Sunday, December 2, 2007
The Thirty $US 500 Finalists Have Been Picked!
12:00PM Brian Ashcraft | Finalists! We’ve got ‘em. Thirty finalists have been randomly selected for their chance at the $US 500 gift certificate. Congrats to them for being lucky and right. Sometime on Monday, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mountain time we will post a question on the site. The first of the 30 finalists to answer it correctly will win the prize. Be warned, we will not be emailing the finalists, just posting their names. Hit the jump for the finalists! More »Musings on the Gaming Community – “Are The Kids Alright?”
8:00AM Maggie Greene | From or via GameSetWatch comes two interesting pieces, musing on something of the same subject – what is it about games that turns fans into a bunch of aggressively opinionated jerks (or is that just life, on and off the internet?)? On the one hand, any community of people is prone to in-fighting and hysteria (tripled if the participants can hide behind anonymity); on the other hand, are some of the accusations lobbed from mainstream media that unfounded? Michaël Samyn takes on the recent kerfluffle over Yak Minter’s comments regarding Frogger and game reviewing in general. The comments section is very interesting, and gets at the community issue and game reviewing in one fell swoop. Leigh Alexander takes on nastiness on another level – far beyond frustrated developers whining in their LJ – and looks at examples of gamers behaving (very) badly, like the Jade Raymond/Something Awful cartoon debacle: More »1Up Shows Support For GameSpot Reviewers
7:00AM Brian Crecente | In the growing wake of the controversy surrounding GameSpot’s alleged firing of editorial director Jeff Gerstmann comes a little bit of surprising solidarity. A bunch of Ziff Davis staffers (including 1Up) made a banner to show their support for fellow game reviewers and marched it the two blocks to the GameSpot building on Friday. The banner, and impromptu march, shows that despite being competition, what may have happened at GameSpot could have wide-spread implications in the game publication industry. We’re also told that the Kane & Lynch user reviews on Gamespot have been, at least temporarily, disabled and there are rumours that people are cancelling their Gamespot accounts “en masse”. I’m not sure how Gamespot is going to deal with all of this since I’m pretty sure they’re not legally able to talk about why Gerstmann is no longer there. I’d assume that at some point Gerstmann might talk, but I’d guess right now he’s trying to figure out what to do in the way of a job. What about you? Do you work as a game reviewer? Have you been forced to rewrite a review due to advertising pressure? Feel free to email us at tips if you have or to editor. Remember, you can remain anonymous. The 1Up Show [Flickr] More »“Is Our Children Reading?” – A Defense of Video Games
6:00AM Maggie Greene | Reader Chris W. pointed us to a nice little piece in The Guardian on the questions of video games and literacy, with author Steven Poole coming to the defence of that medium we’re all so fond of. It’s nothing new for those of us who game, but it never hurts to have another (reasonable, rational) voice in the chorus. Poole points out there are plenty of games out there that require as much reading as the average children’s novel (if not more), and while the quality of writing may be variable, it’s not as if every paperback on the shelves is fantastically written. Ah, but is the writing in these games any good? Well, it’s variable, like the writing in books. Some of it’s rubbish and some of it is very good. (In my opinion, Phoenix Wright is funnier and cleverer than most TV made for adults.) But quality doesn’t really matter. My memory of reading as a child is basically that of voraciously hoovering up any old crap. (This turned out to be excellent training for becoming a book reviewer.) Not all of the games that children are playing are so dependent on reading, of course. Doubtless children are also playing a lot of games where you race shiny cars or shoot zombies into bloody chunks with massive guns. Well, everybody has to relax now and then. To insist that a young person spend every minute of his or her waking day in adult-mandated forms of self-improvement would be a kind of child abuse. In answer to the “is our children reading?” comment – no, they’re probably not reading as much as they “should”, but Poole’s point about new forms of literacy is a well-taken one. Not that it will stem the tide of ‘Video games are ruining literacy rates!’ screeching, but one can dream …. Is our children reading? [The Guardian] More »2008 GDC Summit Speaker Details
5:00AM Maggie Greene | In case you’re interested in the goings-on of the Game Developers Conference ‘08 (being held in San Francisco from 22-28 February), details about the speakers for each of the six summits have been announced. I have this horrible feeling I’m actually going to be in the general vicinity of San Francisco during the conference, but am going to be locked in the libraries of Stanford & Berkeley, which is a shame because some of these summits sound supremely interesting. The summits will be happening over the first two days of the conference, and you can find all sorts of information at the GDF website. There are full details after the jump, via Worlds In Motion. More »