As someone who ordered the previous licensed version that never ever delivered and that company is currently being taken to court by the state of Pennsylvania, I'm not touching this.
I've backed most of GeekClub's previous KickStarter campaigns and received everything I had put money towards including an extra set of kits for one of the campaigns for some reason. The kits are generally pretty good although the instructions are less great in my opinion. From what I can tell in the comment sections, a lot of the people the complain about not getting items are people that never filled out the surveys with their shipping information. Of course, with it being KickStarter, buyer beware is always the rule.
The butter passing robot was a perfect early encapsulation of Rick and Morty's recurring themes of casual indifference to suffering, ennui, and abuse of sentience for convenience.
Vaguely science-magic sounding technobabble is so out of tune with the product's (ironically) purpose it's almost unreal.
I'm a little surprised that with the current state of electronics and machine learning there hasn't been (as far as I'm aware) a resurgence of similar toy robots - a sort of updated Omnibot as it were.
I remember wanting one of those so badly as a kid and they didn't even do much.
I too wanted an Omnibot so bad I could taste it. Those were pricey little numbers, though, for something that barely did anything. Either that or a Heathkit HERO, as seen on Mr. Wizard's World, which was actually programmable. Was more than happy with the Radio Shack Armatron I got.
Does it have a ai formed by plugging a society going through a singularity from a simulation? In other words can Kurweil pass me the butter, while in existential crisis?
[0] https://www.cbsnews.com/pittsburgh/news/pa-attorney-general-...
“You commit an incredibly boring sort of fraud.”
looks at hands
“Oh my god”
"Quantum climate calculator"? "IR Magic Wand"? "Galactic Soldering Arena"?
None of that is remotely on-brand.
The butter passing robot was a perfect early encapsulation of Rick and Morty's recurring themes of casual indifference to suffering, ennui, and abuse of sentience for convenience.
Vaguely science-magic sounding technobabble is so out of tune with the product's (ironically) purpose it's almost unreal.
I remember wanting one of those so badly as a kid and they didn't even do much.
I too wanted an Omnibot so bad I could taste it. Those were pricey little numbers, though, for something that barely did anything. Either that or a Heathkit HERO, as seen on Mr. Wizard's World, which was actually programmable. Was more than happy with the Radio Shack Armatron I got.
(1) https://rickandmorty.fandom.com/wiki/Purpose_Robot