Saturday, October 23, 2004

Nintendo Censorship

Did you know that Nintendo US has a censorship policy? Some games released in Japan were altered for the release in US. This page details some examples which include changing blook to sweat in Mortal Kombat and changing the cross on tombstones of Ducktales to the letters RIP. Interesting.

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

Sony Ericsson Concept Phones

This webpage contains the many entries submitted for a Sony Ericsson concept phone design competition. Some are looks cool, others look functional. There are also some that looks futuristic, and yet others are just downright insane. Whatever it is, it'll be so cool if even one of these makes it into the market.

Turn off that TV set!

Irritated by TV sets blasting everywhere? Wanna turn them off? There's this device called the TV-B-Gone, which is a new key-chain size universal remote that turns off almost any television. The device, which looks like an automobile remote, has just one button. When activated, it spends over a minute flashing out 209 different codes to turn off televisions, the most popular brands first. Good when you need some quiet time or some prank at your local electronics store.

Tuesday, October 19, 2004

Give to Child's Play

The folks at Penny Arcade are doing their bit for charity again. Last year, they got gamers around the world to donate over $250,000 in cash and toys (you can check out the pictures of the amount of toys and games they bought on their website) to the Seattle Children's Hospital. This year, they are expanding their effort to more hospitals in the US. Who says gamers are not socially conscious? And won't it be good if we can do something similar in Singapore? This will help to dispel the misconception that gamers are recluse.

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Understanding Games

How about that? Raph Koster, the lead designer of Ultima Online is writing this book called Theory of Fun for Game Design. It's suppose to be for gaming what Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud is for comics. For those who read McCloud's book, it is an essential read for comic book fans or anyone trying to understand what comics is all about. It explains the theory of how comic books works. If Theory of Fun can do a similar thing, then it will certainly help more non-gamers understand gaming.

Monday, October 11, 2004

Gaming helps traders score big-time

More evidence of why gaming is good for you. I bet now everyone wants to be a gamer...
Video game skills and a good poker face online are becoming essential job qualifications in the financial markets, with recruitment drives assessing potential star traders in online gaming exams.
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And part of their assessment process involves studying an applicant in a video game exercise.
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"It is unlikely that we would hire someone who didn't show good proficiency at a GameBoy or online poker or similar video-type game where hand-to-eye coordination is important."

Media Center extender using a Xbox controller

What this guy did was to repurpose a Xbox controller and a Hip Gear LCD screen and use it to remotely control his Media Center PC. Quite an ingenius use of the Xbox controller.

Thursday, October 07, 2004

Bible stories using LEGO

Is there any story that you can't use LEGO bricks to tell? This site called The Brick Testament uses LEGO bricks to tell the stories in the Bible. Come on, it contains the greatest story ever told and now it's told using LEGO. Is that cool or what?

The New Games Journalism

This piece could become a manifesto for games journalism and writing in general.
New Games Journalism exists to try and explain and transfer the sensations allowed by videogaming to anyone who's willing to sit and take time to read it. It paradoxically manages find a way to be more accessible to the average human being by actually concentrating on the real reasons why people devote huge chunks of their waking hours to games rather than obsessing in tedious detail over the ephemera that surrounds it (How many levels? how many guns? Can I be Goro?). It asks the question “Why game anyway” and then gives as many answers as they are people, as interesting as people, as precious.
I fully agree. It's time games writing grows up, time to be taken seriously.

Friday, October 01, 2004

The Dilbert Ultimate House

Based on readers' suggestions, Scott Adams have come up with the Dilbert house for Dilbert to stay in. Real world experts have also helped to conceptualised this house. There are indeed some nifty features found here, including basketball court in the basement and a vacuum robot. Must be a dream home for a single guy!

Video games stars in MTV

We've seen many crossovers in media today. Book characters in movies. Movie characters in games. Comic book heroes in movies. Now, video games characters are on MTV. MTV's programme Video Mods have game characters from games like Tribes and BloodRayne forming a band and playing the music of bands like Evanescence and Fountains of Wayne. Sounds like a promo tool for the games? You bet. But it's yet another proof that gaming's cultural influence is here to stay.