Literature

Am i game obsessed?

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gamesindustry.biz has a great presentation of Will Wright’s BAFTA Video Games inaugural lecture. Somethign that moved me was this story he told in the context of society more and more worried about it’s youth getting obsessed with games:

“There was this guy, and he walked into a room, and he saw a person sitting on the other side of the room, absorbed in this device. And he was so fixated on this device that he didn’t even notice this fellow walking into the room – he could tell, it was like he wasn’t even there, and he’d displaced himself to another time and place.

“And it creeped him out, he thought this guy was possessed by the devil.

“What this was, it was the sixteenth century, and it was the first time he’d seen somebody reading a book.”

Am I obsessed with games? I guess so… but what people who know me forget or don’t know is that games haven’t really changed who I am, just took over my previous inner life. Before games started having more artwork I was deep in imaginary worlds in books. I’m talking 10-12 hours a day when I had the chance deep. I guess there’s just some people out there who prefer to live in a immaterial world and build their reality in there… be it books, music, games…

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be-witcher-ing

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I must admit I had pretty much written The Witcher off. Not only did it seem like a lower budget product (engine, animation in particular, possibly not so great audio…) but besides forcing me to play through the point&click interface of PC RPGing when I have grown to like so much playing with a gamepad it committed what to me is one of the worst sins ever: yet another "been there done that" medieval world with the promisses of lots of hack and slashing. Why can’t people make a non-standard medieval world? I mean, town, inn, swords, outlands of the city infested with monsters… it’s been soooooo done. And then some. I don’t expect all the games to be as original as placing the setting in the Planescape universe, or constructing something as intricate as the Legacy of Kain mythology, but even other cliches would be better. Or a White Wolf setting? Vampire The Masquerade anybody… Or even better… something new, something creative. Or at a least something with a different aestethic feel. Morrowind for example managed to make a medieval setting feel somewhat fresh with interesting architecture types. The Witcher in the meanwhile besides putting me off with the promise of a combat oriented game showed me standard out of the box medieval houses. And inns!!!
So why I am writing about it? I certanly don’t like bashing things or being all critical like… The reason I’m writing this is because there’s new hope: this video… well, i had seen other videos that hinted the game might have a bit of that grey morality that would be so fresh given all the "be super good"/"be cruel evil" choice games… but this video promissed a lot more… it promissed options. Branches. They don’t even try to kid us with "there’ll be a kazillion gameplay modes"… but they do say 3 completelly different ones, and they do say something that I’ve dreamed of for so long: choices that matter. Choices who’s consequences show up hours after the decision sounds VEEERYYY goood. Then again my heart has been broken before by games which promissed choices and moral depth only to discouver that they were only for marketing or amazingly shallow… but if this is true, well, then all other faults of the game I may be able to forgive, I might even play it on the PC (should i one day get one that will play it well and be able to configure my gamepad to fake a mouse)… That makes 3 games I can dare hope will create choice rich experiences: Fallout 3, Mass Effect & Witcher. Now chances are (from past heart breaks and realizing what an incredible expense and unreasonable thing it is to create a choice oriented game) that 2 out of 3 will barely touch meaningful choices… but that still leaves 1 game i may hope will encourage self-expressing immersive gameplay in the next 2 years. Yeayyy!!!!
PS: I know the chances are slim, but wouldn’t it be cool if Final Fantasy XIII decided to so embrace western approaches that it offered choices or GTA 4 ended up having so much content that it pretty much turned into a self-expressing rpg type experience?
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Memories of Doom atmosphere & Heretic artwork

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   Can’t say Doom is a title that pops to mind when I think of an artistic game: it feels more like a gameplay game. A game about shooting, survival… And yet it feels like it’s made an emotional mark. It may be just repetition/familiarity/my time spent on figuring out Carmack’s programming through playing with code in DosDoom (Plutonia and TNT wads most of the time) or more likely the fact that I was so freakin excited about all the amazing maps people made for it and spent countless hours trying them (one with a very emotional atmosphere given by NiN midi music pops to mind). My point being: to me it still feels like it has a certain feeling. It’s technical limitations of 2d bsps resulted in a very specific style of artwork, a certain kind of design by symetry/asymetry. Anyway, just found myself on this whole memory-emotional rolercoster reading a gamedaily retrospective of the Doom series. I’m talking about Doom 2 & associated wads mostly. Doom 3 had a very promissing start that made me feel like a writer was behind it, and indeed the audio journals were a great touch, however it too soon turned into maze walking (even backtracking i think) through all too similar environments and though i finished it from that point it lost artistic value to me and all the great graphics, shadows and bumpmapping in the world couldn’t save it for me. Unfortunatelly in my opinion ID software have always been more of a technology company… and though they shaped and led 3d graphics through time my heart still remains with those who use technology for artwork. Take Raven Software: they took the doom engine and made the amazingly art-oriented Heretic. Sure, it ran horrible even ages after, and it didn’t cast any blazing trails… but the artwork in it… yum yum yum. Inspiring.
   Note: I make a HUGE distinction between graphics in the sense of technology and in the sense of artwork. IMHO you can have a top notch engine running on high end hardware producing things that feel ordinary, even if they do it in super high detail, or you can have a world with low res textures, running on a weak engine and ancient hardware that still hints at great artistic elements or even manages to make you forget the technology and enjoy the artwork. For example for me the Heretic game is so full of story, one told just by it’s artwork: i completelly forgot it’s game story, but it’s artwork has told my mind a fascinating story, of a magical world, and yet not fantasy, but somehow dark/scifi.. of ancient civilizations and ritual temples.
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