Tag archives for video game

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Good luck with that

So I wonder how that whole PlayStation 3 thing is going to pan out tonight and tomorrow. Have you followed any of the hype on this thing? Supposedly the PS3 will be the most powerful video game system ever. Unfortunately, it's also by far the most expensive.

I'm a bit of a game enthusiast, so I've been keeping tabs on all the news stories that have been sneaking out by ones and twos over the last year or so. I'm convinced the decision makers at Sony are hitting the sake a little too hard.

$600?!

Yeah, yeah… it's actually a bargain considering all the beefy hardware inside the console. It's another step down the road to video games that look like "playing a movie." It's neat, cool and interesting, etc., etc. And it is the cheapest way to get a Blu-ray player. (This is really valid point… a PS3 with a Blu-ray player is several hundred dollars cheaper than a stand-alone Blu-ray player. Sony's taking a loss with that component with the hope of advancing their standard.)

But I still think Sony missed the mark with this. The Blu-ray standard is overhyped, and there's no guarantee it will survive its format war with HD-DVD. The rest of the hardware in the PS3 is fantastic, but it will probably be underutilized for years to come. Developers of major releases always want to ensure wide availability, so games will largely be written for the least common denominator. Many developers won't be willing to release completely specialized versions of their games to leverage the PS3's advanced features, so you'll have many PS3 games that play exactly the same as their Xbox 360 or even PS2 counterparts. That particular trend will probably continue for at least a year or possibly longer as developers wait for the PS3 to achieve larger market penetration. And then consider that a lot of the whiz-bang graphics won't be that big a deal without an HDTV, which most people still don't have and which probably won't be a market standard for at least several more years.

The PS3 will be marketed directly against Microsoft's Xbox 360, which has been on the market for some time now, and Nintendo's forthcoming Wii console. Now Nintendo's really got something going. While the 360 and the PS3 are merely evolutionary, the Wii is truly revolutionary. Wii's motion-sensitive controller has the potential to take gaming to completely new levels. I've read quite a few articles about how technology demonstrations quickly turn into a chorus of onlookers chirping "I want one!" Wii looks poised to attract hordes of non-traditional game players with its completely new style of gameplay. And did I mention the Wii will be half the price of a PS3?

The Wii doesn't come anywhere near the hardware standards set by Microsoft or Sony, but Nintendo seems to have remembered something the other two have forgotten. It's all about play, and the Wii looks like a ton of fun. The PS3 is just a prettier version of the same old thing.

Despite its price and its drawbacks, there will still be a PS3 feeding frenzy when the console is released tonight. Prices on eBay are trending above $2000. Last night at my local Wal-Mart store, there were already five twenty-somethings camped out waiting. And waiting outside, in sub-freezing weather. I sincerely hope those boys are making "entrepreneurial" purchases and are looking for that fast eBay profit.

Come what may, I'm really looking forward to the bevy of news stories about fights, thefts, fraud and small-scale riots that happen around the country as people jostle to snap up the limited supply. I'll leave them to it.

Wednesday, March 1, 2006

A snippet

The Chicken: Dad?

Me: Yeah?

Chicken: When I get home from school can I play Marvel Menesis?

Me: Nemesis.

Chicken: Menesis.

Me: Nemesis.

Chicken: Nenesis.

Me: Nemesis.

Chicken: Memesis.

Me: Nemesis.

Chicken: Menesis.

Me: Nemesis.

Chicken: Nemesis.

Me: That's it, you got it kiddo! Nemesis.

Chicken: So can I play it when I get home from school?

Me: Sure, as long as your mom says it's ok.

(pause)

Me: So what's this game called?

Chicken: Marvel Menesis.

Thursday, January 12, 2006

I suspect…

…I've been spending too much time playing video games.

There's a bird's nest in a tree across the street. Whenever I see it I want to shoot it to see if more ammunition will fall out of it.

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Top five things I did while nursing my stomach

5. Giggled over my comments, especially Frankie's Ode to The Fish.

4. Slept, excessively.

3. Ate Saltines and drank water, excessively.

2. Played Resident Evil 4 for PS2. This game rules. I loves me some zombies, but this is the first game in the series I've ever been able to play seriously.

1. Watched Battlestar Galactica. This show is brilliant. Maybe I'm seeing only what I expected to see, but still. Nearly every moment is saturated with conspiracy and paranoia. There are suicide bombers, sleeper agents, military tribunals. There's honor, despair, madness. And Number 6 is constantly getting nekkid.

Umm… ok.

SOCOM IISOCOM II

At The Chicken's bus stop this morning:

Carrie (a neighborhood girl): Have you heard of soakem?

Me: Soak 'em?

Carrie: No, SOCOM!

Me: SOCOM?

Carrie: Yeah.

Me: The video games?

Carrie: Yeah.

Me: Yeah, I know SOCOM.

Carrie: SOCOM II is a really good game. It's a war game.

Me: You play SOCOM?

Carrie: Yeah.

Me: And your parents are ok with that?

Carrie: Yeah.

Me: Umm… ok.

 
What the hell is wrong with Carrie's mom? She's letting her six year-old daughter play a graphic military simulator, which by the way is rated "M for Mature (17+)."

Sunday, September 18, 2005

Vacanigans*, part 6

*Subtitle: I knew you were messing with me. Finally, something happens!

Wednesday began the same as every other day so far. We slept in, then attempted to do absolutely nothing for as long as possible. Amazingly, The Kid actually slept late that morning. He didn't get up until nearly 10. Girlfriend and I passed the time watching more Lord of The Rings. It was even her idea this time. Like I'd hoped, she was actually getting involved in the story. We finished all of The Two Towers that morning.

Around noon, we packed our bags for the only vacation-like event in our whole vacation. We were off to a hotel and family waterpark place about an hour south of here. Check-in time wasn't until 4 p.m., so we killed time wandering aimlessly around a mall near the hotel.

At a discount bookstore, I finally got around to buying that copy of Christopher Hitchens' "Why Orwell Matters." I'll probably never read it, but it looks nice on my bookshelf.

When finally we arrived at the hotel, The Kid saw the waterpark through the giant lobby window and begin doing his best impression of a meth-addled chihuahua with a bladder problem. It simply was not possible to move fast enough in his quest to get into his swim trunks and start playing.

We checked-in, got our wrist bands, and found our room. ("Dad, can we go yet?") Then we found the nearest entrance to our room and moved the car closer to that door. ("Hurry, Dad!") Because, of course, we guessed wrong and parked all the way on the other side of the complex. ("Dad, come on!")

We got our bags back to our room and changed into our suits. ("Is it time yet, Dad?") We made the trek down to the water park, and The Kid nearly passed out from the excitement. It was one of those "kid in a candy store" moments. He had no idea what to do first. He ran around like a fool for nearly ten minutes ("Hey, no running! You're gonna fall on your head!"), unable to decide what to do first.

Girlfriend wasn't too thrilled about any of it. She's one of those women who thinks she looks terrible in a swimsuit, i.e., she is a woman. I've tried convincing her she's wrong, but that's just not going to happen. Ever. So she spent most of her time submerged to her neck in the whirlpool off in the corner.

Which left me to follow The Kid as he gleefully zoomed from one play area to another. The whole thing would have been excruciatingly dull for me if not for one thing: soccermoms. Oh, sweet Jesus, the soccermoms. They were everywhere, and in various states of undress.

"Ooh, look at that one. She's workin' that bikini. Yeah, that's right, jump up and down with the kids. You know how I like it. What's that noise? Is someone coughing?"   "Whoa, sorry Kid. Didn't see you drowning there. Try to be more careful, ok little man?"   "Now where was I? Hey, check out that one over there. Oh my God, she's playing with one of the pull chain shower thingies…"

After a few hours of frolicking, we went back to our room to dry off and dress for dinner. Nearly everyone else would do the same thing: walk back to their rooms fresh from the water. So seeing all those soccermoms wrapped in towels walking through the hallways made me think of a lot of alternate definitions for the term "room service."

Anyway… we dried, dressed, and went to a ribs restaurant. I was so disappointed that we couldn't get The Kid to order ribs. I was all atwitter at the thought of seeing him with BBQ sauce hanging everyplace from his ears to his eyebrows. But unfortunately, he just wasn't playing my game. He chose a mini cheese pizza. Bummer.

After dessert it was back to the hotel. This time The Kid was all charged up about the wallet-draining arcade the fine people at the hotel saw fit to place right next to the only entrance to the waterpark.

Being even less interested in video games than waterslides, Girlfriend stayed in our room to curl up with a book while I took The Kid to waste vast amounts of money. (I've you've never read The Hot Librarian, now is an excellent time to check out her Chuck E. Cheese vs. The Hot Librarian post. It's a similar experience, only hers has liquor, Eriq La Salle, and is generally much funnier.)

Before leaving home, we stopped by the bank to cash in The Kid's piggy bank. He had a whopping $17.11 in his pocket. We started out by getting five dollars in tokens: $3 of his money and $2 of mine. Again, he ran around like a fool trying to decide which game he'd play first. He burned through the five dollars in minutes and was back to begging for more money. We played a bit of a game with this whole thing, one I knew he'd end up losing.

"Kid, you can spend as much of your money as you want. It's your money."

"I want to spend it all, Dad!"

"You can do that if you want, but remember we're going shopping tomorrow. If you spend all your money now, you won't be able to buy anything tomorrow."

"Oh. I want to buy stuff tomorrow, too."

"So much money do you want to spend now?"

"I want to spend it all, Dad!"

We went back and forth like this, two and three dollars at a time, until he'd burned through all seventeen of his dollars and ten of mine too. These arcade machines are all fitted to dispense tickets at the end of a game, so when the money dried up we went to cash them all in and choose prizes.

The Kid had his eye on a 10-inch plush Lisa Simpson for 800 tickets. After 90 minutes and 27 dollars, we had 415 tickets. The Kid ended up settling for a hacky sack, a plastic matchbox car, an eraser, and a Tootsie Roll.

He took that particular disappointment better than I might have expected. He was probably still on something of a video game high. On the way back to our room to sleep he asked, "Can we go again tomorrow, Dad?"

"Sure… you can spend the rest of your money anyway you want."

"How much do I have left?"

"Eleven cents."

"How many games can I get with that?"

"None."

Pause. "Dad, that wasn't very nice."

Saturday, February 26, 2005

Spending my life simulating life

For several weeks now, I've been thinking about buying The Sims for GameCube. I've already got The Sims for PC, along with several of the expansion packs and a lot of downloads and other mods. And honestly, I haven't played it in a year or so. So why the hell do I want another version?

I really don't know. But yesterday I bought it anyway.

So I played The Sims last night, and it was a lot of fun. But then, I was also drinking tequila. So maybe that was the fun part.

Saturday, June 21, 2003

Gesamtkunstwerk and the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals

Unless you follow CNET's news.com pretty regularly, you probably haven't heard about a recent court decision that's really important for geeks like me. Well, it's important for all of us, but more directly important for geeks like me.

The federal 8th Circuit Court of Appeals in Missouri ruled the other day that video and computer games are protected forms of artistic expression.

The case involved a St. Louis ordinance that prohibited selling graphically violent video games to minors. The court decided that if paintings, music, and poetry are protected by the First Amendment, then video games should be, too. "We see no reason why the pictures, graphic design, concept art, sounds, music, stories and narrative present in video games are not entitled to similar protection," the judges wrote. "The mere fact that they appear in a novel medium is of no legal consequence." In a few short sentences the court declared that games are art, or at least that they have the potential to be.

I'm very pleased by the court finding that video games have the potential to be much more than mindless diversion. Admittedly, most games (whether for PC, or Xbox, or whatever), are just that… games. The average game is no more intellectually stimulating than Solitaire, and even the best multi-player computer games often lack the basic human interaction of Chess or even a simple game of Go Fish.

But that's today. What about tomorrow? Graphic video games are a fairly new thing. 25 years ago, Pong was the big thing. Like computers, games are growing and changing in giant strides.

As disappointed as I was with The Matrix Reloaded, the Wachowski brothers are really on to something. On May 15th (the same day as the movie's release), Enter The Matrix was released for PC, Xbox, PS2, and Game Cube. The game ties into, but does not duplicate, the movie. The Animatrix (on home video and DVD only) says on the back of the box that the short films contained therein set up and tie into both the game and all three movies.

The Wachowski brothers Gesamtkunstwerk isn't really anything new, but it is uncommon that it's attempted with such sincerity. This is the first time that I've seen anyone try to bring these three different mediums together to truly create one immersive experience, each medium complimenting the other. Movie tie-ins are nothing new (anyone else remember the atrocious E.T. for the Atari 2600?), but it's rare that it's intended as something other than a cheap marketing hustle. The Wachowski brothers scripted the game. Jada Pinkett Smith stars as Niobe. Keanu Reeves appears as Neo. The Wachowski's idea is that 1 + 1 + 1 = 7. Even if it's implemented badly, it's an interesting harbinger of things to come.

And yet if the naysayers of the world had their say, we'd not be able to watch the movie, buy the video, or play the game. We'd end up with 1 + 1 + [CENSORED] = ? The court's decision is important because we are just beginning to enter a new era of interactive entertainment.

I'm pleased by the court's ruling because new ideas are often born on the fringe, not in the mainstream. The court has set a precedent by protecting as art a new medium that could have a profound impact on our lives much sooner than we think.

At the same time, I think the court goofed up big time. In protecting the artist's expression, the court may have damaged the medium the artist uses. The best way to ensure that this concept grows and matures is the keep it front and center, readily available to anyone who wants it. And the best way to do that is to make sure that 12 year olds can't buy The Animatrix and Grand Theft Auto. Protecting speech and protecting children are not mutually exclusive goals.

I would have liked to see the court order a revision to the law, perhaps something strictly enforcing the game industry's own rating system. Remember the "let's blame Columbine on DOOM" frenzy in the late 90s? The criticism was almost universally misplaced, but the industry made changes anyway. Just about every game sold today is very honestly rated by the manufacturer.

Grand Theft Auto III (and its follow-up Vice City) is probably the most notorious game on the market right now. In addition to the staple game idea "shoot bad guy, complete mission," GTAIII is what Senator Lieberman will eventually refer to (if he hasn't already) as a "crime simulator." Through the course of a game, you will visit prostitutes to get bonus health, then bludgeon to death those same prostitutes to get your money back. You'll use rockets on police helicopters, aim for heads with high-powered rifles, and run over pedestrians just to hear that squishy, crunchy sound.

GTAIII is a lot of fun, but basically has no redeeming social value. But then the same could be said of Playboy Magazine. Both are now protected forms of speech. Both deserve wide availability to those who want them.

And both deserve to be behind the counter, where kids can't get at them unless Mom and Dad make the informed decision that what's inside the package is okay for their youngsters.