#electronicgames — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #electronicgames, aggregated by home.social.
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English needs a new word for Play, Play, and Play
I’ve covered this topic before, but I need to expand it a bit. The English language doesn’t have a word making a distinction between playing (a game) and playing (with a toy.) For example, Finnish has two words for these two distinctly different actions: pelata (to play [a game]) and leikkiä (to play.) Arguably, gaming has become an activity of its own, but it applies strictly to video and computer games. It appears mostly in marketing materials and within hobbyist circles. However, whenever the term appears outside these ranges, it’s almost automatically a pejorative, a descriptor for some kind of unwanted person and their interest.
There really aren’t any other hobbyist circles that have the same kind of term. Cinephiles, for example, sometimes embrace the term and it has never seen use as a pejorative. There are other terms that we could use for people who find films as their main passion, but rarely these enter the common lexicon across the globe.
The best examples of gaming and gamer would be from a bit over a decade ago, when numerous media outlets pushed out an agenda about Gamers don’t need to be your customers and began extensively splitting the customers between players and gamers. Of course, this is an artificial split that was driven by then-current messaging, but it made an unintentional point, English language sucks in this regard.
English has also slowly but surely dropped the usage of computer and video game, making little to no distinction between the two. Console games are being called computer games by some older people or media that have no idea what’s the distinction, while the gaming media and consumers themselves call everything video games, more or less. Only when tribal connections are called for, we have people making a difference between PC gaming and console gaming, which naturally would indicate the difference. The now-vanished distinction between the two is mostly a memory, but they still represent a difference between the two hardware formats with their own insider cultures. You can consider one above the other and be that much more a fool.
Even the term game has become a common descriptor solely for electronic games in broad terms. It is the most common form of entertainment after all, so needing to add descriptors like tabletop or similar has become necessary, something a generation or two ago wasn’t necessary. What is a game and what is to play a game has changed, no matter how much people would like to quote Wargames.
I must admit that I dislike the term gaming, but for the sake of being clear I use it. However, I favour playing over gaming wherever plausible for the action, because I want to keep reminding people that video and computer games didn’t just pop up in the arcades and homes out of nowhere, but are a part of play culture that is as old as man itself. The methods and playthings have changed throughout the eras, but the inner drive to play for entertainment and for practice has never gone away. Storytelling is an important part of play, but not in the manner modern gaming wants to present it as. Let’s kick the dead horse once more and remind ourselves that the act of playing a game is to tell its story; the game’s FMV sequences and whatnot are there to justify and frame player actions, not to act as the story itself.
For whatever reason, because computer and video games lay in the lineage of play culture, they are seen as somehow worse in terms of storytelling. Partly because the games industry has been chasing Hollywood in terms of mutilating what a video game’s story is and now seeing the endpoint of the medium as being adapted to the silver screen. I find it odd that a more popular media format would want to turn into a lesser thing, but global culture at large still considers film as the peak when it comes to media. That’s good old-school Hollywood propaganda at work.
Films themselves descend from plays. Plays that people play parts in. That’s another layer of English not exactly distinguishing the term play, but actor at least showcases the major difference between a person playing (a role) and a person playing (a game or with something.) If we approached electronic gaming where the game serves as the stage for the player, and the story as the framing and stage the player acts his role out, we probably would find ourselves in a place where games would improve in quality as this would begin to use video and computer games’ inherent element of interactivity as a strength, not as a weakness.
Fifty years ago, when Atari and Space Invaders reigned supreme, it might’ve been hard to imagine these games telling compelling stories. Hence, PC gaming was the place. Different RPGs and MUDs did what they could, following in the wake made by traditional games. Arguably, these games had more freedom for the players to act out their stories in these early games’ frameworks and systems than what we have nowadays as the framing became increasingly more rigid and directive. Especially in games, where the developers are fearful of players who go off the rails and doing their own things, missing developer intended paths and ways of play.
Game’s framing and game’s play sometimes are in opposition with each other, as seen in e.g. Breath of the Wild. The game’s framing supposes that there is a hurry to beat Ganon, but the game’s play is nothing but. There are no consequences in dilly dallying around. This stands in opposition to Fallout, where the framing has a ticking clock in the background, further justifying player actions and what sort of role they choose to act. This isn’t the only kind of dissonance video and computer games can have. FMV sequences and cutscenes often portray the player character’s competence as opposite, able to take more damage than during play, showcasing actions that game doesn’t allow, or otherwise different enough from the play proper to cause a dissonant effect. An example of this would be Dante getting slashed to hell in cutscenes in Devil May Cry 3 but can’t take the same beating when the player is in control. All this would indicate that the framing of a game is treated and considered almost separate from the play proper.
Perhaps partially because of this chase of out-of-media ways to build up games’ framing, game-like description in modern movie parlance describes inane, long action scenes that don’t really do anything for the movie. From an outsider perspective, video and computer games with action sequences may seem the same, short in story and all mundane hack ‘n’ slashing. Naturally, this is the opposite. A player is in active role in a game (or at least should be) and that action is part of the main story that is being told via decisions the player is actively making. These sequences in film have also been described as the director smashing two toys together. We find the connecting line between the two plays from earlier, and both are considered beneath something more proper.
However, that’s why turning any game into a film will suck whatever value the game had as an action. A player walking an hour through a desert would find value in it as it is they, through the avatar they control, doing the walking. In a movie, this would be boring as the viewer is simply watching someone wading through the desert. Only the action of walking, nothing else. No surprise scorpions or mirages, nothing to pull the viewer in. In a game, the player would be making decisions all the time; Would he walk the shortest route, would he try to veer off to see if there are other things to see, how would the sand dunes change as you walk on them from different angles. The player’s action can make it interesting in the given framework, whereas a film will always be someone walking through the desert.
Despite video and computer games enjoying being at the most popular form of entertainment, they’re overlooked and frowned upon. whether from sports fans, music lovers or cinephiles, the act of playing a game is seen as lesser. It’s immaterial for this conversation why exactly. What matters is that because the games industry chases Hollywood in style and status, it never has tried to justify games as an art by its own merits. When game’s writing becomes more text-heavy, it becomes compared to literary works. The reason games like Metal Gear Solid got compared to movies was their heavy reliance on cutscenes. Interestingly enough, the MGS games also showcase great ways of making the game world tell the story with little details and attention to what players may do outside the intended. When the player agenda is taken into account the game world becomes that much more interesting, even in linear titles. However, these examples are still rare. Instead of moving toward games that would encourage player agenda, we’ve got more games that restrict these and construct games to be Skinner boxes to placate customers like DarkSydePhil, holding players’ hands and constantly reminding them to do X or task Y being a thing. It’s easy to see why supposing games as art gets scoffed at when they’re as subtle as a hammer in a pottery shop.
The discussion was very different in the 1990s and after the change of the millennium. There was a significant movement, for a short while, to use games as interactive spaces for art. It wasn’t games as art per se, but games’ space used for art. A vestige of this is the use of experience with games. (I’m going to write about this more next time.)
Games became experiences, things that have music to awe you, things that will make you feel things and showcase high graphical fidelity, and so on. This in a manner is the games industry justifying how the framing is the work of art that Hollywood and others should admire and see, not the act of playing. The Super Mario movies don’t exactly depict any of the Mario games per se as they are, or even adapt them, but adapt the concept of a Mario game and the property’s concepts. Another example would be Prince of Persia’s movie adaptation, which does what any film adaptation of a game can really do; work with the framing and hint the gameplay with action scenes. The reason why the original Mortal Kombat is/was considered one of the best game-movies is because martial arts tournament is a genre, and Mortal Kombat the movie added more to the story and world of the games. Fighting games would naturally loan their play to the action scenes, but often, these scenes end up being depicted like they’re in the games. This is where the original MK movie walked a good middle line.
Thus, if movies are experiences to behold, then the framing of video and computer games follow the same path; they’re the things to behold. Cinematic sequences and non-interactive plot points follow this same path, forcing the player to experience the game world the exact same way repeatedly rather than allowing the agency for the player to make decisions how to experience it themselves. How much freedom to “experience” a game gives to the player is one good indicator on the quality of the game.
That’s perhaps a key here. A game that you game isn’t about the experience, thus it’s free to get all the flak media can muster. The approved games that aim to deliver some sort of art experience often enjoy high ratings and reviews from the games media. It’s partly because how the review industry works as an extended PR of game publishers, where nepotism and corruption are daily things. The more you have an experience, the less there is game to play.
Computer and video games are a collection of different people working toward one end result. With films, the director is largely credited as the driving force behind the film’s vision despite hundreds or thousands of people working blood and sweat on the production. For literature, it’s often the writer who gets the sole credit even if there are more people behind the scenes giving a helping hand. Video games have a couple of names that can be listed in the superstar status, names that get similar treatment as directors, team leads, or whatever Todd Howard wants to call himself. Gaming has been trying to implement the auteur theory into practice, but rarely it works as consumers recognize how many different visions have to come together in a big budget title. The auteur theory proposes the director has an unbound influence on the project they are working on, imprinting their unique personal vision and focus on every aspect of the finished piece. There are numerous games that we could identify this with. Nintendo specifically wants to sell Shigeru Miyamoto as an auteur director, someone who has a magical touch and is responsible for all great things in gaming. It’s like how Disney used to portray Walt Disney making all the comics over the real authors, like Carl Barks.
Much like films, perhaps even more so, video and computer games are geared toward popular culture. The difference was that being a coder or a director wasn’t exactly cool or a desired position, unlike being a writer or a film director. Companies were afraid of losing their coders. The superstar game developer would come a bit later, perhaps iD being one of the bigger examples of this in the wake of Doom‘s popularity. Nintendo had the aforementioned Shigsy, and Capcom showcased Keiji Inafune as their posterboy for Mega Man. Konami would have Hideo Kojima breaking to the scene with the Metal Gear Solid‘s success. These and numerous more would trickle down the line to the mainstream consciousness. It’s no coincidence that games that were taken in with more artistic value than other had a recognizable name attached to them. The name that delivers that experience has become more important than the play, often cited in a tertiary manner. Framing has become more important as that’s what people who don’t play video and computer games understand. These people don’t realize that the best point of comparison with games isn’t other media, but their own history of playing when they were younger. Starting from there, they might realize that modern electronic gaming has become acting out the worst and the best parts of our imagination rather than just watching things passively.
#AuteurTheory #customerService #design #electronicGames #entertainment #FilmAndGames #films #gameDesign #GamerIdentity #games #gaming #InteractiveMedia #MediaAnalysis #playCulture -
Ampere Analysis makes speculation on female gamers, not hard data
Ampere Analysis presented a study earlier this year where they concluded that women make up 48% of the gaming community. We can say that’s effectively half. That’s approximately 922 million people across 21 countries. Big numbers for sure. Supposedly, the gaming industry is largely ignoring this major possible market segment, as there is a serious lack of games for women who would like to play story-driven single-player games with a social aspect and romance. They came to this conclusion by looking at what kind of media outside games these women consume and made a beeline assumption that women want the same thing from their games. What their data seems to indicate is that there is a large section of women who are interested in playing games but don’t. Either they don’t know how to play games or don’t know what kind of game content exists.
Let’s pause here and point out that Ampere showcases data in a biased manner. That 48% includes any woman who has played a game, be it Candy Crush or FarmVille. If you’re a woman who has played a game of any kind, you’re counted in this number. The quality of these stats is messy, as that equates players who spend about ten minutes with games per week with people who spend most of their waking hours gaming. This is an important point, as any person wanting to sell something realizes that these two kinds of customers are completely different and need to be valued in a different manner.
The inquiry had 52 video and computer games listed. Only three titles had more women playing than men: Animal Crossing: New Horizons, The Sims 4, and Roblox. From a list of 50 mobile games, some 13 titles had more women players. This would indicate, then, that the higher concentration of women in gaming can be found outside the usual big sellers, and on mobile devices rather than consoles and computers.
The market is functioning as you’d expect; nothing has really changed in behavioural differences between the two sexes. Early on in this blog’s life, I wrote about girl games as part of a series where I illustrated how video and computer games aren’t a special phenomenon in and of themselves, but a continuation of a long play culture. Gaming in general mostly adheres to boys’ play culture, as it builds on competition and readily set rules. It’s much easier to make a soccer or a tennis video game because these rules exist and are set in stone. Playing house is something classically part of girls’ play culture, as playing with dolls and other miniature house equipment readies them for motherhood. It’s much harder to make a simulacrum of playing house because it has no readily set rules. Here’s mother, dad, kid, and maybe a dog. Here’s the house. Now play house. I’ve used The Sims as an example of this being successfully adapted, and I’m not surprised The Sims 4 is on the above list.
The Sims, analogue editionMaking girl games is hard because historically they’ve been misunderstood and misapplied by powers that be in the gaming industry. You might have a good memory of some Barbie game out there, but none of them would win any prizes. What most of these girl games lacked in the 1980s and 1990s was holding power, or the way a game keeps attracting the player back to itself to maintain their attention span and immerse them in its world. Because gaming is largely based on boys’ play culture, its holding power over girls is less due to the different schema the two have classically worked under. In a manner, girls and women as gamers were treated like some sort of invalids because of this. Girl games were colourful, with horses and puppies galore, with about as much gameplay as a wet towel on a wall.
However, as demand grew for games specifically catering to girls and women, a few began to understand that the differences in play cultures were a possibility rather than a ball and chain. Brenda Laurel founded Purple Moon in 1999 to make, as she called it in 2009, a cultural intervention. Purple Moon’s games targeted girls between 8 and 14, and rather than making games about competition and confrontation, their games were more like interactive story worlds the players could explore. However, as we can see from Ampere’s data, games-for-all are more popular among modern women and girls than games directly aimed at girls.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zu2kZwk1Ym4?version=3&rel=1&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&fs=1&hl=en&autohide=2&wmode=transparent&w=863&h=486]
Purple Moon games were criticized for doing the same gender stereotyping they wanted to intervene
In a way, girl games dried out early in the millennium because games in general had already begun to emphasize story framing and expanded world-building in mainstream titles. I would hazard a guess that World of Warcraft offered much of the very same story-driven exploration and interactivity, not just with the game but with other players as well.
Barbie Fashion Designer may have sold well and left an unwanted mark, but a game like New Style Boutique 3 found itself with a cult following from the opposite sex. The game didn’t just require players to design new clothing combinations, but had a framing narrative of the player needing to run a clothes boutique, making the game deep enough to have holding power over both boys and men as well as girls and women. Unlike the Barbie game, this 3DS game had some depth to it. The lack of a license probably hurt the game’s sales, but its cult status shows that games stemming from girl play culture can have universal acceptance, even if it’s marginal. Of course, The Sims is the titan in this.
A game that had surprising hold on its male audienceGirl game as a term has become rare, as it became associated with terrible shovelware. They were represented as the opposite of boys’ games, which frankly is just the de facto standard for the game industry. That’s not to say girls and women were ignored, as Super Mario and The Legend of Zelda games still make big sales and are more or less equally popular between the sexes. As gaming has moved away from public places and now solely resides at home, there is no longer any pressure for girls and women to give whatever games they might fancy a go. Why did more females play Tetris than Pac-Man? Because the physical placement of the game had moved away from arcades to home computers and consoles.
This study seems to ignore a few genres that have an overwhelming female audience, and they even make the whole girl game concept sound good: otome games and romance video games. Otome games have been specifically designed to cater to the sensibilities girls and women have, so it’s not surprising that over 90% of otome game players are women. We can argue whether or not visual novels count, but some fantasy otome games also have elements like running a kingdom, meaning they’re not just text but have meaningful gameplay elements that impact the social aspect.
As games have gotten heavier on delivering framing and allowing players to wander the world, we’ve seen a sort of coming together between the two play cultures. Especially with RPGs like Dragon Age series or The Witcher 3, we see that social aspect becoming a major component, with the ability to romance characters and that being an essential part of the story. However, the bulk of the play is still dictated by rules and regulations that largely stem from boys’ play culture. Acknowledging this, we can see how the two complement each other in a manner where they couldn’t exist separately. You get action gameplay with whatever character you choose to make, and then engage in extensive dialogue options between NPCs that might affect anything from what coloured shoes they wear to who stabs you in the back.
I see that if gaming would take its interactivity into account more, allowing players to dynamically change framing directions as much as systems could, and not stick to linear storytelling as seen in films and literature, we could find ourselves in places where games combine the two play cultures in a more holistic manner and embrace the medium’s inherent properties rather than stick with ready-made stories.
However, that wouldn’t automatically mean more women would want to play such a game. The number of hardcore male gamers who put more money into gaming is larger than females, and that is a lifestyle choice. The linkage between visual novels and women reading books is easy to understand; they’re almost the same thing in different packaging. However, there is no hard proof or individual linkage showcasing cross-media consumption. Anecdotes and niche demographics do suggest an overlap, but a large number of romance book readers don’t play games, even when there are already options that cater to them.
Mass Effect is another game series that bucks the trends with a loyal female fanbaseEven when we ignore romance as a genre, there are no studies that link cross-media consumption. Ampere is making the argument that because women consume X kind of content in media Y, then they should also be interested in X content in media Z. While this seems like a no-brainer at surface value, it’s a pretty big leap from opening a book and reading what’s on the page to installing a 50GB game on your computer and learning system mechanics that enable a similar story to that of a Harlequin book. That’s why girl games had that bad reputation; they tried to meet a supposedly invalid audience by cutting away gameplay to match a level where other media offered a more enjoyable pastime. The claims Ampere makes are circumstantial at best. We would first need studies showcasing that people, especially women, actually consume the same kinds of genres and styles across all media. Ampere’s conclusion about what women would look for in a game based on what they watch and read is no less than harmful stereotyping.
The argument of women needing an easier entry point for gaming is petty at best and sexist at worst. It’s the whole notion of girl games and females being seen as gaming invalids raising its head again. There has never been a better time in history to get into gaming than now. Endless amounts of YouTube tutorials and guides exist, games quite literally hold the player’s hand to pass even the slightest obstacle, no-failure states exist across the board, and even gameplay can be skipped in some cases. Saying that there’s a subset of female non-gamers who are interested in gaming but lack the knowledge of how to play these games and what content is out there, and then demanding entry-level content, is misguided. If women are interested in something and want to give it a shot, they are just as capable of finding things out themselves. They need the same thing as men: motivation and reason.
We have more games than ever before, from small indie developers to large AAA studios, and they’re all easy to find as long as your search skills are decent. However, if there is no reason to take up gaming as a hobby or lifestyle, then that person is not as valuable a customer as someone who already is. You can’t force people to become something, just like you can’t force men and women to choose a certain kind of career path simply because statistics look off. The same applies to hobbies. It might be cultural or biological; it doesn’t matter.
Koei’s Angelique Trois is an example of a successful otome game IP from over twenty years agoWhen you have people who are not interested in your product and are aware it exists, they’re not even untapped customers. You would have to fundamentally change their perceptions to turn them into customers. Ampere disregards its own results: 47% of female non-gamers say they would never consider playing. That’s 10% less than non-gaming males. If there are more boys and men willing to give gaming a shot than girls and women, then wouldn’t that be the more viable market segment to pursue?
We should, of course, question Ampere’s data, as it’s all done via surveys. Ampere gave out a generalised survey that doesn’t really go into detail, nor did they conduct any behavioural study over time. 46,000 respondents self-reported their preferences and habits. This is probably one of the worst ways to gather consumer information, as customers don’t always know what they want. I often use the example of why there are so many different kinds of tomato pasta on store shelves. Consumers think they know what they want, but often don’t. It’s not because they’re unintelligent, but because we are creatures of habit and environment.
Everything in this study is just speculation. There are no strong scientific grounds presented.
No industry would take a study like this and its recommendations seriously. You can’t turn someone who doesn’t want mustard into a mustard customer. It simply won’t happen.
The approach is also flawed. Rather than directly asking what games women play or what media they consume elsewhere, a study examining what kinds of games and play current girls engage in would yield more valid data. Similarly, researching past play habits of adult women and their current non-digital hobbies could provide valuable insights. This would be difficult, time-consuming, and expensive. It would also require researchers who understand differences in play cultures across various societies if conducted globally.
To understand women, Arino played Angelique Trois on airHowever, there’s still one thorn in my side I need to pick: games for general audiences. I mentioned Mario and Zelda earlier, and the reason they attract both sexes is because they are well-designed, high-quality games. Data over decades suggests that boys and girls, men and women, gravitate toward games that are enjoyable and have strong holding power. The more explicitly gendered a game is, the worse its design tends to be, and the less successful it becomes.
#computerGames #culture #customerAndService #customerService #customers #electronicGames #entertainment #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames #visualNovels -
The many games of The Most Successful
With Rockstar and Grant Theft Auto 6 in the news for some unsavory reasons, I saw quite a lot of hubbubs about the success of the fifth game in the franchise and its comparative success compared to other games, and other forms entertainment. I’m slightly flabbergasted that someone would claim that GTA5 was the most successful form of entertainment, when people without much contact with the modern world knew about Michael Jackson. Thriller permeated everywhere, you can’t beat it.
Nevertheless, this made an interesting thought experiment on what counts as The Most Successful Video Game. It didn’t help that I saw the goal being pushed after one or two rounds of discussion, under which at least few realized that there’s more than one way of seeing this. Business has a different view on things compared to the customers, and then you have the historical view that has a longer view on how games have affected culture in general. This is why Pong, Space Invaders, Breakout and Pac-Man still live on in the cultural memory, even if the amount of success they’ve seen in terms of money is less than whatever big Triple A title that’s come after.
I should probably note that there’s also a slight difference in how some use the term franchise. While I tend to use it wrong as a synonym with Intellectual Property, an example of a franchise would be Street Fighter II. Street Fighter III would be its own franchise, while all falling under the same umbrella of IP. This is because of merchandising rights and all that business jazz.
Units Sold is of course a big one, the cumulative sales made by one game, or a series of games. For example, the Mario games have a cumulative sale of 957 million units, while Mega Man has 43 million units.
As for individual titles, Minecraft is an evergreen title that hits 350 units sold. GTAV follows It at 220 million units.
Units sold doesn’t really keep you afloat a lot, unless you have Revenue. This is the total gross the series does through game sales, possible DLC, merch, and other licensed material. Pokémon tops this chart with $115, followed by Call of Duty with $31 million.
The way digital games are consumed is different from purchased titles, of course. That’s why something like Candy Crush or Dungeon Fighter Online can top the chart of games with most revenue, as individuals put more money into these games. This compares apples and oranges; the business models are ultimately very different and the amount of money you can squeeze out of a customer via single sold title plus DLC is ultimately less than digital-only but squeezing small amounts throughout their play time. Gacha mixes things with the whole gambling aspect.
I don’t think we should count individual downloads. This is because a download doesn’t translate to a purchase, or revenue. There are numerous cases of curious people testing a free game out and then proceeding not to continue. These people are often counted to the player metric nonetheless, which shows that the total number of players can be skewed to showcase a more positive statistic for PR reasons. This is the same reason why Sony cites the total number of PlayStation 2’s when asked about the total number of consoles sold. It just looks better, and they can fudge the numbers for their benefit.
Then again, Subway Surfers has 2.05 billion individual downloads and spawned numerous imitators so there’s something value in that too.
Player Count is also something that seems to be a significant metric, with Roblox topping the list with the estimated number of players being in billions cumulative. Minecraft hitting a nice spot of 600 million plus players shows that it really is the Tetris of the modern age.
I would argue that the peak number of players, and how long that plateau is held, is a more significant counter simply because it shows how many players consume the game in each span of time. Through this, we get an idea whether a game holds its audience, which is far more important in the long-term in terms of customer satisfaction and how well customers make emotional connection to the game. A game that gets massive sales at the start but sees the player count sink like a rock in water has no lasting hold on the market.
While I don’t give much weight on the Critical Acclaim the journalists give to games (as they are nothing more than just an extra arm in the PR machine), The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and Soul Calibur top the chart with 99 and 98 according to Metacritic. I’d like to say the User Score is the metric we should use, but seeing Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 topping the current list reminds me how customers can’t be any more objective than the journalists most of the time.
If we count Spacewar! as the progenitor of all modern video and computer games (and we are,) gaming is 63 at the time of writing. There are only a handful of game names from the early era of electronic gaming that are still strongly alive. Pac-Man and Mario are the handful, with the rest of their brethren being relocated to nostalgic revivals and retro collections. While we may think the most popular games we have now will last for all time, we’ve seen so many game names simply vanishing, dying out or otherwise fall into torpor. Mega Man is a great example of this, sometimes popping its head up only to fall back into Capcom archives. Maybe we’ll get another game by 2030. Prince of Persia seemed like a name that would never die, but overexposure and simply being owned by Ubisoft clearly took its toll on the name. Same thing could be happening to Assassin Creed now, one can only hope.
Some of you might’ve noticed that I counted Donkey Kong as a Mario title. So does Nintendo, as that’s the first appearance of Mario, then named Jumpman. If you want, we can count Mario being started in 1983, making Mario 42 to Pac-Man’s 45. These are still small numbers compared to something like Universal Monsters, which have lasted for good 117 years. Looking at the comic book world, both Superman and Batman are in their 80s.
However, the gaming industry influences itself. Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 was influenced by Final Fantasy, which was seen as the premier gaming IP at one point in the Western World. However, going back and seeing what influenced Final Fantasy we find Dragon Quest and its numerous copycats and imitators. Going further back we find both Utima and Wizardry influencing the game, which also influenced so many other Japanese computer RPGs like The Black Onyx, which inspired the creation of The Legend of Zelda. Ultima and Wizardry have their roots in MUDs, which have roots in table-top RPGs, mainly Dungeon and Dragons, which have their roots in the military games generals and other army leaders would play to train their leadership.
The roots of video and computer gaming lie in the games and play of children and adults alike, alongside how stories were told by acting and playing them out. This tangent is to remind ourselves that gaming is not something that just came along with computers and consoles but is just the latest iteration of mankind has been doing ever since we dwelled in caves.
Nevertheless, the game with most cultural impact is probably Pokémon. Its Trading Card Game sales generate about one to three billion dollars per year, which rivals the top-most successful film’s revenue in their lifetime. Of course, TCG is an evergreen product compared to film’s finite runs, so this should illustrate how different the media are. Still, the franchise IP generated that $150 billion plus dollars and probably is Japan’s single most important import product. Pikachu is the face and mascot of the franchise, well-known across the glob, and served as an ambassador to 2014 World Cup, 2020 Tokyo Olympics and in 2025 World Expo. Its yellow face is featured in over fifty embassies across the world. Surprisingly, Pokémon has shown itself to be a multi-generational product, a cornerstone of sorts that sees constant parodies in other shows and games while drawing tourists of all ages to Pokémon Centers across the world, especially to Japan.
Even if Pokémon is a 1990s product, it can be placed alongside Mario and Pac-Man as a long-lasting face of gaming, with it probably ending up as the face of gaming on the long run if we had to choose one, for better or worse. This also illustrates some why Nintendo, The Pokémon Company, and to a lesser extent GameFreak would be freakishly overprotective of their IP. There are numerous other contenders we could put there, but I’m making a point there; there must be generationally recognizable face for all without really any breaks.
The list of games that influenced other games is as wide as the library of games out there. Talking about First-Person Shooting ends up someone tracing back to Halo, then Half-Life, a mention of Quake’s code still running in some modern games, another mentioning Goldeneye 007, with usually ending with either Doom or Wolfenstein 3D in a similar fashion I did with RPGs above.
While we have been seeing the influence of video and computer games on the culture ever since the 1970s in an increasing fashion, it’s hard to determine how well a game or a name will endure as history happens. Only in hindsight can we properly determine the ebbs and flows of masses, something the current gaming industry seems to ignore in favour of trying to appease each other with the press as their echo chamber. When Demon’s Souls was put out for the first time, nobody expected it to become a cultural cornerstone. However, history has shown us that people like to play challenging games, and from that challenge comes customer satisfaction. Well-built world and framing, with play-first mentality, is a sort of silver bullet. It’s not a game for everyone, and that’s fine. You can’t please everyone with one product, and trying to is simply being dishonest toward the game and the customer.
#electronicGames #entertainment #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
-
The many games of The Most Successful
With Rockstar and Grant Theft Auto 6 in the news for some unsavory reasons, I saw quite a lot of hubbubs about the success of the fifth game in the franchise and its comparative success compared to other games, and other forms entertainment. I’m slightly flabbergasted that someone would claim that GTA5 was the most successful form of entertainment, when people without much contact with the modern world knew about Michael Jackson. Thriller permeated everywhere, you can’t beat it.
Nevertheless, this made an interesting thought experiment on what counts as The Most Successful Video Game. It didn’t help that I saw the goal being pushed after one or two rounds of discussion, under which at least few realized that there’s more than one way of seeing this. Business has a different view on things compared to the customers, and then you have the historical view that has a longer view on how games have affected culture in general. This is why Pong, Space Invaders, Breakout and Pac-Man still live on in the cultural memory, even if the amount of success they’ve seen in terms of money is less than whatever big Triple A title that’s come after.
I should probably note that there’s also a slight difference in how some use the term franchise. While I tend to use it wrong as a synonym with Intellectual Property, an example of a franchise would be Street Fighter II. Street Fighter III would be its own franchise, while all falling under the same umbrella of IP. This is because of merchandising rights and all that business jazz.
Units Sold is of course a big one, the cumulative sales made by one game, or a series of games. For example, the Mario games have a cumulative sale of 957 million units, while Mega Man has 43 million units.
As for individual titles, Minecraft is an evergreen title that hits 350 units sold. GTAV follows It at 220 million units.
Units sold doesn’t really keep you afloat a lot, unless you have Revenue. This is the total gross the series does through game sales, possible DLC, merch, and other licensed material. Pokémon tops this chart with $115, followed by Call of Duty with $31 million.
The way digital games are consumed is different from purchased titles, of course. That’s why something like Candy Crush or Dungeon Fighter Online can top the chart of games with most revenue, as individuals put more money into these games. This compares apples and oranges; the business models are ultimately very different and the amount of money you can squeeze out of a customer via single sold title plus DLC is ultimately less than digital-only but squeezing small amounts throughout their play time. Gacha mixes things with the whole gambling aspect.
I don’t think we should count individual downloads. This is because a download doesn’t translate to a purchase, or revenue. There are numerous cases of curious people testing a free game out and then proceeding not to continue. These people are often counted to the player metric nonetheless, which shows that the total number of players can be skewed to showcase a more positive statistic for PR reasons. This is the same reason why Sony cites the total number of PlayStation 2’s when asked about the total number of consoles sold. It just looks better, and they can fudge the numbers for their benefit.
Then again, Subway Surfers has 2.05 billion individual downloads and spawned numerous imitators so there’s something value in that too.
Player Count is also something that seems to be a significant metric, with Roblox topping the list with the estimated number of players being in billions cumulative. Minecraft hitting a nice spot of 600 million plus players shows that it really is the Tetris of the modern age.
I would argue that the peak number of players, and how long that plateau is held, is a more significant counter simply because it shows how many players consume the game in each span of time. Through this, we get an idea whether a game holds its audience, which is far more important in the long-term in terms of customer satisfaction and how well customers make emotional connection to the game. A game that gets massive sales at the start but sees the player count sink like a rock in water has no lasting hold on the market.
While I don’t give much weight on the Critical Acclaim the journalists give to games (as they are nothing more than just an extra arm in the PR machine), The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and Soul Calibur top the chart with 99 and 98 according to Metacritic. I’d like to say the User Score is the metric we should use, but seeing Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 topping the current list reminds me how customers can’t be any more objective than the journalists most of the time.
If we count Spacewar! as the progenitor of all modern video and computer games (and we are,) gaming is 63 at the time of writing. There are only a handful of game names from the early era of electronic gaming that are still strongly alive. Pac-Man and Mario are the handful, with the rest of their brethren being relocated to nostalgic revivals and retro collections. While we may think the most popular games we have now will last for all time, we’ve seen so many game names simply vanishing, dying out or otherwise fall into torpor. Mega Man is a great example of this, sometimes popping its head up only to fall back into Capcom archives. Maybe we’ll get another game by 2030. Prince of Persia seemed like a name that would never die, but overexposure and simply being owned by Ubisoft clearly took its toll on the name. Same thing could be happening to Assassin Creed now, one can only hope.
Some of you might’ve noticed that I counted Donkey Kong as a Mario title. So does Nintendo, as that’s the first appearance of Mario, then named Jumpman. If you want, we can count Mario being started in 1983, making Mario 42 to Pac-Man’s 45. These are still small numbers compared to something like Universal Monsters, which have lasted for good 117 years. Looking at the comic book world, both Superman and Batman are in their 80s.
However, the gaming industry influences itself. Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 was influenced by Final Fantasy, which was seen as the premier gaming IP at one point in the Western World. However, going back and seeing what influenced Final Fantasy we find Dragon Quest and its numerous copycats and imitators. Going further back we find both Utima and Wizardry influencing the game, which also influenced so many other Japanese computer RPGs like The Black Onyx, which inspired the creation of The Legend of Zelda. Ultima and Wizardry have their roots in MUDs, which have roots in table-top RPGs, mainly Dungeon and Dragons, which have their roots in the military games generals and other army leaders would play to train their leadership.
The roots of video and computer gaming lie in the games and play of children and adults alike, alongside how stories were told by acting and playing them out. This tangent is to remind ourselves that gaming is not something that just came along with computers and consoles but is just the latest iteration of mankind has been doing ever since we dwelled in caves.
Nevertheless, the game with most cultural impact is probably Pokémon. Its Trading Card Game sales generate about one to three billion dollars per year, which rivals the top-most successful film’s revenue in their lifetime. Of course, TCG is an evergreen product compared to film’s finite runs, so this should illustrate how different the media are. Still, the franchise IP generated that $150 billion plus dollars and probably is Japan’s single most important import product. Pikachu is the face and mascot of the franchise, well-known across the glob, and served as an ambassador to 2014 World Cup, 2020 Tokyo Olympics and in 2025 World Expo. Its yellow face is featured in over fifty embassies across the world. Surprisingly, Pokémon has shown itself to be a multi-generational product, a cornerstone of sorts that sees constant parodies in other shows and games while drawing tourists of all ages to Pokémon Centers across the world, especially to Japan.
Even if Pokémon is a 1990s product, it can be placed alongside Mario and Pac-Man as a long-lasting face of gaming, with it probably ending up as the face of gaming on the long run if we had to choose one, for better or worse. This also illustrates some why Nintendo, The Pokémon Company, and to a lesser extent GameFreak would be freakishly overprotective of their IP. There are numerous other contenders we could put there, but I’m making a point there; there must be generationally recognizable face for all without really any breaks.
The list of games that influenced other games is as wide as the library of games out there. Talking about First-Person Shooting ends up someone tracing back to Halo, then Half-Life, a mention of Quake’s code still running in some modern games, another mentioning Goldeneye 007, with usually ending with either Doom or Wolfenstein 3D in a similar fashion I did with RPGs above.
While we have been seeing the influence of video and computer games on the culture ever since the 1970s in an increasing fashion, it’s hard to determine how well a game or a name will endure as history happens. Only in hindsight can we properly determine the ebbs and flows of masses, something the current gaming industry seems to ignore in favour of trying to appease each other with the press as their echo chamber. When Demon’s Souls was put out for the first time, nobody expected it to become a cultural cornerstone. However, history has shown us that people like to play challenging games, and from that challenge comes customer satisfaction. Well-built world and framing, with play-first mentality, is a sort of silver bullet. It’s not a game for everyone, and that’s fine. You can’t please everyone with one product, and trying to is simply being dishonest toward the game and the customer.
#electronicGames #entertainment #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
-
The many games of The Most Successful
With Rockstar and Grant Theft Auto 6 in the news for some unsavory reasons, I saw quite a lot of hubbubs about the success of the fifth game in the franchise and its comparative success compared to other games, and other forms entertainment. I’m slightly flabbergasted that someone would claim that GTA5 was the most successful form of entertainment, when people without much contact with the modern world knew about Michael Jackson. Thriller permeated everywhere, you can’t beat it.
Nevertheless, this made an interesting thought experiment on what counts as The Most Successful Video Game. It didn’t help that I saw the goal being pushed after one or two rounds of discussion, under which at least few realized that there’s more than one way of seeing this. Business has a different view on things compared to the customers, and then you have the historical view that has a longer view on how games have affected culture in general. This is why Pong, Space Invaders, Breakout and Pac-Man still live on in the cultural memory, even if the amount of success they’ve seen in terms of money is less than whatever big Triple A title that’s come after.
I should probably note that there’s also a slight difference in how some use the term franchise. While I tend to use it wrong as a synonym with Intellectual Property, an example of a franchise would be Street Fighter II. Street Fighter III would be its own franchise, while all falling under the same umbrella of IP. This is because of merchandising rights and all that business jazz.
Units Sold is of course a big one, the cumulative sales made by one game, or a series of games. For example, the Mario games have a cumulative sale of 957 million units, while Mega Man has 43 million units.
As for individual titles, Minecraft is an evergreen title that hits 350 units sold. GTAV follows It at 220 million units.
Units sold doesn’t really keep you afloat a lot, unless you have Revenue. This is the total gross the series does through game sales, possible DLC, merch, and other licensed material. Pokémon tops this chart with $115, followed by Call of Duty with $31 million.
The way digital games are consumed is different from purchased titles, of course. That’s why something like Candy Crush or Dungeon Fighter Online can top the chart of games with most revenue, as individuals put more money into these games. This compares apples and oranges; the business models are ultimately very different and the amount of money you can squeeze out of a customer via single sold title plus DLC is ultimately less than digital-only but squeezing small amounts throughout their play time. Gacha mixes things with the whole gambling aspect.
I don’t think we should count individual downloads. This is because a download doesn’t translate to a purchase, or revenue. There are numerous cases of curious people testing a free game out and then proceeding not to continue. These people are often counted to the player metric nonetheless, which shows that the total number of players can be skewed to showcase a more positive statistic for PR reasons. This is the same reason why Sony cites the total number of PlayStation 2’s when asked about the total number of consoles sold. It just looks better, and they can fudge the numbers for their benefit.
Then again, Subway Surfers has 2.05 billion individual downloads and spawned numerous imitators so there’s something value in that too.
Player Count is also something that seems to be a significant metric, with Roblox topping the list with the estimated number of players being in billions cumulative. Minecraft hitting a nice spot of 600 million plus players shows that it really is the Tetris of the modern age.
I would argue that the peak number of players, and how long that plateau is held, is a more significant counter simply because it shows how many players consume the game in each span of time. Through this, we get an idea whether a game holds its audience, which is far more important in the long-term in terms of customer satisfaction and how well customers make emotional connection to the game. A game that gets massive sales at the start but sees the player count sink like a rock in water has no lasting hold on the market.
While I don’t give much weight on the Critical Acclaim the journalists give to games (as they are nothing more than just an extra arm in the PR machine), The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and Soul Calibur top the chart with 99 and 98 according to Metacritic. I’d like to say the User Score is the metric we should use, but seeing Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 topping the current list reminds me how customers can’t be any more objective than the journalists most of the time.
If we count Spacewar! as the progenitor of all modern video and computer games (and we are,) gaming is 63 at the time of writing. There are only a handful of game names from the early era of electronic gaming that are still strongly alive. Pac-Man and Mario are the handful, with the rest of their brethren being relocated to nostalgic revivals and retro collections. While we may think the most popular games we have now will last for all time, we’ve seen so many game names simply vanishing, dying out or otherwise fall into torpor. Mega Man is a great example of this, sometimes popping its head up only to fall back into Capcom archives. Maybe we’ll get another game by 2030. Prince of Persia seemed like a name that would never die, but overexposure and simply being owned by Ubisoft clearly took its toll on the name. Same thing could be happening to Assassin Creed now, one can only hope.
Some of you might’ve noticed that I counted Donkey Kong as a Mario title. So does Nintendo, as that’s the first appearance of Mario, then named Jumpman. If you want, we can count Mario being started in 1983, making Mario 42 to Pac-Man’s 45. These are still small numbers compared to something like Universal Monsters, which have lasted for good 117 years. Looking at the comic book world, both Superman and Batman are in their 80s.
However, the gaming industry influences itself. Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 was influenced by Final Fantasy, which was seen as the premier gaming IP at one point in the Western World. However, going back and seeing what influenced Final Fantasy we find Dragon Quest and its numerous copycats and imitators. Going further back we find both Utima and Wizardry influencing the game, which also influenced so many other Japanese computer RPGs like The Black Onyx, which inspired the creation of The Legend of Zelda. Ultima and Wizardry have their roots in MUDs, which have roots in table-top RPGs, mainly Dungeon and Dragons, which have their roots in the military games generals and other army leaders would play to train their leadership.
The roots of video and computer gaming lie in the games and play of children and adults alike, alongside how stories were told by acting and playing them out. This tangent is to remind ourselves that gaming is not something that just came along with computers and consoles but is just the latest iteration of mankind has been doing ever since we dwelled in caves.
Nevertheless, the game with most cultural impact is probably Pokémon. Its Trading Card Game sales generate about one to three billion dollars per year, which rivals the top-most successful film’s revenue in their lifetime. Of course, TCG is an evergreen product compared to film’s finite runs, so this should illustrate how different the media are. Still, the franchise IP generated that $150 billion plus dollars and probably is Japan’s single most important import product. Pikachu is the face and mascot of the franchise, well-known across the glob, and served as an ambassador to 2014 World Cup, 2020 Tokyo Olympics and in 2025 World Expo. Its yellow face is featured in over fifty embassies across the world. Surprisingly, Pokémon has shown itself to be a multi-generational product, a cornerstone of sorts that sees constant parodies in other shows and games while drawing tourists of all ages to Pokémon Centers across the world, especially to Japan.
Even if Pokémon is a 1990s product, it can be placed alongside Mario and Pac-Man as a long-lasting face of gaming, with it probably ending up as the face of gaming on the long run if we had to choose one, for better or worse. This also illustrates some why Nintendo, The Pokémon Company, and to a lesser extent GameFreak would be freakishly overprotective of their IP. There are numerous other contenders we could put there, but I’m making a point there; there must be generationally recognizable face for all without really any breaks.
The list of games that influenced other games is as wide as the library of games out there. Talking about First-Person Shooting ends up someone tracing back to Halo, then Half-Life, a mention of Quake’s code still running in some modern games, another mentioning Goldeneye 007, with usually ending with either Doom or Wolfenstein 3D in a similar fashion I did with RPGs above.
While we have been seeing the influence of video and computer games on the culture ever since the 1970s in an increasing fashion, it’s hard to determine how well a game or a name will endure as history happens. Only in hindsight can we properly determine the ebbs and flows of masses, something the current gaming industry seems to ignore in favour of trying to appease each other with the press as their echo chamber. When Demon’s Souls was put out for the first time, nobody expected it to become a cultural cornerstone. However, history has shown us that people like to play challenging games, and from that challenge comes customer satisfaction. Well-built world and framing, with play-first mentality, is a sort of silver bullet. It’s not a game for everyone, and that’s fine. You can’t please everyone with one product, and trying to is simply being dishonest toward the game and the customer.
#electronicGames #entertainment #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
-
The many games of The Most Successful
With Rockstar and Grant Theft Auto 6 in the news for some unsavory reasons, I saw quite a lot of hubbubs about the success of the fifth game in the franchise and its comparative success compared to other games, and other forms entertainment. I’m slightly flabbergasted that someone would claim that GTA5 was the most successful form of entertainment, when people without much contact with the modern world knew about Michael Jackson. Thriller permeated everywhere, you can’t beat it.
Nevertheless, this made an interesting thought experiment on what counts as The Most Successful Video Game. It didn’t help that I saw the goal being pushed after one or two rounds of discussion, under which at least few realized that there’s more than one way of seeing this. Business has a different view on things compared to the customers, and then you have the historical view that has a longer view on how games have affected culture in general. This is why Pong, Space Invaders, Breakout and Pac-Man still live on in the cultural memory, even if the amount of success they’ve seen in terms of money is less than whatever big Triple A title that’s come after.
I should probably note that there’s also a slight difference in how some use the term franchise. While I tend to use it wrong as a synonym with Intellectual Property, an example of a franchise would be Street Fighter II. Street Fighter III would be its own franchise, while all falling under the same umbrella of IP. This is because of merchandising rights and all that business jazz.
Units Sold is of course a big one, the cumulative sales made by one game, or a series of games. For example, the Mario games have a cumulative sale of 957 million units, while Mega Man has 43 million units.
As for individual titles, Minecraft is an evergreen title that hits 350 units sold. GTAV follows It at 220 million units.
Units sold doesn’t really keep you afloat a lot, unless you have Revenue. This is the total gross the series does through game sales, possible DLC, merch, and other licensed material. Pokémon tops this chart with $115, followed by Call of Duty with $31 million.
The way digital games are consumed is different from purchased titles, of course. That’s why something like Candy Crush or Dungeon Fighter Online can top the chart of games with most revenue, as individuals put more money into these games. This compares apples and oranges; the business models are ultimately very different and the amount of money you can squeeze out of a customer via single sold title plus DLC is ultimately less than digital-only but squeezing small amounts throughout their play time. Gacha mixes things with the whole gambling aspect.
I don’t think we should count individual downloads. This is because a download doesn’t translate to a purchase, or revenue. There are numerous cases of curious people testing a free game out and then proceeding not to continue. These people are often counted to the player metric nonetheless, which shows that the total number of players can be skewed to showcase a more positive statistic for PR reasons. This is the same reason why Sony cites the total number of PlayStation 2’s when asked about the total number of consoles sold. It just looks better, and they can fudge the numbers for their benefit.
Then again, Subway Surfers has 2.05 billion individual downloads and spawned numerous imitators so there’s something value in that too.
Player Count is also something that seems to be a significant metric, with Roblox topping the list with the estimated number of players being in billions cumulative. Minecraft hitting a nice spot of 600 million plus players shows that it really is the Tetris of the modern age.
I would argue that the peak number of players, and how long that plateau is held, is a more significant counter simply because it shows how many players consume the game in each span of time. Through this, we get an idea whether a game holds its audience, which is far more important in the long-term in terms of customer satisfaction and how well customers make emotional connection to the game. A game that gets massive sales at the start but sees the player count sink like a rock in water has no lasting hold on the market.
While I don’t give much weight on the Critical Acclaim the journalists give to games (as they are nothing more than just an extra arm in the PR machine), The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and Soul Calibur top the chart with 99 and 98 according to Metacritic. I’d like to say the User Score is the metric we should use, but seeing Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 topping the current list reminds me how customers can’t be any more objective than the journalists most of the time.
If we count Spacewar! as the progenitor of all modern video and computer games (and we are,) gaming is 63 at the time of writing. There are only a handful of game names from the early era of electronic gaming that are still strongly alive. Pac-Man and Mario are the handful, with the rest of their brethren being relocated to nostalgic revivals and retro collections. While we may think the most popular games we have now will last for all time, we’ve seen so many game names simply vanishing, dying out or otherwise fall into torpor. Mega Man is a great example of this, sometimes popping its head up only to fall back into Capcom archives. Maybe we’ll get another game by 2030. Prince of Persia seemed like a name that would never die, but overexposure and simply being owned by Ubisoft clearly took its toll on the name. Same thing could be happening to Assassin Creed now, one can only hope.
Some of you might’ve noticed that I counted Donkey Kong as a Mario title. So does Nintendo, as that’s the first appearance of Mario, then named Jumpman. If you want, we can count Mario being started in 1983, making Mario 42 to Pac-Man’s 45. These are still small numbers compared to something like Universal Monsters, which have lasted for good 117 years. Looking at the comic book world, both Superman and Batman are in their 80s.
However, the gaming industry influences itself. Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 was influenced by Final Fantasy, which was seen as the premier gaming IP at one point in the Western World. However, going back and seeing what influenced Final Fantasy we find Dragon Quest and its numerous copycats and imitators. Going further back we find both Utima and Wizardry influencing the game, which also influenced so many other Japanese computer RPGs like The Black Onyx, which inspired the creation of The Legend of Zelda. Ultima and Wizardry have their roots in MUDs, which have roots in table-top RPGs, mainly Dungeon and Dragons, which have their roots in the military games generals and other army leaders would play to train their leadership.
The roots of video and computer gaming lie in the games and play of children and adults alike, alongside how stories were told by acting and playing them out. This tangent is to remind ourselves that gaming is not something that just came along with computers and consoles but is just the latest iteration of mankind has been doing ever since we dwelled in caves.
Nevertheless, the game with most cultural impact is probably Pokémon. Its Trading Card Game sales generate about one to three billion dollars per year, which rivals the top-most successful film’s revenue in their lifetime. Of course, TCG is an evergreen product compared to film’s finite runs, so this should illustrate how different the media are. Still, the franchise IP generated that $150 billion plus dollars and probably is Japan’s single most important import product. Pikachu is the face and mascot of the franchise, well-known across the glob, and served as an ambassador to 2014 World Cup, 2020 Tokyo Olympics and in 2025 World Expo. Its yellow face is featured in over fifty embassies across the world. Surprisingly, Pokémon has shown itself to be a multi-generational product, a cornerstone of sorts that sees constant parodies in other shows and games while drawing tourists of all ages to Pokémon Centers across the world, especially to Japan.
Even if Pokémon is a 1990s product, it can be placed alongside Mario and Pac-Man as a long-lasting face of gaming, with it probably ending up as the face of gaming on the long run if we had to choose one, for better or worse. This also illustrates some why Nintendo, The Pokémon Company, and to a lesser extent GameFreak would be freakishly overprotective of their IP. There are numerous other contenders we could put there, but I’m making a point there; there must be generationally recognizable face for all without really any breaks.
The list of games that influenced other games is as wide as the library of games out there. Talking about First-Person Shooting ends up someone tracing back to Halo, then Half-Life, a mention of Quake’s code still running in some modern games, another mentioning Goldeneye 007, with usually ending with either Doom or Wolfenstein 3D in a similar fashion I did with RPGs above.
While we have been seeing the influence of video and computer games on the culture ever since the 1970s in an increasing fashion, it’s hard to determine how well a game or a name will endure as history happens. Only in hindsight can we properly determine the ebbs and flows of masses, something the current gaming industry seems to ignore in favour of trying to appease each other with the press as their echo chamber. When Demon’s Souls was put out for the first time, nobody expected it to become a cultural cornerstone. However, history has shown us that people like to play challenging games, and from that challenge comes customer satisfaction. Well-built world and framing, with play-first mentality, is a sort of silver bullet. It’s not a game for everyone, and that’s fine. You can’t please everyone with one product, and trying to is simply being dishonest toward the game and the customer.
#electronicGames #entertainment #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
-
The many games of The Most Successful
With Rockstar and Grant Theft Auto 6 in the news for some unsavory reasons, I saw quite a lot of hubbubs about the success of the fifth game in the franchise and its comparative success compared to other games, and other forms entertainment. I’m slightly flabbergasted that someone would claim that GTA5 was the most successful form of entertainment, when people without much contact with the modern world knew about Michael Jackson. Thriller permeated everywhere, you can’t beat it.
Nevertheless, this made an interesting thought experiment on what counts as The Most Successful Video Game. It didn’t help that I saw the goal being pushed after one or two rounds of discussion, under which at least few realized that there’s more than one way of seeing this. Business has a different view on things compared to the customers, and then you have the historical view that has a longer view on how games have affected culture in general. This is why Pong, Space Invaders, Breakout and Pac-Man still live on in the cultural memory, even if the amount of success they’ve seen in terms of money is less than whatever big Triple A title that’s come after.
I should probably note that there’s also a slight difference in how some use the term franchise. While I tend to use it wrong as a synonym with Intellectual Property, an example of a franchise would be Street Fighter II. Street Fighter III would be its own franchise, while all falling under the same umbrella of IP. This is because of merchandising rights and all that business jazz.
Units Sold is of course a big one, the cumulative sales made by one game, or a series of games. For example, the Mario games have a cumulative sale of 957 million units, while Mega Man has 43 million units.
As for individual titles, Minecraft is an evergreen title that hits 350 units sold. GTAV follows It at 220 million units.
Units sold doesn’t really keep you afloat a lot, unless you have Revenue. This is the total gross the series does through game sales, possible DLC, merch, and other licensed material. Pokémon tops this chart with $115, followed by Call of Duty with $31 million.
The way digital games are consumed is different from purchased titles, of course. That’s why something like Candy Crush or Dungeon Fighter Online can top the chart of games with most revenue, as individuals put more money into these games. This compares apples and oranges; the business models are ultimately very different and the amount of money you can squeeze out of a customer via single sold title plus DLC is ultimately less than digital-only but squeezing small amounts throughout their play time. Gacha mixes things with the whole gambling aspect.
I don’t think we should count individual downloads. This is because a download doesn’t translate to a purchase, or revenue. There are numerous cases of curious people testing a free game out and then proceeding not to continue. These people are often counted to the player metric nonetheless, which shows that the total number of players can be skewed to showcase a more positive statistic for PR reasons. This is the same reason why Sony cites the total number of PlayStation 2’s when asked about the total number of consoles sold. It just looks better, and they can fudge the numbers for their benefit.
Then again, Subway Surfers has 2.05 billion individual downloads and spawned numerous imitators so there’s something value in that too.
Player Count is also something that seems to be a significant metric, with Roblox topping the list with the estimated number of players being in billions cumulative. Minecraft hitting a nice spot of 600 million plus players shows that it really is the Tetris of the modern age.
I would argue that the peak number of players, and how long that plateau is held, is a more significant counter simply because it shows how many players consume the game in each span of time. Through this, we get an idea whether a game holds its audience, which is far more important in the long-term in terms of customer satisfaction and how well customers make emotional connection to the game. A game that gets massive sales at the start but sees the player count sink like a rock in water has no lasting hold on the market.
While I don’t give much weight on the Critical Acclaim the journalists give to games (as they are nothing more than just an extra arm in the PR machine), The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and Soul Calibur top the chart with 99 and 98 according to Metacritic. I’d like to say the User Score is the metric we should use, but seeing Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 topping the current list reminds me how customers can’t be any more objective than the journalists most of the time.
If we count Spacewar! as the progenitor of all modern video and computer games (and we are,) gaming is 63 at the time of writing. There are only a handful of game names from the early era of electronic gaming that are still strongly alive. Pac-Man and Mario are the handful, with the rest of their brethren being relocated to nostalgic revivals and retro collections. While we may think the most popular games we have now will last for all time, we’ve seen so many game names simply vanishing, dying out or otherwise fall into torpor. Mega Man is a great example of this, sometimes popping its head up only to fall back into Capcom archives. Maybe we’ll get another game by 2030. Prince of Persia seemed like a name that would never die, but overexposure and simply being owned by Ubisoft clearly took its toll on the name. Same thing could be happening to Assassin Creed now, one can only hope.
Some of you might’ve noticed that I counted Donkey Kong as a Mario title. So does Nintendo, as that’s the first appearance of Mario, then named Jumpman. If you want, we can count Mario being started in 1983, making Mario 42 to Pac-Man’s 45. These are still small numbers compared to something like Universal Monsters, which have lasted for good 117 years. Looking at the comic book world, both Superman and Batman are in their 80s.
However, the gaming industry influences itself. Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 was influenced by Final Fantasy, which was seen as the premier gaming IP at one point in the Western World. However, going back and seeing what influenced Final Fantasy we find Dragon Quest and its numerous copycats and imitators. Going further back we find both Utima and Wizardry influencing the game, which also influenced so many other Japanese computer RPGs like The Black Onyx, which inspired the creation of The Legend of Zelda. Ultima and Wizardry have their roots in MUDs, which have roots in table-top RPGs, mainly Dungeon and Dragons, which have their roots in the military games generals and other army leaders would play to train their leadership.
The roots of video and computer gaming lie in the games and play of children and adults alike, alongside how stories were told by acting and playing them out. This tangent is to remind ourselves that gaming is not something that just came along with computers and consoles but is just the latest iteration of mankind has been doing ever since we dwelled in caves.
Nevertheless, the game with most cultural impact is probably Pokémon. Its Trading Card Game sales generate about one to three billion dollars per year, which rivals the top-most successful film’s revenue in their lifetime. Of course, TCG is an evergreen product compared to film’s finite runs, so this should illustrate how different the media are. Still, the franchise IP generated that $150 billion plus dollars and probably is Japan’s single most important import product. Pikachu is the face and mascot of the franchise, well-known across the glob, and served as an ambassador to 2014 World Cup, 2020 Tokyo Olympics and in 2025 World Expo. Its yellow face is featured in over fifty embassies across the world. Surprisingly, Pokémon has shown itself to be a multi-generational product, a cornerstone of sorts that sees constant parodies in other shows and games while drawing tourists of all ages to Pokémon Centers across the world, especially to Japan.
Even if Pokémon is a 1990s product, it can be placed alongside Mario and Pac-Man as a long-lasting face of gaming, with it probably ending up as the face of gaming on the long run if we had to choose one, for better or worse. This also illustrates some why Nintendo, The Pokémon Company, and to a lesser extent GameFreak would be freakishly overprotective of their IP. There are numerous other contenders we could put there, but I’m making a point there; there must be generationally recognizable face for all without really any breaks.
The list of games that influenced other games is as wide as the library of games out there. Talking about First-Person Shooting ends up someone tracing back to Halo, then Half-Life, a mention of Quake’s code still running in some modern games, another mentioning Goldeneye 007, with usually ending with either Doom or Wolfenstein 3D in a similar fashion I did with RPGs above.
While we have been seeing the influence of video and computer games on the culture ever since the 1970s in an increasing fashion, it’s hard to determine how well a game or a name will endure as history happens. Only in hindsight can we properly determine the ebbs and flows of masses, something the current gaming industry seems to ignore in favour of trying to appease each other with the press as their echo chamber. When Demon’s Souls was put out for the first time, nobody expected it to become a cultural cornerstone. However, history has shown us that people like to play challenging games, and from that challenge comes customer satisfaction. Well-built world and framing, with play-first mentality, is a sort of silver bullet. It’s not a game for everyone, and that’s fine. You can’t please everyone with one product, and trying to is simply being dishonest toward the game and the customer.
#electronicGames #entertainment #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
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The second Microsoft rant of the Month
Satya Nadella says Xbox isn’t competing with other game consoles. He says Xbox is competing with TikTok. This is Nadella effectively admitting Xbox has lost its primary market and must find something else to compare themselves to in order not to look so bad in the eyes of the market, or investors. People thought the Activision Blizzard buyout would’ve changed gaming in a way that Xbox would get all these exclusives, concentrating large swaths of games to one or two platforms, or something along those lines. As it turns out, none of these people looked at how Microsoft has worked, buying out companies and then gutting them when they haven’t turned out to be moneymakers. The more things change, the more things stay the same.
The buyout didn’t increase the number of customers. Simply buying a company and having it produce games doesn’t expand the market. You must deliver something that the Blue Ocean customer might want to have. The issue with Xbox is that it was a lifestyle brand for young boys and teenagers, as well as for some young adults, especially in the US and parts of Europe. It’s a very American brand, loud and obnoxious in a way. Xbox is Sega 2.0, doing the same bit in a different decade. This can carry a gaming console for a generation or two, when it must either expand its audience or try to appease its aging consumer base. Neither is a very good option, as the former is often seen as abandoning existing customers and will fail even worse if the new console and games aren’t disrupting the market, and the latter will be diminishing returns as younger generations or expanding families won’t find the system appealing. The Apple lifestyle brand model doesn’t work in console gaming, as consoles require games, not just expensive looks.
Gaming is changing not because of consolidation of companies. It’s changing because of customer behaviour and lack of competition between game companies. If Xbox is in competition with TikTok, then they are in competition with every other form of entertainment media and that is a losing battle. They’re stretching their battlefield too thin and are now losing in their own market. This is like dick envy from Microsoft, seeing the numbers something completely different from their business is doing and wanting some of that. This is a repeat of Microsoft wanting to get into console gaming with the Xbox after seeing what sort of magic Nintendo and Sony were brewing. This small dick energy has always been something Microsoft, and by extension Xbox, has always had.
Gaming has changed due to the game market changing, i.e. people changing. Currently, the average age of a gamer in the US is 36. European media is 31, the same as China, but Italy tops out at 50. The numbers don’t change much across the world, even in Japan the number is 33. These are people who have some eighteen years of gaming behind them, these all are part of a particular generation in global terms that took up gaming us a hobby in their childhood. These people now have families and jobs that require their attention. Time to play games grows shorter and thus what kind of games people play.
Why are younger generations going for TikTok and other shortform content instead of playing video games? Because the games that these big companies are bloated mess that hold your hand all the way down and don’t give the kicks. The children yearn for arcade games. Games that get you in fast, give you exhilaration and get you out just as fast. Keep it simple, stupid. Not these tens to hundreds of hours of bloat and framing, these kids want to be entertained now, not in five minutes after the cutscene is over.
I guess this is why Xbox is now whatever. They can’t sell themselves as a lifestyle brand with Mountain Dew and Doritos anymore, so they’re going to brand your phone as an Xbox you can play games on while taking a shit at school or work. Gaming has been competing for the same set of customers without expanding. The Hollywood Approach in gaming dooms it to develop and publish games that take over half a decade to develop and try to appease everyone while being aimed at the core audience. It doesn’t work on the long run. There is always a need for variety, and in this grey mass of Triple A all you get is disappointment.
Sure, Nadella, Xbox is competing with other media for the attention of the customer. Xbox becoming a dedicated gaming PC with windows and Steam is just admitting Microsoft failed at console business. You can’t compete with TikTok by offering the same things that are already offered elsewhere better. If you’re selling tomato sauce, you can’t just offer the same kind of tomato sauce your competition is already selling and then say you’re competing with chocolate bars.
This is why I find Xbox as a console so boring in terms of business and games. They never do anything original, and when they do something that causes an uproar, they do the exact same things they’ve always done as a tech company. They don’t create disruptions, they don’t create better value alternatives, they don’t create original IPs that could last (and when they do, they just kill ‘em off), and now you can pick their games wherever the fuck you want. They’re not even a Triple A gaming company, they’re a tech company with all the woes and none of the benefits when it comes to gaming.
Why would you buy a console that has less unique titles than the competition? If Sony’s getting Xbox titles, there is no reason to buy an Xbox outside brand loyalty. But then you’re missing all the Sony titles. But then why buy a PlayStation when you could just buy a gaming PC at the same price and get both systems’ titles? When you’re not competing with Sony, your biggest gaming rival, then who are you competing against? Everything else, it seems.
Xbox isn’t even Pepsi of gaming. When they can’t win at PC gaming, they asked What else people want to play. Then they went to learn lessons from Sega with the Dreamcast and shat out the Xbox. Now that’s failing, and they’re asking What else people are spending their time one, and here we are. Xbox didn’t grow the gaming market in any significant manner, it simply wallowed what was already there. If Microsoft wants to see growth, they need to grow the market itself. This isn’t “modern audiences” garbage, this is about lapsed gamers and people who have never played games before. The industry will not grow unless these people are met with on a level ground.
What these companies need to do is to tear down the walls that are between games and people who would like to, might want to, play them.
We’ve seen what kind of games the younger generation plays. Roblox is what they enjoy, something older gamers have a tough time understanding, and what other publishers don’t get either but still want to replicate the results. We saw the exact same with Fortnite.
“The graveyard of any industry is filled with the headstones of companies who decided to keep doing things the same old way. Playing only on the margin, making things just a little bit better. That strategy works….for a while, but ultimately it’s fatal.”
You can’t disrupt and hope to come at the top in a market if you abandon it.
“We’re not going to grow the market with $1,000 consoles.”
#customerService #electronicGames #games #gaming #microsoft #xbox
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Xbox is now a watered down brand
Microsoft has a history with buying gaming companies, having exceedingly large expectations of them, and then proceeding to cull them for not meeting those expectations. They ultimately call the shots what Xbox as a department does. People were calling buying Activision Blizzard deal of the century, something that would forever change gaming. What we got was the same as usual, just with bigger dollars in the play.
Microsoft has never really got console gaming. They were decent when it came to PC market, but console gaming was beyond them. Maybe that’s why they resorted on delivering PC gaming on consoles. Looking back, the Xbox 360 probably wouldn’t have been the limited success it was if the macro-economics hadn’t been in a good shape and a new generation of consumers had come around. Xbox kiddies are now grown up and remember the days they were throwing slurs to each other in online matches with rose-tinted goggles.
MS and Xbox are doing the mistake all businesses tend to do when there’s a downward spiral; hard sale the decreasing customer base. When these last customers realise that they’re paying at least twice as much as they used to, with less other people around, they tend to explore other venues where they get better value for their money. Only the hardest of the core customer will stay to the sad end, and they’ll be monetarily abused all the way. It’ll help to get some money short term, but on the long term it’ll bust the business.
It’s comedic how much Microsoft’s console gaming is only a pale shadow of PC gaming, as now we’re seeing plans and methods of monetization that have been prevalent in mobile gaming, which itself is an extension of PC gaming. Xboxes have always been just dumbed down PCs with the games largely mirroring this. Microsoft never understood console gaming, which is why they’ve always been a massive failure in Japan, and why X360 didn’t sell as well as the Wii, or the PS3 in the end. The same can be said about modern Sony, where their big name titles all look the same, and their pricing has gone to high heavens. Nintendo lost the plot after Iwata as well.
It’s not a big secret what console gaming is supposed to be; an option for home gaming that is uncomplicated, direct and has high value with relatively low pricing point. It has its own culture around it that is different from PC gaming, both among players and developers. Some publishers saw this, but as the division between the two (and the arcade being the third pillar in this house) has been diminished, so has the quality of the product. PC gamers bemoan how games get dumbed down to console gamers with simplified controls or how ports of console games lack options they expect from PC games. Console gamers then get the same deal, dregs and scraps of PC games that are forced into a mold these games don’t really fit. Double stick controls are still only a bad emulation for Mouse and Keyboard. At the same time, M+KB can never beat the immediacy and tactile controls a console pad has. Probably why people are using first and third party console controllers on PCs nowadays a lot. Both sides suffer (while the arcades stay dead.)
The rising prices and chasing higher-end graphics that contribute nothing to the play has been a detriment for consoles. The more expensive and the more inconvenient a console is, the less it performs. The first point we can clearly say Microsoft started the downfall of Xbox was during X360’s and Xbox One’s transition, when they told customers that couldn’t have an always-online console to buy their older machine rather than invest into their newer hotness. Nintendo’s rep said the same thing when asked about customers who wouldn’t afford the Switch 2. It’s not good form and show how little these companies care about their customers. We’ll see if history rhymes.
If the Game Pass has been disastrous to game sales and money gotten out of MS brand games, mainly Call of Duty, then what does that say about smaller publishers’ and developers’ games on it? They’re probably seeing even less individual sales on their games. Game Pass has simply devalued gaming in general and MS is now feeling it themselves. It appears that individual game sales makes more profit than bundling them into an equivalent of Netflix of gaming. So, nickle and diming become the standard because the Netflix model as it is now with games doesn’t work. You will see ads becoming a standard down the line when maximum amount of nickel and diming is met, and then every other thing will be monetized in some fashion. Hell, I can see things like higher graphics settings being monetized on the long run if things keep going on like this.
Then you have the watering down of Xbox as a brand. If everything that can have Game Pass in some form is a Xbox, Xbox is worthless as a brand. Game Pass has replaced it. If rumours about the next Xbox console are true, then having Steam on the system makes it yet another dumbed down PC that offers nothing over buying a standard PC. The same games appear on Steam, Epic and Windows Store anyway. What’s the point of Xbox as a console at this point? At least Nintendo is still offering first party titles that aren’t available anywhere else, even if they’re insane with their pricing.
When services get more expensive and what’s deliver gets worse, people will turn away and spend their money where they get more value. Alternatively, people will go back to piracy, like in Finland. If people running Xbox as a brand wants it to do better, they have to go back to what made the original and 360 cultural touchstones while learning from the mistakes they’ve been doing all this time. Like Xbox brand name on a $1k ROG handheld. They’re contracting the market instead of expanding it, making their hard business even harder for them.
#consoleGaming #customerAndService #electronicGames #games #gaming #microsoft #videoGames #videogames #xbox
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Philippine gaming industry figures are in, with e-games being 53% of total GGR - The Philippine gaming industry has seen increased gross gaming revenues (GGR) in t... - https://readwrite.com/philippine-gaming-industry-figures-e-games-ggr/ #electronicgames #philippines #gambling
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Philippine gaming industry figures are in, with e-games being 53% of total GGR - The Philippine gaming industry has seen increased gross gaming revenues (GGR) in t... - https://readwrite.com/philippine-gaming-industry-figures-e-games-ggr/ #electronicgames #philippines #gambling
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Philippine gaming industry figures are in, with e-games being 53% of total GGR - The Philippine gaming industry has seen increased gross gaming revenues (GGR) in t... - https://readwrite.com/philippine-gaming-industry-figures-e-games-ggr/ #electronicgames #philippines #gambling
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Philippine gaming industry figures are in, with e-games being 53% of total GGR - The Philippine gaming industry has seen increased gross gaming revenues (GGR) in t... - https://readwrite.com/philippine-gaming-industry-figures-e-games-ggr/ #electronicgames #philippines #gambling
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Philippine gaming industry figures are in, with e-games being 53% of total GGR - The Philippine gaming industry has seen increased gross gaming revenues (GGR) in t... - https://readwrite.com/philippine-gaming-industry-figures-e-games-ggr/ #electronicgames #philippines #gambling
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History rhymes
The more things change, the more things stay the same. I don’t subscribe to the idea of history repeating itself. Instead, it rhymes. Certain kind of events keep happening generationally, and the whole hundred years cycle seems to have a point to it. That’s enough generations to go through some hardship, who has children seeing what happens, who can’t really get it through with the next generation, and then we lose the point of connection with people and events. Rarely people look at history and learn from it. School teaches as about history, and that’s where we usually stop. That’s good enough. However, politicians and businessmen should learn from history. That changes the game drastically. Resorting to the way of thinking technological and social advancements somehow refute or disvalue the past successes and mistakes.
Things change constantly even if we don’t notice it ourselves. A lot of things don’t matter to us, and we’re lulled that the world is an unchanging place to a certain extent. Take Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as an example. After the Berlin Wall and Soviet Union fell, that was seen as a certain point where history ended. The Western World would include Russia, as it was seen the democratic change in the country would make all things better. It was a march for all things good. This didn’t happen. A nation and culture going through a shock treatment of sorts, freeing industries and economy from the socialist stranglehold into Russian version of capitalism, but Yeltsin’s government didn’t implement rules and regulations that would direct the change. Instead, the oligarchs would sweep government issued vouchers (that could’ve been traded for shares of a company, deposited in mutual funds, sold or exchanged) from people who didn’t know investing and owning stocks worked, privatizing Russia’s industries to a large extend under their own names. Not that the government could’ve done much to prevent this, they didn’t have the resources or the knowhow.
Fast-forward to 1998 when the Russian government went through a financial meltdown partly how to oligarchs kept fighting with each other. Russia never had a chance with democracy or proper capitalism. The change was too fast and unregulated, letting people who knew how to game the system take advantage of others and thus screwing up the whole pot for everyone. With Putin in the big seat after Yeltsin, the New Millennium saw oligarchs being chased out of Russia, or killed, as a class. His autocracy and direction promised Russian people better living. Under Putin, Russia is a democracy in name only. His long-term leadership has the long cultural aftertaste of the tzars, and in recent years it has gained the poisonous tinge of leader worship in fashion of Stalin.
Despite the recent history of Russia, and the 2014 Annexation of Crimea, Western powers believed Russia to be a benevolent power that was going toward good for all through hard patches. Especially European powers believed there’d be no large-scale war in Europe anymore, but here we now are. Europe’s defences are largely scuffed, major centre powers were reliant on Russian gas for energy while downsizing their nuclear power, and then the Middle East powder keg began to shake again. People know about the history Russian and Middle East history, but only a few would’ve voiced out loud how we’re going to see the shit hitting the fan. We live through history every day. If you look under the crust of it all, we always live in interesting times. Not necessarily directly related to us in any manner, but the psychohistorical forces are working onwards each day. Some work hard to be on the right side of history, but in the moment of things taking place, there is no right or wrong side. That’s for the future generations to decide with (hopefully) better hindsight. They could be completely screwed by the historians interpreting events and people wrong, politicians intentionally changing the story to fit certain narratives to make them and the people feel better.
The whole SARS-Covid-19 Pandemic is an example where this happens. The amount of first-hand anecdotes historians will have to go through in the future is immense thanks to the social media. Then you have all the cases where politicians and the mainstream mass media told the people you wouldn’t get the virus if you were vaccinated. Of course, that’s not how vaccines work; they give you better resistance, but you’ll still catch the virus and can spread it around. Suspicions about the vaccines themselves were raised, seeing they didn’t go through any of the long-term testing other vaccines had to go through. No governing body was ready for the pandemic, and now that we’re at a point where its endemic, the global response was lacklustre.
The idea of global pandemic had been something that belonged in the realms of fiction. Very few people were alive, who had gone through the Spanish Flu, or the Great Influenza Epidemic. We know about it, but no government had anyone who had learned from it. There were no protocols to rely on, no people who had expert knowledge on what to do or how to enact whatever policies. People just did what they thought was the best, with some taking the advantage of the situation, as usual.
How does this reflect on the general motif of the blog? Entertainment doesn’t really change, it reflects the times and cultures it is created in. A parody of the ruling class made in the Ancient Greece has the same pushing power as the modern late-night comedy show dissing whomever is the in the Big Chair. Games naturally are there to offer friendly competition.
Video and computer games are still a relatively young media, but it has already seen a generational change once or twice. Much like how some people can’t stand black-and-white movies or read books that have old-fashioned language, there is a generation that can barely tolerate games that don’t have polygons. First and Second Generation of consoles are outright dismissed as unplayable junk. Quality of life is a must for everything to streamline the experience, which in some cases means cutting out part of the play. I’m looking at you, Monster Hunter.
The US Video Game Crash of 1983 has been exaggerated (mainly by US video game historians) as it had no real effect on the European or Asian markets, where consumers were buying different kind of machines. Often flooding the market with lousy games and rising interest in personal computers are cited as the main reasons why the Crash took place, but rarely the core reasons are pin pointed. The one point I want to put a pin on is how all the suits pushing for more games at a lower quality weren’t players themselves. They understood making money on video games in then-current paradigm, but not how to sustain the market properly. When you’re looking at the numbers, you often forget the people. You may understand what sells, but not why it sells or how to evolve the market. That only leads to weakened state, where you’re open for competition to disturb the market with a new product. In Nintendo’s case, kick the market back into action in the US, while staying in the second place in European markets.
Currently, the major console manufacturers are in a similar position, where they’re running on investor fumes and chasing an unchanging market. Nintendo must rely on their souped-up handheld now to carry them all the while Sony’s porting all their possible system sellers to other platforms and Microsoft has all but waved a white flag on the console business. A competitor could come from the woodworks and offer a home console at an affordable price with attractive exclusive titles, the lifeblood of console gaming. Electronic gaming is so safe nowadays, nobody is taking risks or chancing to kick the industry into a new curve that might excite customers. None of the Three Big Ones have leadership that understands their customers or play games themselves. At its core, the ’83 American Video Game Crash was because of corporate complacency and unwillingness to have customer-driven approach. Then again, both Microsoft and Sony seem to be bending out of the race
Gaming won’t crash a second time, however. Much like how computer gaming got its rise during the Crash in the US (in Europe, micro-computers were already trending over US consoles, with Sega later upping the stage by offering a cheaper and more accessible alternative than its supposed main competitor, Nintendo), modern gaming is rhyming with the small single-developed computer games of the era.
More than a handful of remarkable games were developed by a small team of enthusiastic people working toward their dream. Ultima and Wizardry, the mainstay examples were developed by what’d be called now as indies. Even if the console market crashed, PC gaming kicked off to a whole new start, leading to multiple manufacturers to compete with their own hardware. Atari’s consoles may have been a footnote in the European market on the grand scale, but the Atari’s computers’ rivalry against the Commodore Amiga had its own system war worth talking about one of these days.
The interest in indies hasn’t vaned since the term was coined sometime in the ‘00s. Just the contrary, indies have become the place where people are able to find far more interesting and daring games that big companies aren’t willing to entertain a thought of. Hence, quite many voices says the most interesting games are now found in the indies-sphere. Some claim to have abandoned Triple A games altogether in favour of indie titles. Not just because they’re more interesting, but also because they’re cheaper and often better optimized.
History rhymes in gaming. I’ve seen a steady rise of want for games that are distilled play. People who played one game for hundreds of hours are now looking for games that are shorter and meatier. People want games that have the arcade spirit, games you can get quickly in, have dense play, and you can get quickly out. Life changes. As a kid or a teenager, you’ve got all the time to walk around in a RPG that’s mostly walking around, a hot-air game. After you start getting responsibilities, work starts to take time, kids roll around, and suddenly you find yourself an adult, games fall behind in priority. That’s only natural, but you can’t really let go of a loved hobby. So, games that pack a punch become more valuable. Mega Man 11 was a great entry, because it wasn’t a hot-air game. It was all play, like Classic Mega Man should be. Arcades as a place may have gone the way of the dodo, but the need for games that have the same function has never gone away.
There is a market for console gaming. Sega’s and Nintendo’s mini-consoles sold out fast, necessitating additional production runs. Sony’s mini-PlayStation lingered on the shelves a bit longer, mostly due to the bad choices in its design and game selection. The current state of console gaming is waiting for some company to disrupt it. I know there are Sega diehards who would like see their return to the home-hardware business, but Sega has largely been a Red Ocean company when it came to consoles. One of the reasons why they had lacklustre success in Japan compared to US and Europe, which the Sega of Japan heads didn’t really understand. Sega’s innovation in the arcades never really translated into innovation with consoles, even when they had the best D-Pad in the industry up until the Dreamcast. Apple probably won’t try consoles again thanks to the failure of the Pippin. Google showing how big money can’t really net you a workable console either, especially when you’re tying it into something crippling like cloud service.
Console gaming fails when the companies behind the consoles are failing to deliver. Nowadays, all the consoles are dumbed-down PCs, Xboxes the most. When all systems share the same library, none of them is unique. Nintendo still has an edge in this regard, but even exclusives will carry them only so far. New physical game carts that function as keys to game downloads and customers not even owning their consoles according to their TOS are all steps toward the customer not owning their hardware and software anymore. At some point, anti-consumer antics will come home to roost and then there’s hell to pay. I keep saying exclusives matter with consoles, but at some point the scales will tip to the opposite direction and only sycophants will pay for lesser value hardware and software. History will rhyme at some point, and if console companies don’t realize it, someone else will be taking the top spot. Big things happen and change will take place in your lifetime. It’s just a matter of time. The harmony of things will get disrupted.
#computerGames #design #electronicGames #games #gaming #microsoft #Nintendo #sega #Sony #videoGames #videogames
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History rhymes
The more things change, the more things stay the same. I don’t subscribe to the idea of history repeating itself. Instead, it rhymes. Certain kind of events keep happening generationally, and the whole hundred years cycle seems to have a point to it. That’s enough generations to go through some hardship, who has children seeing what happens, who can’t really get it through with the next generation, and then we lose the point of connection with people and events. Rarely people look at history and learn from it. School teaches as about history, and that’s where we usually stop. That’s good enough. However, politicians and businessmen should learn from history. That changes the game drastically. Resorting to the way of thinking technological and social advancements somehow refute or disvalue the past successes and mistakes.
Things change constantly even if we don’t notice it ourselves. A lot of things don’t matter to us, and we’re lulled that the world is an unchanging place to a certain extent. Take Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as an example. After the Berlin Wall and Soviet Union fell, that was seen as a certain point where history ended. The Western World would include Russia, as it was seen the democratic change in the country would make all things better. It was a march for all things good. This didn’t happen. A nation and culture going through a shock treatment of sorts, freeing industries and economy from the socialist stranglehold into Russian version of capitalism, but Yeltsin’s government didn’t implement rules and regulations that would direct the change. Instead, the oligarchs would sweep government issued vouchers (that could’ve been traded for shares of a company, deposited in mutual funds, sold or exchanged) from people who didn’t know investing and owning stocks worked, privatizing Russia’s industries to a large extend under their own names. Not that the government could’ve done much to prevent this, they didn’t have the resources or the knowhow.
Fast-forward to 1998 when the Russian government went through a financial meltdown partly how to oligarchs kept fighting with each other. Russia never had a chance with democracy or proper capitalism. The change was too fast and unregulated, letting people who knew how to game the system take advantage of others and thus screwing up the whole pot for everyone. With Putin in the big seat after Yeltsin, the New Millennium saw oligarchs being chased out of Russia, or killed, as a class. His autocracy and direction promised Russian people better living. Under Putin, Russia is a democracy in name only. His long-term leadership has the long cultural aftertaste of the tzars, and in recent years it has gained the poisonous tinge of leader worship in fashion of Stalin.
Despite the recent history of Russia, and the 2014 Annexation of Crimea, Western powers believed Russia to be a benevolent power that was going toward good for all through hard patches. Especially European powers believed there’d be no large-scale war in Europe anymore, but here we now are. Europe’s defences are largely scuffed, major centre powers were reliant on Russian gas for energy while downsizing their nuclear power, and then the Middle East powder keg began to shake again. People know about the history Russian and Middle East history, but only a few would’ve voiced out loud how we’re going to see the shit hitting the fan. We live through history every day. If you look under the crust of it all, we always live in interesting times. Not necessarily directly related to us in any manner, but the psychohistorical forces are working onwards each day. Some work hard to be on the right side of history, but in the moment of things taking place, there is no right or wrong side. That’s for the future generations to decide with (hopefully) better hindsight. They could be completely screwed by the historians interpreting events and people wrong, politicians intentionally changing the story to fit certain narratives to make them and the people feel better.
The whole SARS-Covid-19 Pandemic is an example where this happens. The amount of first-hand anecdotes historians will have to go through in the future is immense thanks to the social media. Then you have all the cases where politicians and the mainstream mass media told the people you wouldn’t get the virus if you were vaccinated. Of course, that’s not how vaccines work; they give you better resistance, but you’ll still catch the virus and can spread it around. Suspicions about the vaccines themselves were raised, seeing they didn’t go through any of the long-term testing other vaccines had to go through. No governing body was ready for the pandemic, and now that we’re at a point where its endemic, the global response was lacklustre.
The idea of global pandemic had been something that belonged in the realms of fiction. Very few people were alive, who had gone through the Spanish Flu, or the Great Influenza Epidemic. We know about it, but no government had anyone who had learned from it. There were no protocols to rely on, no people who had expert knowledge on what to do or how to enact whatever policies. People just did what they thought was the best, with some taking the advantage of the situation, as usual.
How does this reflect on the general motif of the blog? Entertainment doesn’t really change, it reflects the times and cultures it is created in. A parody of the ruling class made in the Ancient Greece has the same pushing power as the modern late-night comedy show dissing whomever is the in the Big Chair. Games naturally are there to offer friendly competition.
Video and computer games are still a relatively young media, but it has already seen a generational change once or twice. Much like how some people can’t stand black-and-white movies or read books that have old-fashioned language, there is a generation that can barely tolerate games that don’t have polygons. First and Second Generation of consoles are outright dismissed as unplayable junk. Quality of life is a must for everything to streamline the experience, which in some cases means cutting out part of the play. I’m looking at you, Monster Hunter.
The US Video Game Crash of 1983 has been exaggerated (mainly by US video game historians) as it had no real effect on the European or Asian markets, where consumers were buying different kind of machines. Often flooding the market with lousy games and rising interest in personal computers are cited as the main reasons why the Crash took place, but rarely the core reasons are pin pointed. The one point I want to put a pin on is how all the suits pushing for more games at a lower quality weren’t players themselves. They understood making money on video games in then-current paradigm, but not how to sustain the market properly. When you’re looking at the numbers, you often forget the people. You may understand what sells, but not why it sells or how to evolve the market. That only leads to weakened state, where you’re open for competition to disturb the market with a new product. In Nintendo’s case, kick the market back into action in the US, while staying in the second place in European markets.
Currently, the major console manufacturers are in a similar position, where they’re running on investor fumes and chasing an unchanging market. Nintendo must rely on their souped-up handheld now to carry them all the while Sony’s porting all their possible system sellers to other platforms and Microsoft has all but waved a white flag on the console business. A competitor could come from the woodworks and offer a home console at an affordable price with attractive exclusive titles, the lifeblood of console gaming. Electronic gaming is so safe nowadays, nobody is taking risks or chancing to kick the industry into a new curve that might excite customers. None of the Three Big Ones have leadership that understands their customers or play games themselves. At its core, the ’83 American Video Game Crash was because of corporate complacency and unwillingness to have customer-driven approach. Then again, both Microsoft and Sony seem to be bending out of the race
Gaming won’t crash a second time, however. Much like how computer gaming got its rise during the Crash in the US (in Europe, micro-computers were already trending over US consoles, with Sega later upping the stage by offering a cheaper and more accessible alternative than its supposed main competitor, Nintendo), modern gaming is rhyming with the small single-developed computer games of the era.
More than a handful of remarkable games were developed by a small team of enthusiastic people working toward their dream. Ultima and Wizardry, the mainstay examples were developed by what’d be called now as indies. Even if the console market crashed, PC gaming kicked off to a whole new start, leading to multiple manufacturers to compete with their own hardware. Atari’s consoles may have been a footnote in the European market on the grand scale, but the Atari’s computers’ rivalry against the Commodore Amiga had its own system war worth talking about one of these days.
The interest in indies hasn’t vaned since the term was coined sometime in the ‘00s. Just the contrary, indies have become the place where people are able to find far more interesting and daring games that big companies aren’t willing to entertain a thought of. Hence, quite many voices says the most interesting games are now found in the indies-sphere. Some claim to have abandoned Triple A games altogether in favour of indie titles. Not just because they’re more interesting, but also because they’re cheaper and often better optimized.
History rhymes in gaming. I’ve seen a steady rise of want for games that are distilled play. People who played one game for hundreds of hours are now looking for games that are shorter and meatier. People want games that have the arcade spirit, games you can get quickly in, have dense play, and you can get quickly out. Life changes. As a kid or a teenager, you’ve got all the time to walk around in a RPG that’s mostly walking around, a hot-air game. After you start getting responsibilities, work starts to take time, kids roll around, and suddenly you find yourself an adult, games fall behind in priority. That’s only natural, but you can’t really let go of a loved hobby. So, games that pack a punch become more valuable. Mega Man 11 was a great entry, because it wasn’t a hot-air game. It was all play, like Classic Mega Man should be. Arcades as a place may have gone the way of the dodo, but the need for games that have the same function has never gone away.
There is a market for console gaming. Sega’s and Nintendo’s mini-consoles sold out fast, necessitating additional production runs. Sony’s mini-PlayStation lingered on the shelves a bit longer, mostly due to the bad choices in its design and game selection. The current state of console gaming is waiting for some company to disrupt it. I know there are Sega diehards who would like see their return to the home-hardware business, but Sega has largely been a Red Ocean company when it came to consoles. One of the reasons why they had lacklustre success in Japan compared to US and Europe, which the Sega of Japan heads didn’t really understand. Sega’s innovation in the arcades never really translated into innovation with consoles, even when they had the best D-Pad in the industry up until the Dreamcast. Apple probably won’t try consoles again thanks to the failure of the Pippin. Google showing how big money can’t really net you a workable console either, especially when you’re tying it into something crippling like cloud service.
Console gaming fails when the companies behind the consoles are failing to deliver. Nowadays, all the consoles are dumbed-down PCs, Xboxes the most. When all systems share the same library, none of them is unique. Nintendo still has an edge in this regard, but even exclusives will carry them only so far. New physical game carts that function as keys to game downloads and customers not even owning their consoles according to their TOS are all steps toward the customer not owning their hardware and software anymore. At some point, anti-consumer antics will come home to roost and then there’s hell to pay. I keep saying exclusives matter with consoles, but at some point the scales will tip to the opposite direction and only sycophants will pay for lesser value hardware and software. History will rhyme at some point, and if console companies don’t realize it, someone else will be taking the top spot. Big things happen and change will take place in your lifetime. It’s just a matter of time. The harmony of things will get disrupted.
#computerGames #design #electronicGames #games #gaming #microsoft #Nintendo #sega #Sony #videoGames #videogames
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About Super Mario Bros. and a rant about game reviews lacking focus on technology
I just recently played through Super Mario Bros. through without Warps or skips for the first time in a few decades. It’s a challenge, especially without Warps. I made a note how in World 4-2 gets harder in its layout and enemies just after the spot where you can get to Warp via beanstalk. This is where the first Buzzy Beetles appear, mirrored to a Green Koopa Troopa. You can get a Star above it, but first time players wouldn’t know you can’t hurt them with a Fireball, leading to an easy death if you’re rushing things.
Rushing things was something I kept doing too much, trying to rely on my atrophied muscle memory and skill I don’t have any more. There’s over 200 seconds in the timer, I could afford to slow down and take in the game’s design the way I properly never had before. While I’m more partial for physics found in Mega Man, the way Mario retains motion and accelerates allows tight control. More skilled players can blaze through the game and abuse some of the coding bugs and quirks, but for a normal player the game is coded so no bugs or errors appear outside some hitbox interactions. Like in World 8-3, where kicking a Koopa shell often misses Hammer Bros. despite the stage layout being designed for it. I recall this being fixed in Mario All-Stars.
Super Mario Bros. is a wonderful game, outmatched by pretty much every single action game that followed it, but nevertheless a joy to play. Being able to choose a stage after finishing the game is a fun thing, and the Hard Mode is for players who want more punishing enemies and stage elements. It’s not Lost Levels, but still.
The main reason I picked up SMB as my weekend game out of all others is because I wanted to stand by my words. You can find tons of references to the game on this blog, and going back with older set of eyes made me appreciate the game slightly more. In a few ways, SMB is almost a perfect game, a perfect home console game. You get fast into it, the game doesn’t waste your time. The game’s mechanics are very easy to learn, but ultimately hard to master. Once you master them, you can proceed to break it. I never really mastered the game, I never could pull off Infinite Lives trick. Not that it is needed, but it’d be nice to have. The music and sounds are all apt, and for a game that’s running on the most bare bones of NES hardware without any extra bells and whistles when it comes to mappers, it’s just nice. SMB was supposed to be the last, greatest cartridge game Nintendo published to the Famicom after all, just before the launched the Disk System. Hindsight is 20/20.
Games don’t become old because technology advances, game become old if there if newer games are better. While subjective, we have objective metrics on which we can measure how well a game is made on. Most of that is subject how well the game is coded and good the controls are. Ghost’n Goblins’ NES port isn’t a good game because its coding is an awful mess, for example. Its various other ports are a lot better though. For example, the Amiga port is a superb game, as is the Saturn port. Not too many games can hit the level of quality SMB has, and when they do, you can often find the stage designs being overly obtuse or some mechanical gimmick being introduced to make it stand separate. Part of why SMB plays so well is because it is very distilled down to the core; there are no unnecessary extra bits bolted unto it to mess it up. Even Nintendo messes this up, introducing gimmicks to Mario games that add no value to the game or its play.
Sometimes I check a younger Youtuber doing a review on older games. Sometimes they mention how they don’t have intentions to consider the times the game was made in, or put the game in its place in its era. All that matters if the game is worth playing now or something else along those lines. I find this a weak justification to ignore what the game was made to be played on, as that discolours the objectivity of the review. Unless we accept that Super Mario Bros. was made to be played on a forty years old console on a CRT, we can’t really have an objective view on it. Sure we can play it on other consoles via re-releases, but as we know, modern technology throws a few monkey wrenches into the mix that make the play less than ideal. Be it from introducing save states to LCD screen lag compared to CRT, the play will be inherently different. Especially on emulators, where people can further muddle up the play as they want.
I inherently distrust a reviewer who doesn’t consider the context of the game. If we don’t, I might as well exclaim stupidly that we might as well delete all the video and computer games from last console generation onwards. Clearly, these are inferior products as they’re on inferior hardware and offer lesser play than newer games. On the other hand, it is also apparent the generations you grew up with are the best and exempt from the whole shebang. You would be surprised how many kids these days have told me that the Seventh console generation was the peak of gaming, that the competition between the 360 and PS3 was the greatest thing there was, with the Wii being a great outlier. Similarly I’ve met people who consider the Sixth Gen to be the best there ever was, citing the massive library the PS2 had, how Xbox introduced online gaming to consoles and how Super Smash Bros. Melee is the best fighting game out there still. The point being, we often forget the context games were made in and what were their limitations. Video and computer games, broadly speaking, have no limitations as they used to have.
Let’s dismiss those hyperbole and superlatives, and let me squeeze the juice out of that; we can’t dismiss the era a game was made in no matter how much we’d like to.
Technology advances, but a game’s play doesn’t. It’ll always stay the same no matter on what future technology it is put on. Recognizing that SMB is a NES game made in a certain moment in time to a certain platform with technological limitations on can only elevate a review, because it would recognize the passage of time and in comparison to any game that’s on better technology.
Hell, I’d go as far as argue that game reviews should put more emphasize on how well current technology is being used alongside its coding. If a generic engine like Unreal is used, then there needs to be even more scrutinizing whether or not the engine is used to its utmost extent and how well it has been modified for the game. We don’t see most reviews mentioning any of these, because most game reviewers aren’t considering the technology at all.
Of course, consumers aren’t thinking about the technology either, generally speaking. The only place where discussion about hardware and coding rears its ugly head is when people discuss low framerates, bugs and play issues. Graphics is something that’s an inherent part of PC gaming culture, so we can dismiss it. I’m like a broken clock with this, but we can’t really escape the unoptimised games nowadays with uncompressed data galore. Developers and publishers are largely moving towards technological progress that isn’t valuable to the consumers, which in turn make developing games cost more and more. One of the many reasons why games end up costing 70 to 100 euro now, if not more. If any of these companies would practice the Blue Ocean strategy any more, they’d aim to product with value to the customer with lower cost. This can be done, and it has been done multiple time in gaming history. It will be done again, once companies and corporations realize ever-rising costs to consumers isn’t the healthiest way of making money.
We can’t really expect reviewers to spend time to look behind the curtains about games though. Very, very few reviewer is adept at coding and looking at how a game is made. Most we can do, in general, is to look at the results how they play. One Youtube channel concentrates solely on framerates and ignores pretty much everything else how a game is built and how it functions, be it enemy AI or something else, and makes a call whether or not a game plays well. I honestly can’t recall what its name is.
There’s no depth when it comes to discussion about the technology behind video games in reviews, but maybe that just reflects the general consumers. Perhaps very few people are interested in reading about the tech, and outlets have optimised their content to match the general consumer expectations. Maybe publishers and devs themselves aren’t really adept making statements about their games outside broad strokes if a game is marketing itself with some kind of technological breakthrough or advancement. These often end up being a dud. The real magic happens behind the scenes, and perhaps that’s where its fated to be in. Ultimately, the consumer shouldn’t really care about the technology behind how things work, but it sure would make their life that much more easier.
Classics sold well for many reasons in their time, and the same classics keep selling nowadays whenever they get new ports. I find it foolish to forget their context in favour of favour of sterile, clinical reviews.
#electronicGames #games #gaming #mario #Nintendo #videoGames #videogames
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I don't even know that's exist!! :0)
Cool stuff.. from hard gaming time.. :0))"Save any game
Any level
Any time".Advertisement in first issue of Electronic Games Magazine (1995)
#nakitek #gameaccessory #gaming #games #videogaming #videogames #nintendo #snes #retrogaming #press #add #advertisement #magazine #electronicgames
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I don't even know that's exist!! :0)
Cool stuff.. from hard gaming time.. :0))"Save any game
Any level
Any time".Advertisement in first issue of Electronic Games Magazine (1995)
#nakitek #gameaccessory #gaming #games #videogaming #videogames #nintendo #snes #retrogaming #press #add #advertisement #magazine #electronicgames
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I don't even know that's exist!! :0)
Cool stuff.. from hard gaming time.. :0))"Save any game
Any level
Any time".Advertisement in first issue of Electronic Games Magazine (1995)
#nakitek #gameaccessory #gaming #games #videogaming #videogames #nintendo #snes #retrogaming #press #add #advertisement #magazine #electronicgames
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Legends appearing on the cover of first issue of Electronic Games Magazine (1995).
You can read it on Archive:
https://archive.org/details/electronic-games-1995-01/mode/1up---
#magazine #electronicgames #DOOM #fps #johncarmack #johnromero #idsoftware #devs #game #gaming #press #retrogaming #retrocomputing #archive #archiveorg #legends
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Legends appearing on the cover of first issue of Electronic Games Magazine (1995).
You can read it on Archive:
https://archive.org/details/electronic-games-1995-01/mode/1up---
#magazine #electronicgames #DOOM #fps #johncarmack #johnromero #idsoftware #devs #game #gaming #press #retrogaming #retrocomputing #archive #archiveorg #legends
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Legends appearing on the cover of first issue of Electronic Games Magazine (1995).
You can read it on Archive:
https://archive.org/details/electronic-games-1995-01/mode/1up---
#magazine #electronicgames #DOOM #fps #johncarmack #johnromero #idsoftware #devs #game #gaming #press #retrogaming #retrocomputing #archive #archiveorg #legends
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“You’ll flap over it” ohh 😮
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Williams electronics advertisement 1982.
.
#Electronics #Games #Gamer #ElectronicGames #Advertisement #DoubleEntendre #Retro #vintage -
“You’ll flap over it” ohh 😮
.
Williams electronics advertisement 1982.
.
#Electronics #Games #Gamer #ElectronicGames #Advertisement #DoubleEntendre #Retro #vintage -
“You’ll flap over it” ohh 😮
.
Williams electronics advertisement 1982.
.
#Electronics #Games #Gamer #ElectronicGames #Advertisement #DoubleEntendre #Retro #vintage -
“You’ll flap over it” ohh 😮
.
Williams electronics advertisement 1982.
.
#Electronics #Games #Gamer #ElectronicGames #Advertisement #DoubleEntendre #Retro #vintage -
“You’ll flap over it” ohh 😮
.
Williams electronics advertisement 1982.
.
#Electronics #Games #Gamer #ElectronicGames #Advertisement #DoubleEntendre #Retro #vintage -
Xbox is everything
Xbox was always an underdog in the video game console market. They had a good rise with Xbox and Xbox 360, yet they starter to spiral down with Xbox One and Xbox Series X/S. Part of the reason was the naming. Following computer hardware and smartphone naming conventions damaged their reputation by default, and emphasizing streaming, music and television over video games is what ultimately dragged their business down.
Microsoft can only blame themselves for screwing Xbox ever since they entered the console market. Their approach was always from the computer gaming culture side of gaming. History already had shown that consoles that go for the multimedia approach tend to fall. That said, Xbox and Xbox 360 did adhere to what consoles do best most of the time, but Xbox One and Xbox Series of consoles are effectively media centres that play games. Both came out in an age where everybody have media centres in their pocket. If your console is not competing with games, you’re in the wrong market.
The console wars had one thing going on for it; variety. The reason why even the industry talking heads and journalists have to bend their heads and admit Nintendo is seeing success with their business model is because Nintendo’s business is video games. Both Sony and Microsoft have screwed their business when it comes to Xboxes and PlayStations because they’re not competing with games anymore. It’s the damn multimedia again. When you’re doing everything, you’re really not doing anything special anymore. There’s really no difference between picking up an Xbox, a PlayStation or using Steam and GOG when all the big titles are available on all of them, par few exceptions.
GamePass devalues games. Buy the Pass, get games free. Publishers and developers suffer because of this and see less returns for their investments. Customers aren’t moving to your new machine, when worries about always-online are met with snarky comments about getting a better ‘net connection or sticking with the older console.
Now, everything is Xbox.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYBSNQLsBKk
Xbox as a brand has no real value anymore. When your TV, phone, laptop and whatever media device you have is now an Xbox, there’s no uniqueness to it anymore. It’s become a generic name, something companies want to fight against. Having a unique brand and name for your single thing is nearly a lifeline. That’s why, for example, Hasbro doesn’t use the term transform in their Transformers toys. Their packaging mentions converting between the two modes. This is because Hasbro wants to keep “transforming” from becoming a generic term, like hoovering. Hell, even kleenex is a generic term for a type of product.
Both Sony and Microsoft have let themselves go too wide with Xbox and PlayStation. They’ve gone from highly valued unique brands of devices that carry equally valued games to digital brands that exist outside that highly sought-after device. Nintendo’s business still being games, they’ve avoided this. If Microsoft and Sony would’ve pushed for gaming first and foremost, competed against each other on the values of games, we’d have a much healthier industry at the moment. Microsoft could force Sony to compete. Putting big guns against theirs and simply make everything exclusive on Xbox console. This lacklustre pissing contest the HDR twins are having is serving nobody else but egos of few people high up.
I want gaming consoles to be bloody competitive. They all need to have unique titles that compete for the eyes and money of the consumer. What we have is the same slog on every platform and no sense of competition whatsoever. Single-device gaming isn’t the future. It’s only a matter of time when some company says they’re pushing out a brand new device that’ll have games no other platforms have. That’ll kick up the flame up again. I don’t think that’ll happen anytime soon though, the economy isn’t giving in to that at the moment.
Xbox could be a competitive console. It just needs bullshit cut out and have it be driven by its games for the consumers. Consoles are just boxes to play games on after all. You can do streaming flicks and whatnot on whatever else. Microsoft is telling you now that everything is an Xbox, so it doesn’t matter if the tag on the machine says its an Xbox. They’ve devalued the console, now they’ve devalued the brand. What a way to keep stabbing your business in the back.
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Xbox is everything
Xbox was always an underdog in the video game console market. They had a good rise with Xbox and Xbox 360, yet they starter to spiral down with Xbox One and Xbox Series X/S. Part of the reason was the naming. Following computer hardware and smartphone naming conventions damaged their reputation by default, and emphasizing streaming, music and television over video games is what ultimately dragged their business down.
Microsoft can only blame themselves for screwing Xbox ever since they entered the console market. Their approach was always from the computer gaming culture side of gaming. History already had shown that consoles that go for the multimedia approach tend to fall. That said, Xbox and Xbox 360 did adhere to what consoles do best most of the time, but Xbox One and Xbox Series of consoles are effectively media centres that play games. Both came out in an age where everybody have media centres in their pocket. If your console is not competing with games, you’re in the wrong market.
The console wars had one thing going on for it; variety. The reason why even the industry talking heads and journalists have to bend their heads and admit Nintendo is seeing success with their business model is because Nintendo’s business is video games. Both Sony and Microsoft have screwed their business when it comes to Xboxes and PlayStations because they’re not competing with games anymore. It’s the damn multimedia again. When you’re doing everything, you’re really not doing anything special anymore. There’s really no difference between picking up an Xbox, a PlayStation or using Steam and GOG when all the big titles are available on all of them, par few exceptions.
GamePass devalues games. Buy the Pass, get games free. Publishers and developers suffer because of this and see less returns for their investments. Customers aren’t moving to your new machine, when worries about always-online are met with snarky comments about getting a better ‘net connection or sticking with the older console.
Now, everything is Xbox.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYBSNQLsBKk
Xbox as a brand has no real value anymore. When your TV, phone, laptop and whatever media device you have is now an Xbox, there’s no uniqueness to it anymore. It’s become a generic name, something companies want to fight against. Having a unique brand and name for your single thing is nearly a lifeline. That’s why, for example, Hasbro doesn’t use the term transform in their Transformers toys. Their packaging mentions converting between the two modes. This is because Hasbro wants to keep “transforming” from becoming a generic term, like hoovering. Hell, even kleenex is a generic term for a type of product.
Both Sony and Microsoft have let themselves go too wide with Xbox and PlayStation. They’ve gone from highly valued unique brands of devices that carry equally valued games to digital brands that exist outside that highly sought-after device. Nintendo’s business still being games, they’ve avoided this. If Microsoft and Sony would’ve pushed for gaming first and foremost, competed against each other on the values of games, we’d have a much healthier industry at the moment. Microsoft could force Sony to compete. Putting big guns against theirs and simply make everything exclusive on Xbox console. This lacklustre pissing contest the HDR twins are having is serving nobody else but egos of few people high up.
I want gaming consoles to be bloody competitive. They all need to have unique titles that compete for the eyes and money of the consumer. What we have is the same slog on every platform and no sense of competition whatsoever. Single-device gaming isn’t the future. It’s only a matter of time when some company says they’re pushing out a brand new device that’ll have games no other platforms have. That’ll kick up the flame up again. I don’t think that’ll happen anytime soon though, the economy isn’t giving in to that at the moment.
Xbox could be a competitive console. It just needs bullshit cut out and have it be driven by its games for the consumers. Consoles are just boxes to play games on after all. You can do streaming flicks and whatnot on whatever else. Microsoft is telling you now that everything is an Xbox, so it doesn’t matter if the tag on the machine says its an Xbox. They’ve devalued the console, now they’ve devalued the brand. What a way to keep stabbing your business in the back.
-
Xbox is everything
Xbox was always an underdog in the video game console market. They had a good rise with Xbox and Xbox 360, yet they starter to spiral down with Xbox One and Xbox Series X/S. Part of the reason was the naming. Following computer hardware and smartphone naming conventions damaged their reputation by default, and emphasizing streaming, music and television over video games is what ultimately dragged their business down.
Microsoft can only blame themselves for screwing Xbox ever since they entered the console market. Their approach was always from the computer gaming culture side of gaming. History already had shown that consoles that go for the multimedia approach tend to fall. That said, Xbox and Xbox 360 did adhere to what consoles do best most of the time, but Xbox One and Xbox Series of consoles are effectively media centres that play games. Both came out in an age where everybody have media centres in their pocket. If your console is not competing with games, you’re in the wrong market.
The console wars had one thing going on for it; variety. The reason why even the industry talking heads and journalists have to bend their heads and admit Nintendo is seeing success with their business model is because Nintendo’s business is video games. Both Sony and Microsoft have screwed their business when it comes to Xboxes and PlayStations because they’re not competing with games anymore. It’s the damn multimedia again. When you’re doing everything, you’re really not doing anything special anymore. There’s really no difference between picking up an Xbox, a PlayStation or using Steam and GOG when all the big titles are available on all of them, par few exceptions.
GamePass devalues games. Buy the Pass, get games free. Publishers and developers suffer because of this and see less returns for their investments. Customers aren’t moving to your new machine, when worries about always-online are met with snarky comments about getting a better ‘net connection or sticking with the older console.
Now, everything is Xbox.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYBSNQLsBKk
Xbox as a brand has no real value anymore. When your TV, phone, laptop and whatever media device you have is now an Xbox, there’s no uniqueness to it anymore. It’s become a generic name, something companies want to fight against. Having a unique brand and name for your single thing is nearly a lifeline. That’s why, for example, Hasbro doesn’t use the term transform in their Transformers toys. Their packaging mentions converting between the two modes. This is because Hasbro wants to keep “transforming” from becoming a generic term, like hoovering. Hell, even kleenex is a generic term for a type of product.
Both Sony and Microsoft have let themselves go too wide with Xbox and PlayStation. They’ve gone from highly valued unique brands of devices that carry equally valued games to digital brands that exist outside that highly sought-after device. Nintendo’s business still being games, they’ve avoided this. If Microsoft and Sony would’ve pushed for gaming first and foremost, competed against each other on the values of games, we’d have a much healthier industry at the moment. Microsoft could force Sony to compete. Putting big guns against theirs and simply make everything exclusive on Xbox console. This lacklustre pissing contest the HDR twins are having is serving nobody else but egos of few people high up.
I want gaming consoles to be bloody competitive. They all need to have unique titles that compete for the eyes and money of the consumer. What we have is the same slog on every platform and no sense of competition whatsoever. Single-device gaming isn’t the future. It’s only a matter of time when some company says they’re pushing out a brand new device that’ll have games no other platforms have. That’ll kick up the flame up again. I don’t think that’ll happen anytime soon though, the economy isn’t giving in to that at the moment.
Xbox could be a competitive console. It just needs bullshit cut out and have it be driven by its games for the consumers. Consoles are just boxes to play games on after all. You can do streaming flicks and whatnot on whatever else. Microsoft is telling you now that everything is an Xbox, so it doesn’t matter if the tag on the machine says its an Xbox. They’ve devalued the console, now they’ve devalued the brand. What a way to keep stabbing your business in the back.
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Want to own the games you buy in the future and have them accessible after the publisher ceases support? Do you live in a European country that’s party of the EU? Then you can help by signing this initiative.
Stop Killing Games. The project has a goal; have games in functional state at the end of their life. Lot of games already have this built-in. However, every game that requires always-online functionality has a high probability of just dying on you. You won’t get to play the game because the publisher doesn’t support it anymore. The game’s obsolescence is built-in, planned to get you off that game and move to another product of their. Shut up and consume products, you have no right to this license. I don’t think many will agree with my take here, but this is something I want to get out of my system. Give the above links a read if consider the idea of Stop Killing Games a good one.
I hate the idea of government needing to tell companies to stop being abusive towards their customers. However, current laws across the globe largely benefit the companies, as they’ve had lobbyists doing that for them. The balance of power between consumers and corporations is grossly unbalanced. Consumers are expected to pay up and be happy to own nothing.
Therefore, you go in bed with the devil yourself in the best way you can. This EU Initiative is not making a law. It can be a start for a ruling. It’s a far shot, as members of the EU parliament are largely clueless idiots, who don’t read the papers and rulings they vote on. These parliament members are informed by their assistants, whose job is to read through these papers and help to make informed voting decisions. Of course, these assistants have their own agendas and will mislead the parliament members if they want.
I have no love for the EU, but this is a chance consumers can’t really sit on. On the long run, this isn’t just about having all video and computer games independently functional. This is also about ownership and license purchases work. There’s only a net positive if purchasing a license would end up equating to purchasing a physical product. Think it much like buying a music CD. You own that particular copy of the CD, but not the intellectual property on it. That’s your copy to do what you want with, even sell it to someone else. We should have the right to sell digital goods we’ve bought. The only reason you can’t is because the gaming industry might lose revenue from that. Again, the teeter-totter is against the consumer.
If this initiative would pass and the ruling would require publishers to ensure games would be in a reasonably working condition, it would also make a precedent for other industries. For example, a music player that requires an always-Online connection to the provider servers might be required to ensure the player would still work after they drop support and close the servers down. This naturally ties to Right to Repair, where customers fixing their own stuff to make them work again would be that much easier and simpler if the companies wouldn’t fight them to tooth and nail.
Unlike some buzz on the Internet about this initiative solely being to kill Live Service model games, that’s not the case. Live service games would be heavily impacted, but that’s just because they’re inherently anti-consumer. The core audience of video games have been treated like trash for long enough, and if this initiative doesn’t pass, and then hit its intended target, the industry will end up even more draconian. In no part of history has an industry looked at itself and considered whether or not they’re going too far. Instead, they’ll plough straight through into injuring other consumer protection laws and then decimate them through lobbyists and gerrymandering.
The game industry won’t stop the bad, anti-consumer practices and standards they have going on wilfully. It’d be nice if they’d start being consumer friendly and transparent, yet only a few developer and publisher ever seems to go for that. Instead, there have been even more layers obfuscating the separation between the consumers, developers and publishers. It doesn’t help that the gaming media is just another arm of the publisher PR machine. Hype the Big Game, buy the Big Game and a year later the Big Game is announced a disappointment after million dollars initial sales. There’s no monetary benefit for the industry to be pro-consumer, not at this point. Some talking heads have raised worries of this initiative opening publishers and developers for abuse from the consumers, but that’s goddamn rich talk when the industry is openly abusing its customers. To be make a very extreme point, anyone who sells you something should be treated with high suspicion, like they’re a drug seller trying to sell you bad juju instead of the good and pure stuff.
The initiative isn’t perfect and is intentionally rather vague. There are tons of stuff that can’t be pinpointed down until the later by the parliament starts their discussions on the topic. Some people want to know the details how these games would be kept functional. All that minutia would just slow down the conversation, and in the end, that’s up to the developers. Be it allowing consumers to access server binaries or built a multiplayer-only game to have AI opponents, that’s fully on the developers to figure out as far as I’m concerned. Every industry rejects and fights change that’s for the customer, but just like how car manufacturers nowadays have seatbelts, the game industry will too adjust and design games to be accessible in the future as well.
Future being the keyword, as it wouldn’t be fair to grandfather in games that have been already published and abandoned. I would include games that are currently active and live, e.g. Street Fighter 6 wouldn’t just go poof after Capcom shuts the servers down.
Which of course begs the question about console games. The Big N, MS and Sony would need to provide some method to access certain online functions after they drop support on their consoles. For example, they could patch the Wii to have an option to access a custom server that can run online-only game. Or maybe an older example, Capcom would need to offer a way to access Online-only quests in the original Monster Hunter. Not that either examples would be grandfathered in, they’re just examples. Still, that’s mostly beside the point. The minutia of how comes after.
It shouldn’t be any surprise that I support this initiative. Everything that’s pro-consumer, pro-Right to Repair and pro-ownership is only a net good thing. Anything that empowers individual more and allows individual rights and freedoms to be expressed without oppressive corporate oversight is one step toward a brighter future.
#customerAndService #customerService #electronicGames #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
-
Want to own the games you buy in the future and have them accessible after the publisher ceases support? Do you live in a European country that’s party of the EU? Then you can help by signing this initiative.
Stop Killing Games. The project has a goal; have games in functional state at the end of their life. Lot of games already have this built-in. However, every game that requires always-online functionality has a high probability of just dying on you. You won’t get to play the game because the publisher doesn’t support it anymore. The game’s obsolescence is built-in, planned to get you off that game and move to another product of their. Shut up and consume products, you have no right to this license. I don’t think many will agree with my take here, but this is something I want to get out of my system. Give the above links a read if consider the idea of Stop Killing Games a good one.
I hate the idea of government needing to tell companies to stop being abusive towards their customers. However, current laws across the globe largely benefit the companies, as they’ve had lobbyists doing that for them. The balance of power between consumers and corporations is grossly unbalanced. Consumers are expected to pay up and be happy to own nothing.
Therefore, you go in bed with the devil yourself in the best way you can. This EU Initiative is not making a law. It can be a start for a ruling. It’s a far shot, as members of the EU parliament are largely clueless idiots, who don’t read the papers and rulings they vote on. These parliament members are informed by their assistants, whose job is to read through these papers and help to make informed voting decisions. Of course, these assistants have their own agendas and will mislead the parliament members if they want.
I have no love for the EU, but this is a chance consumers can’t really sit on. On the long run, this isn’t just about having all video and computer games independently functional. This is also about ownership and license purchases work. There’s only a net positive if purchasing a license would end up equating to purchasing a physical product. Think it much like buying a music CD. You own that particular copy of the CD, but not the intellectual property on it. That’s your copy to do what you want with, even sell it to someone else. We should have the right to sell digital goods we’ve bought. The only reason you can’t is because the gaming industry might lose revenue from that. Again, the teeter-totter is against the consumer.
If this initiative would pass and the ruling would require publishers to ensure games would be in a reasonably working condition, it would also make a precedent for other industries. For example, a music player that requires an always-Online connection to the provider servers might be required to ensure the player would still work after they drop support and close the servers down. This naturally ties to Right to Repair, where customers fixing their own stuff to make them work again would be that much easier and simpler if the companies wouldn’t fight them to tooth and nail.
Unlike some buzz on the Internet about this initiative solely being to kill Live Service model games, that’s not the case. Live service games would be heavily impacted, but that’s just because they’re inherently anti-consumer. The core audience of video games have been treated like trash for long enough, and if this initiative doesn’t pass, and then hit its intended target, the industry will end up even more draconian. In no part of history has an industry looked at itself and considered whether or not they’re going too far. Instead, they’ll plough straight through into injuring other consumer protection laws and then decimate them through lobbyists and gerrymandering.
The game industry won’t stop the bad, anti-consumer practices and standards they have going on wilfully. It’d be nice if they’d start being consumer friendly and transparent, yet only a few developer and publisher ever seems to go for that. Instead, there have been even more layers obfuscating the separation between the consumers, developers and publishers. It doesn’t help that the gaming media is just another arm of the publisher PR machine. Hype the Big Game, buy the Big Game and a year later the Big Game is announced a disappointment after million dollars initial sales. There’s no monetary benefit for the industry to be pro-consumer, not at this point. Some talking heads have raised worries of this initiative opening publishers and developers for abuse from the consumers, but that’s goddamn rich talk when the industry is openly abusing its customers. To be make a very extreme point, anyone who sells you something should be treated with high suspicion, like they’re a drug seller trying to sell you bad juju instead of the good and pure stuff.
The initiative isn’t perfect and is intentionally rather vague. There are tons of stuff that can’t be pinpointed down until the later by the parliament starts their discussions on the topic. Some people want to know the details how these games would be kept functional. All that minutia would just slow down the conversation, and in the end, that’s up to the developers. Be it allowing consumers to access server binaries or built a multiplayer-only game to have AI opponents, that’s fully on the developers to figure out as far as I’m concerned. Every industry rejects and fights change that’s for the customer, but just like how car manufacturers nowadays have seatbelts, the game industry will too adjust and design games to be accessible in the future as well.
Future being the keyword, as it wouldn’t be fair to grandfather in games that have been already published and abandoned. I would include games that are currently active and live, e.g. Street Fighter 6 wouldn’t just go poof after Capcom shuts the servers down.
Which of course begs the question about console games. The Big N, MS and Sony would need to provide some method to access certain online functions after they drop support on their consoles. For example, they could patch the Wii to have an option to access a custom server that can run online-only game. Or maybe an older example, Capcom would need to offer a way to access Online-only quests in the original Monster Hunter. Not that either examples would be grandfathered in, they’re just examples. Still, that’s mostly beside the point. The minutia of how comes after.
It shouldn’t be any surprise that I support this initiative. Everything that’s pro-consumer, pro-Right to Repair and pro-ownership is only a net good thing. Anything that empowers individual more and allows individual rights and freedoms to be expressed without oppressive corporate oversight is one step toward a brighter future.
#customerAndService #customerService #electronicGames #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
-
Want to own the games you buy in the future and have them accessible after the publisher ceases support? Do you live in a European country that’s party of the EU? Then you can help by signing this initiative.
Stop Killing Games. The project has a goal; have games in functional state at the end of their life. Lot of games already have this built-in. However, every game that requires always-online functionality has a high probability of just dying on you. You won’t get to play the game because the publisher doesn’t support it anymore. The game’s obsolescence is built-in, planned to get you off that game and move to another product of their. Shut up and consume products, you have no right to this license. I don’t think many will agree with my take here, but this is something I want to get out of my system. Give the above links a read if consider the idea of Stop Killing Games a good one.
I hate the idea of government needing to tell companies to stop being abusive towards their customers. However, current laws across the globe largely benefit the companies, as they’ve had lobbyists doing that for them. The balance of power between consumers and corporations is grossly unbalanced. Consumers are expected to pay up and be happy to own nothing.
Therefore, you go in bed with the devil yourself in the best way you can. This EU Initiative is not making a law. It can be a start for a ruling. It’s a far shot, as members of the EU parliament are largely clueless idiots, who don’t read the papers and rulings they vote on. These parliament members are informed by their assistants, whose job is to read through these papers and help to make informed voting decisions. Of course, these assistants have their own agendas and will mislead the parliament members if they want.
I have no love for the EU, but this is a chance consumers can’t really sit on. On the long run, this isn’t just about having all video and computer games independently functional. This is also about ownership and license purchases work. There’s only a net positive if purchasing a license would end up equating to purchasing a physical product. Think it much like buying a music CD. You own that particular copy of the CD, but not the intellectual property on it. That’s your copy to do what you want with, even sell it to someone else. We should have the right to sell digital goods we’ve bought. The only reason you can’t is because the gaming industry might lose revenue from that. Again, the teeter-totter is against the consumer.
If this initiative would pass and the ruling would require publishers to ensure games would be in a reasonably working condition, it would also make a precedent for other industries. For example, a music player that requires an always-Online connection to the provider servers might be required to ensure the player would still work after they drop support and close the servers down. This naturally ties to Right to Repair, where customers fixing their own stuff to make them work again would be that much easier and simpler if the companies wouldn’t fight them to tooth and nail.
Unlike some buzz on the Internet about this initiative solely being to kill Live Service model games, that’s not the case. Live service games would be heavily impacted, but that’s just because they’re inherently anti-consumer. The core audience of video games have been treated like trash for long enough, and if this initiative doesn’t pass, and then hit its intended target, the industry will end up even more draconian. In no part of history has an industry looked at itself and considered whether or not they’re going too far. Instead, they’ll plough straight through into injuring other consumer protection laws and then decimate them through lobbyists and gerrymandering.
The game industry won’t stop the bad, anti-consumer practices and standards they have going on wilfully. It’d be nice if they’d start being consumer friendly and transparent, yet only a few developer and publisher ever seems to go for that. Instead, there have been even more layers obfuscating the separation between the consumers, developers and publishers. It doesn’t help that the gaming media is just another arm of the publisher PR machine. Hype the Big Game, buy the Big Game and a year later the Big Game is announced a disappointment after million dollars initial sales. There’s no monetary benefit for the industry to be pro-consumer, not at this point. Some talking heads have raised worries of this initiative opening publishers and developers for abuse from the consumers, but that’s goddamn rich talk when the industry is openly abusing its customers. To be make a very extreme point, anyone who sells you something should be treated with high suspicion, like they’re a drug seller trying to sell you bad juju instead of the good and pure stuff.
The initiative isn’t perfect and is intentionally rather vague. There are tons of stuff that can’t be pinpointed down until the later by the parliament starts their discussions on the topic. Some people want to know the details how these games would be kept functional. All that minutia would just slow down the conversation, and in the end, that’s up to the developers. Be it allowing consumers to access server binaries or built a multiplayer-only game to have AI opponents, that’s fully on the developers to figure out as far as I’m concerned. Every industry rejects and fights change that’s for the customer, but just like how car manufacturers nowadays have seatbelts, the game industry will too adjust and design games to be accessible in the future as well.
Future being the keyword, as it wouldn’t be fair to grandfather in games that have been already published and abandoned. I would include games that are currently active and live, e.g. Street Fighter 6 wouldn’t just go poof after Capcom shuts the servers down.
Which of course begs the question about console games. The Big N, MS and Sony would need to provide some method to access certain online functions after they drop support on their consoles. For example, they could patch the Wii to have an option to access a custom server that can run online-only game. Or maybe an older example, Capcom would need to offer a way to access Online-only quests in the original Monster Hunter. Not that either examples would be grandfathered in, they’re just examples. Still, that’s mostly beside the point. The minutia of how comes after.
It shouldn’t be any surprise that I support this initiative. Everything that’s pro-consumer, pro-Right to Repair and pro-ownership is only a net good thing. Anything that empowers individual more and allows individual rights and freedoms to be expressed without oppressive corporate oversight is one step toward a brighter future.
#customerAndService #customerService #electronicGames #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
-
Want to own the games you buy in the future and have them accessible after the publisher ceases support? Do you live in a European country that’s party of the EU? Then you can help by signing this initiative.
Stop Killing Games. The project has a goal; have games in functional state at the end of their life. Lot of games already have this built-in. However, every game that requires always-online functionality has a high probability of just dying on you. You won’t get to play the game because the publisher doesn’t support it anymore. The game’s obsolescence is built-in, planned to get you off that game and move to another product of their. Shut up and consume products, you have no right to this license. I don’t think many will agree with my take here, but this is something I want to get out of my system. Give the above links a read if consider the idea of Stop Killing Games a good one.
I hate the idea of government needing to tell companies to stop being abusive towards their customers. However, current laws across the globe largely benefit the companies, as they’ve had lobbyists doing that for them. The balance of power between consumers and corporations is grossly unbalanced. Consumers are expected to pay up and be happy to own nothing.
Therefore, you go in bed with the devil yourself in the best way you can. This EU Initiative is not making a law. It can be a start for a ruling. It’s a far shot, as members of the EU parliament are largely clueless idiots, who don’t read the papers and rulings they vote on. These parliament members are informed by their assistants, whose job is to read through these papers and help to make informed voting decisions. Of course, these assistants have their own agendas and will mislead the parliament members if they want.
I have no love for the EU, but this is a chance consumers can’t really sit on. On the long run, this isn’t just about having all video and computer games independently functional. This is also about ownership and license purchases work. There’s only a net positive if purchasing a license would end up equating to purchasing a physical product. Think it much like buying a music CD. You own that particular copy of the CD, but not the intellectual property on it. That’s your copy to do what you want with, even sell it to someone else. We should have the right to sell digital goods we’ve bought. The only reason you can’t is because the gaming industry might lose revenue from that. Again, the teeter-totter is against the consumer.
If this initiative would pass and the ruling would require publishers to ensure games would be in a reasonably working condition, it would also make a precedent for other industries. For example, a music player that requires an always-Online connection to the provider servers might be required to ensure the player would still work after they drop support and close the servers down. This naturally ties to Right to Repair, where customers fixing their own stuff to make them work again would be that much easier and simpler if the companies wouldn’t fight them to tooth and nail.
Unlike some buzz on the Internet about this initiative solely being to kill Live Service model games, that’s not the case. Live service games would be heavily impacted, but that’s just because they’re inherently anti-consumer. The core audience of video games have been treated like trash for long enough, and if this initiative doesn’t pass, and then hit its intended target, the industry will end up even more draconian. In no part of history has an industry looked at itself and considered whether or not they’re going too far. Instead, they’ll plough straight through into injuring other consumer protection laws and then decimate them through lobbyists and gerrymandering.
The game industry won’t stop the bad, anti-consumer practices and standards they have going on wilfully. It’d be nice if they’d start being consumer friendly and transparent, yet only a few developer and publisher ever seems to go for that. Instead, there have been even more layers obfuscating the separation between the consumers, developers and publishers. It doesn’t help that the gaming media is just another arm of the publisher PR machine. Hype the Big Game, buy the Big Game and a year later the Big Game is announced a disappointment after million dollars initial sales. There’s no monetary benefit for the industry to be pro-consumer, not at this point. Some talking heads have raised worries of this initiative opening publishers and developers for abuse from the consumers, but that’s goddamn rich talk when the industry is openly abusing its customers. To be make a very extreme point, anyone who sells you something should be treated with high suspicion, like they’re a drug seller trying to sell you bad juju instead of the good and pure stuff.
The initiative isn’t perfect and is intentionally rather vague. There are tons of stuff that can’t be pinpointed down until the later by the parliament starts their discussions on the topic. Some people want to know the details how these games would be kept functional. All that minutia would just slow down the conversation, and in the end, that’s up to the developers. Be it allowing consumers to access server binaries or built a multiplayer-only game to have AI opponents, that’s fully on the developers to figure out as far as I’m concerned. Every industry rejects and fights change that’s for the customer, but just like how car manufacturers nowadays have seatbelts, the game industry will too adjust and design games to be accessible in the future as well.
Future being the keyword, as it wouldn’t be fair to grandfather in games that have been already published and abandoned. I would include games that are currently active and live, e.g. Street Fighter 6 wouldn’t just go poof after Capcom shuts the servers down.
Which of course begs the question about console games. The Big N, MS and Sony would need to provide some method to access certain online functions after they drop support on their consoles. For example, they could patch the Wii to have an option to access a custom server that can run online-only game. Or maybe an older example, Capcom would need to offer a way to access Online-only quests in the original Monster Hunter. Not that either examples would be grandfathered in, they’re just examples. Still, that’s mostly beside the point. The minutia of how comes after.
It shouldn’t be any surprise that I support this initiative. Everything that’s pro-consumer, pro-Right to Repair and pro-ownership is only a net good thing. Anything that empowers individual more and allows individual rights and freedoms to be expressed without oppressive corporate oversight is one step toward a brighter future.
#customerAndService #customerService #electronicGames #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
-
Want to own the games you buy in the future and have them accessible after the publisher ceases support? Do you live in a European country that’s party of the EU? Then you can help by signing this initiative.
Stop Killing Games. The project has a goal; have games in functional state at the end of their life. Lot of games already have this built-in. However, every game that requires always-online functionality has a high probability of just dying on you. You won’t get to play the game because the publisher doesn’t support it anymore. The game’s obsolescence is built-in, planned to get you off that game and move to another product of their. Shut up and consume products, you have no right to this license. I don’t think many will agree with my take here, but this is something I want to get out of my system. Give the above links a read if consider the idea of Stop Killing Games a good one.
I hate the idea of government needing to tell companies to stop being abusive towards their customers. However, current laws across the globe largely benefit the companies, as they’ve had lobbyists doing that for them. The balance of power between consumers and corporations is grossly unbalanced. Consumers are expected to pay up and be happy to own nothing.
Therefore, you go in bed with the devil yourself in the best way you can. This EU Initiative is not making a law. It can be a start for a ruling. It’s a far shot, as members of the EU parliament are largely clueless idiots, who don’t read the papers and rulings they vote on. These parliament members are informed by their assistants, whose job is to read through these papers and help to make informed voting decisions. Of course, these assistants have their own agendas and will mislead the parliament members if they want.
I have no love for the EU, but this is a chance consumers can’t really sit on. On the long run, this isn’t just about having all video and computer games independently functional. This is also about ownership and license purchases work. There’s only a net positive if purchasing a license would end up equating to purchasing a physical product. Think it much like buying a music CD. You own that particular copy of the CD, but not the intellectual property on it. That’s your copy to do what you want with, even sell it to someone else. We should have the right to sell digital goods we’ve bought. The only reason you can’t is because the gaming industry might lose revenue from that. Again, the teeter-totter is against the consumer.
If this initiative would pass and the ruling would require publishers to ensure games would be in a reasonably working condition, it would also make a precedent for other industries. For example, a music player that requires an always-Online connection to the provider servers might be required to ensure the player would still work after they drop support and close the servers down. This naturally ties to Right to Repair, where customers fixing their own stuff to make them work again would be that much easier and simpler if the companies wouldn’t fight them to tooth and nail.
Unlike some buzz on the Internet about this initiative solely being to kill Live Service model games, that’s not the case. Live service games would be heavily impacted, but that’s just because they’re inherently anti-consumer. The core audience of video games have been treated like trash for long enough, and if this initiative doesn’t pass, and then hit its intended target, the industry will end up even more draconian. In no part of history has an industry looked at itself and considered whether or not they’re going too far. Instead, they’ll plough straight through into injuring other consumer protection laws and then decimate them through lobbyists and gerrymandering.
The game industry won’t stop the bad, anti-consumer practices and standards they have going on wilfully. It’d be nice if they’d start being consumer friendly and transparent, yet only a few developer and publisher ever seems to go for that. Instead, there have been even more layers obfuscating the separation between the consumers, developers and publishers. It doesn’t help that the gaming media is just another arm of the publisher PR machine. Hype the Big Game, buy the Big Game and a year later the Big Game is announced a disappointment after million dollars initial sales. There’s no monetary benefit for the industry to be pro-consumer, not at this point. Some talking heads have raised worries of this initiative opening publishers and developers for abuse from the consumers, but that’s goddamn rich talk when the industry is openly abusing its customers. To be make a very extreme point, anyone who sells you something should be treated with high suspicion, like they’re a drug seller trying to sell you bad juju instead of the good and pure stuff.
The initiative isn’t perfect and is intentionally rather vague. There are tons of stuff that can’t be pinpointed down until the later by the parliament starts their discussions on the topic. Some people want to know the details how these games would be kept functional. All that minutia would just slow down the conversation, and in the end, that’s up to the developers. Be it allowing consumers to access server binaries or built a multiplayer-only game to have AI opponents, that’s fully on the developers to figure out as far as I’m concerned. Every industry rejects and fights change that’s for the customer, but just like how car manufacturers nowadays have seatbelts, the game industry will too adjust and design games to be accessible in the future as well.
Future being the keyword, as it wouldn’t be fair to grandfather in games that have been already published and abandoned. I would include games that are currently active and live, e.g. Street Fighter 6 wouldn’t just go poof after Capcom shuts the servers down.
Which of course begs the question about console games. The Big N, MS and Sony would need to provide some method to access certain online functions after they drop support on their consoles. For example, they could patch the Wii to have an option to access a custom server that can run online-only game. Or maybe an older example, Capcom would need to offer a way to access Online-only quests in the original Monster Hunter. Not that either examples would be grandfathered in, they’re just examples. Still, that’s mostly beside the point. The minutia of how comes after.
It shouldn’t be any surprise that I support this initiative. Everything that’s pro-consumer, pro-Right to Repair and pro-ownership is only a net good thing. Anything that empowers individual more and allows individual rights and freedoms to be expressed without oppressive corporate oversight is one step toward a brighter future.
#customerAndService #customerService #electronicGames #games #gaming #videoGames #videogames
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Some bits from #ElectronicGames magazine, August '93.
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Some bits from #ElectronicGames magazine, August '93.
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Some bits from #ElectronicGames magazine, August '93.
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Some bits from #ElectronicGames magazine, August '93.
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Some bits from #ElectronicGames magazine, August '93.
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Tonight's finds in my parents' basement: vintage 1980 magazines with ads for #HandheldElectronicGames (#HandheldGames #ElectronicGames).
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Tonight's finds in my parents' basement: vintage 1980 magazines with ads for #HandheldElectronicGames (#HandheldGames #ElectronicGames).
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Minimal Tic Tac Toe Business Card - The PCB business card has long been a way for the aspiring electronics engineer to... - https://hackaday.com/2022/09/24/minimal-tic-tac-toe-business-card/ #electronicgames #arduinohacks #businesscard #atmega328p #hardware #games
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Minimal Tic Tac Toe Business Card - The PCB business card has long been a way for the aspiring electronics engineer to... - https://hackaday.com/2022/09/24/minimal-tic-tac-toe-business-card/ #electronicgames #arduinohacks #businesscard #atmega328p #hardware #games