First things first: This is something I'm doing just for fun. Heh. "Fun".
This isn't a showcase of nor an attempt to polish my skills (even though I probably should).
This isn't a professional portfolio or a resume (even though I probably should make one of those).
This is, primarily, just my attempt at breaking away from the overly-sanitized, corporate-designed sites that have now taken over every corner of the world wide web. I just wanna bring back something like the HTML pages of old.
Secondarily, this is where I hope to post some of my thoughts, hobbies, and projects here. Maybe even some of my games, when I get around to finishing them.
Lastly, but certainly not the least, this is where I hope to meet some like-minded people who are also tired of what the web has become and want to bring back some of what the web used to be. If that's you, then hey, welcome! I hope you enjoy your stay here.
If you have any suggestions or feedback, feel free to reach out to me on /INSERT CONTACT DETAILS HERE, cause privacy?/.

Yup, that's me.
I'm Lance. I'm a software developer (lol), a gamer, and a general nerd (I guess?).
I didn't have a lot of money growing up, but I made due with what we had. Biking on construction yards (pretending the sand mound was a mountain), flying kites, and exploring were my starting past-times.
Through the generosity of others, I added gaming and an R/C truck to my early hobbies.
I have a lot of interests, but some of my main ones include:
WARNING! The following is a long long list. Open at your own risk.
Ooh boy, where do I begin? I suppose these are the ones that influenced me a lot, in the order that I remember playing them:
Before I was a gamer, I was an avid watcher of cartoons. I was fortunate enough to have cable most of my childhood, and here are just some of the cartoons that shaped my young imagination:
I was in grade school when I watched Star Wars for the first time... on rented VHS tapes. (Remember those?)
I wasn't exactly in to it, at first; my brain just couldn't comprehend, I guess. Couple that with the fact that we only rented the VHS tapes for it, and I never got around to repeat viewings.
Everything changed when Star Wars: The Phantom Menace was shown in the cinema.
I remember seeing a news clipping about it in a library and I wanted to TRACE it on my pencil case. The librarian, annoyed, just told me to cut out the picture and paste it. Bless her.
What followed next was a blur.
We got a VCD player, and got the Original Trilogy on VCDs. (Remember those? They came in pairs)
I remember watching those CDs on an almost weekly basis. My sister and I would repeatedly quote the characters.
The magic of Star Wars, as a whole, got to me, when, upon chancing on an unknown movie on HBO (or Cinemax, idk), I saw Harrison Ford. He was getting beaten up in a glass elevator by a guy with a fake nose. To this day, I still don't know what that movie was.
I turned to my mom and excitedly claimed that that was Harrison Ford, Han Solo's actor.
I also stated that I was very impressed with what looked like OLD MAN MAKE-UP that they put on poor Harrison.
My mom corrected me; that wasn't old man make-up. That was Harrison Ford looked like. Star Wars was made years before I was even born. It never occured to me until that moment.
And as Count Dooku said, "This is just the beginning."
My aunt from US would also occasionally send toys, and mine were Star Wars Lego sets. I had the original X-wing, Lego System Set 7140.
Whenever our family computer would break down, a family acquaintance would fix it, and also install games procured from the Seven Seas.
Two of those were Star Wars: Rogue Squadron, and Star Wars Episode 1 Racer.
A few years later, after the conclusion of the Prequel Trilogy, my best friend would tell me about this awesome game he had - Star Wars: Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast, and it remains my favorite Star Wars game to this day.
Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy would soon follow as one of my favorites, and it got my introverted ass online on modded game (ForceMod III) as 'Zack_Falcon'.
I never quite fit in with kids at school. Even my best friend, almost as big of a Star Wars geek as I was, was at the very least was charismatic enough to be part of the in-crowd. Star Wars just was NOT a thing where I grew up, and is largely still not a thing.
But I wouldn't trade my love for Star Wars for anything.
The Sequel Trilogy can go kick rocks tho.
If I had the talent for it, I'd like to make some videos regarding my ideas on how the Sequel Trilogy could be done better.
But that's for another time, perhaps, even... Later™.
Got my start with the game GLTron, with the awesome soundtrack. I never was very good at it, but I enjoyed the visuals. I was playing it on the family computer when my uncle came in, saw what I was playing, and casually mentioned that there was a movie about that game.
I never got around to watching said movie then.
But it was many years later, with utterly excellent and criminally underrated with Tron: Uprising, that I finally entered the fandom. I will admit I'm a bigger fan of the recent entries in the Tron franchise than the original film, but I loved the Grid.
I'm probably the biggest Tron fan in my area. Maybe even my country, because sadly, like Star Wars, this is just one of those things that isn't popular where I'm from.
I commissioned a cosplay maker to create a Tron Uprising-inspired jacket for me. If she ever finishes it, I'll show it off here, or maybe a dedicated Projects page.
I got into this hobby because of some old Tower Hobbies magazine, where I saw an excerpt from an RC Car Action magazine or something, detailing the comparison between the Tamiya Clodbuster and the Kyosho USA-1, and I thought they looked awesome! While I always preferred the looks of the USA-1, over the Clod, I couldn't afford either.
Sometime in my early teens, the whole family, extended and all, pitched together to buy me a Kyosho QRC-series Wild Dodge Ram for my birthday! I loved that thing, even if I must confess that I haven't played with as much as I'd like. It was only later when I realized how special it was, to have a Nitro-powered truck (I never did think it a "Monster" truck) with reverse! That feature was apparently rare, and the truck itself, more so, considering where we lived.
Despite all the years I've spent running the Wild Dodge Ram, I've never forgotten my love for a real Monster Truck, and I hope to build one someday, preferably, with the parts from my old Ram.
First things first: I actually try to be punctual.
So why "Always Late"? Well, sometimes it just feels that way, y'know?
I grew up in less-than-well-off family.
I watched friends and classmates around me get what they want and need, given or earned. I barely even had an allowance - McDonald's was a luxury, not "fast food".
It wasn't all bad. We had a family computer used for work, which was eventually used for schoolwork, and eventually for gaming. I had a pretty good childhood, all things considered.
I told myself that when I graduate, I would work for the rest.
But as Dr. Ian Malcolm said, "Life, uh, life finds a way." (to screw things up), and I ended up in a situation where I had to take care of my family instead of pursuing my own goals.
My friends and classmates are now talking about (or already have) their own families, houses, cars, their own lives. Meanwhile my proudest purchase were the Toy Story Signature Collection Buzz Lightyear and Woody figures that I always wanted since I was a kid.

To be fair, they are pretty sweet.
Feels like life passed me by.

Dumbledore said calmly, after hyping up Slytherin only to utterly, utterly destroy them
There is some progress, I'd like to think. I was able to buy little things (LEGO sets). Then bigger things (a laptop!). And then I got to travel a bit (Japan!). And for as long as I'm able, I'll try to get where I wanna be, wherever that is.
Even if I get there a little Late™.
This site was built using Next.js, a React framework blah blah blah. The styling was done using Tailwind CSS, a utility-first blah blah blah. Yeah, we're not here for that lmao.
Here's to the people, websites, and resources that help made this thing happen:
How I discovered this whole thing: A Web Revival: the Internet didn't die, you're just not on it - by OnionbootsI'm sure there's more I'm missing, I'll add them here as I build this website!