Archive for the Fluff Category

I should start updating this again.

A few key things have happened since my last post (wow, over a year ago), so I guess I should write stuff here now.  I’ll follow this up later with interesting things!

1000 Blank White Cards, a game

We played this on Sunday when we weren’t able to have game:

http://www.elsewhere.org/discordian/bwcards.html/

It was a lot of fun, with cards ranging from the Monty Python foot to Lag to Rain.  If you have a bunch of 3×5s, some pens and some friends who are bored then it’s worth the pirce of admission.

Linking Violence and Video Games still a hot topic

Of course, you read that and think “well duuuuh, you have a link to GamePolitics right over there.” When you actually see what a psychologist hands you for a “survey”, you’ll wonder if they’ve ever touched a controller.

It started off with the usual demographics - age, gender, race, married or not. It asked daily how much time you spend gaming (4 hours a day nowadays) and how much today (30 minutes, jumped in to play a little Beyond Good and Evil) which brings me to my first issue. This is the list of games they apparently know about:

  • First Person Shooter
  • Sports
  • Simulator (Sims, Real Life? Real Life isn’t a game!)
  • Real-Time Strategy
  • MMORPG

I wrote in “Other - Adventure - Beyond Good and Evil”. Note also how they listed FPSes and MMOs at the top and bottom, for ease of selection.

Next they go on this long list using very big words about how you were able to “control” the game session. Whether you could interactively look at stuff, how natural it was to do things, all in very clinical terms as if we could lift boxes, bring them to the screen and spin them around or something. They did ask some of the important questions like “how engaged were your senses”, but the rest just didn’t seem like they had ever played a game. I’d love to see a chess player with the same questionnaire and see how they’d answer some of that part.

The last part was the real clincher. How do you answer “Given enough provocation, I may hit another person” or “If I have to resort to violence to protect my rights, I will”? ONOS HE WILL DEFEND HIS RIGHTS WITH HIS FISTS, HE IS AN ANGRY GAMER. Or worse, if someone threatens your loved one with bodily harm and you step up, that also apparently makes you a violent gamer. Also, disagreeing with someone can be a flag - “When people annoy me, I may tell them what I think of them.” Yes, if they’re annoying I’ll say “hey man, that’s… a bit annoying”. “I tell my friends openly when I disagree with them” is called being open and honest, not violent.

I must say I’m boggled.

[edit] After speaking to the person who handed out the survey, the one who wrote it is a friend’s friend and no, she hasn’t played games before.   Based on some of the other responses I’ve heard, she’s going to get some very interesting feedback concerning it.

FIRST POST!

Hello!

This is my blog, that I will be using to muse on all things gaming.  So here you go.  Yay!

|