad sat back and let me play. I’d only walk around for about fifteen minutes before I wanted to Dad to play again and I liked curling up on his lap to watch him fight evil. I think Dad liked having company when he played his game.

    When I turned five, my Dad decided we would get a second account so we could play at the same time. I would sit beside my dad and use his laptop to play. He told me it was important he could keep an eye on me in the game and he taught me proper game manners as well as some safety rules. I all ready knew that rules are important and I like to tell my friends that rules are there to keep us safe, especially when grown-ups are not around. It was good lesson I learned from my dad.

    A lot of great things have happened to me because I play City of Heroes. The game has given me a lot of practice with my reading when I started looking at the words the contacts were saying to me. My Grade One teacher was really impressed at how well I could read and I told her it was because I play this really cool super hero game. I don’t think she understood what I was talking about, but she told me to keep doing whatever I was doing. It was kind of cool to have your teacher tell you to play a computer game because it was good for you.

    One of the best things that ever happened to me in my life was when I met War Witch in Pocket D. Dad told me that she sent a message saying she wanted to meet me in the game, so we logged in and I led the way to where she was in Pocket D. When we got there, War Witch started moving around and talking to me. I was so excited! I ran and got my family to show them War Witch. She talked to me for a little while and I showed her my other costumes I made. She had to get going, but she wrote me a real letter later and sent me her autograph. I took them to school for show and tell and I am proud to tell everyone I meet that I am special friend of War Witch, one of the “makers” of City of Heroes.

    It sounds kind of weird to say, but I have been playing City of Heroes for half of my life. I have had so much fun with the game and I have learned so much. I hope the game goes on for a long time so that I can play with my dad for a long time. We have had so many adventures together and we have our own little City Of Heroes jokes that we say to each other that no one else gets. All of my friends have something special they do with their dads and I am happy to say that playing City of Heroes is the special thing I do with my dad.”


    And last, but not least, from Timothy2day: “My wife and daughter refer to CoH as “daddy's game.” To me, however, CoH is much more than than just a game. It is part of my therapy. My name is Tim, I'm 43 and I think I am one of the few severely disabled people in the player-base. I have a severe degenerative neurological disease. I won't say which one because it is both complex and very rare. Suffice to say the disease has slowly robbed me of my ability to walk and speak clearly, and has all but eliminated my fine motor control. I don't tell you this to get sympathy - I don't need that. Rather, I say it so you'll understand some of my play-style if you ever encounter me in-game.

    I have a BS degree in journalism from Northern Arizona University. In the past, I have been a newspaper reporter; a teacher; and a computer help desk analyst – all jobs that require an active mind and good speaking skills. Since I had to stop working, I needed to find something to fill the void. I saw the game at Wal-mart, and thought I would give it a try. I found I didn't always need lightning reflexes to play. I spent a lot of time remapping keys and figured out how to play about 90 percent with the keyboard. Things were going well until Issue 13 hit. I nearly quit, but it had nothing to do with PvP. I had to fast-click to do anything – closing dialogs, selecting items, selling, buying, etc. Prior to I13, I could click slow and leisurely and was ok. After going several rounds with support, I found the solution in Windows. I maxed the double-click speed and remapped my 5-button ergo-mouse.

    I get my 36-month badge on May 3. I started playing right before Issue 7 went live. I started on Liberty and my very first toon, an elec/elec blaster, is still there. He hit 46 last 2XP weekend. My first 50, an arch/emp, also is on Liberty and four more 50s live on Triumph. Currently, my focus is on Infinity where my main, Magic Taxi, participates in the Paragon Taxi Service. Even though I play a lot, I'm not interested too much in the underlying mechanics of the game. I play to have fun. Just by playing, I am exercising my hands and my mind.

    Ok, my game play. I bring this up because it was a sore spot when I started with a SG a while ago before they knew about me. I don't type very well and other than binds and macros, I am sort of quiet on a mish – especially when I play an emp and spend time buffing and healing. I'm not being anti-social. If the team is moving really fast, sometimes I follow – I'm not afk, I'm just trying to keep up. If I do something particularly egregious, please let me know. My old group used Vent and that was good. It allowed me to speak. I talk slowly but after awhile, people understand me with little difficulty. My old group mostly left to play Diablo, so meh!

    CoH is important to me. It not only provides me with a source of awesome fun, it gives me therapy on skills many people take for granted. My board name is Timothy2day, my global is @paramed. Look me up. Chances are I'll be on with a ranged toon. I would love to find another patient Vent group. My playtime is during weekdays and weekend days and evenings, EDT.”


    There you have it, readers-City of Heroes is more than just a game. Think about it-has playing the game changed your life somehow? Have you made friends you wouldn’t have made, learned something about yourself, tried something different, or helped someone you wouldn’t normally have helped because of it? And while you’re thinking about it, say thank you to the developers of City of Heroes.


    After all, the change wouldn’t have happened without them.
  21. facebook.com/swinthrop

    Just let me know who you are or I may think you're a random stranger from the internet...oh wait.
  22. This is what I'm trying to figure out, too.
  23. Despite the news of today, this is still happening.

    It may be the last SSTFM ever, but that's all the more reason to make it memorable.
  24. Hope it was a good one. Happy belated!