Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Pre-E3 videos
Courtesy of Joystiq.com, there's a round up of 10 of the E3 videos released so far.
- Call of Duty: Modern Warfare
- Dead or Alive: Deformed
- Dungeon Hero
- NHL '08
- Fury
- Need for Speed ProStreet
- SpaceForce: RU
- European Street Racing
- TimeShift
- Legendary: The Box
Interesting -- 10 vids, and 3 are from Austin upstart "we-don't-need-the-stinkin'-man" publisher GameCock Media.
My favorite video?
Probably GameCock's Legendary: The Box. I've said it before: "Anything mythology. Anything."
And Dungeon Hero. Because I likes my dungeon crawling.
Oh, and "like-a-phoenix-from-the-ashes" TimeShift.Labels: E3 2007, previews, video game violence
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SOURCES: Gamespot.com, joystiq.com, kotaku.com, Xbox.com, IGN, GameInformer, Official XBox Magazine, CNN, gamesindustry.biz, and others.
Saturday, May 05, 2007
Video game play premieres tonight ...
Hey, "Spider-Man: The Musical" is coming (so, so torn), so why not "Counter-Strike: The Play"?
OK, it's actually called "First Person Shooter", it's from the mind of Aaron Loeb from Planet Moon Studios (the brilliant Armed & Dangerous / Giants: Citizen Kabuto / MDK), and it premieres tonight at the San Francisco Playhouse.
Here's the official summary of the play: First Person Shooter takes us inside 'JetPack Games', a start-up video game company, where the hottest, most violent game on the market has brought instant success to its twenty-something tech geniuses. Their celebration fizzles when their game is blamed for a schoolyard shooting. As the young CEO of Jet Pack deals with an impending lawsuit and the father of one of the victims, he must confront whether he has any responsibilities in the world beyond his computer screen. Aaron Loeb was a video game reporter at the time of the Littleton, Colorado shootings: "[Loeb] wanted to write a play about the people caught in the echo chamber of the debate. What must it be like for the people actually accused of making a game that turns kids into killers? What about the parents of the victims? Their children are dead and the news is jam packed with talk of something so trivial as videogames!" Kudos to Loeb for taking this on -- not necessarily for the content, but for taking what he knows into a new medium to explore something important. And for doing more than sensationalizing and cheapening single events (and extrapolating those single events to describe the "problem" / "solution").
If you're in SF and get a chance to see it, let me know how it is. I'll try to get down there before the run ends June 9.Labels: events, media intersection, video game violence
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SOURCES: Gamespot.com, joystiq.com, kotaku.com, Xbox.com, IGN, GameInformer, Official XBox Magazine, CNN, gamesindustry.biz, and others.
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