Sure, some might stare a bit cockeyed at the EarthBound fan community, but you can’t say they’re not resourceful, dedicated, and above all, tenacious. Proof positive: over 250 pages of devotion bound in one book, theEarthBound Anthology.

When the news dropped of the Mother3.org/Starmen.net collaboration, I mentioned something of the StarmenEB Siege project, an endeavor for which the EarthBound fan community was raising a pretty substantial sum of money (now over $7,500). FedEx dropped the fruits of their labor into my lap this morning: a metric ton compilation of artwork, music, and media by members of theEarthBoundfan community.

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TheEarthBound Anthologychronicles the saga of Shigesato Itoi’sMotherseries and its commercial flop in North America, background information on the franchise, sales data and the myriad campaigns waged by Starmen.net and the fan community to bringEarthBoundback to North America. The weighty text portion of the anthology ends with a proposal: the time is ripe for a revival, and there’s a mighty audience waiting for Nintendo to capitalize on the opportunity. Driving the point home are 200+ pages of fan art and four DVDs loaded with fan games, music, videos, performances — it’s an absolute avalanche of content.

The goal of EB Siege is to extend the reach of the community out towards would-be allies to the cause, media, developers, and Nintendo itself and communicate their message: that this is a series, beyond all others in Nintendo’s catalog, that should not be swept aside. Even ifEarthBoundain’t really your thing, you have to recognize Starmen.net’s gesture as one that goes beyond the standard-issue objections by most of the internet (“biological web shooters!? Quick, to petitiononline.org!”). More than a simple fan DVD or ‘zine or somesuch, theEarthBound Anthologyis an extremely well-designed, terribly comprehensive love-letter to the fan community and a clear message to Nintendo that they won’t soon forget.

John and Molly sitting on the park bench

Check out the pictures in the gallery. Big thanks toStarmen’sReid for the hook-up.

Close up shot of Marissa Marcel starring in Ambrosio

Kukrushka sitting in a meadow

Lightkeeper pointing his firearm overlapped against the lighthouse background

Overseer looking over the balcony in opening cutscene of Funeralopolis

Edited image of Super Imposter looking through window in No I’m not a Human demo cutscene with thin man and FEMA inside the house

Indie game collage of Blue Prince, KARMA, and The Midnight Walk

Close up shot of Jackie in the Box

Silhouette of a man getting shot as Mick Carter stands behind cover