The Video Game Explosion
The Video Game Explosion
The Video Game Explosion
Greenwood Press
Westport, Connecticut
London
CONTENTS
Illustrations
ix
Acknowledgments
xi
Introduction
xiii
xvii
Part I
13
17
21
Part II
29
31
35
vi
Contents
45
53
Chapter 10
59
Chapter 11
63
Chapter 12
Vector Games
Mark J.P. Wolf
67
Chapter 13
73
Chapter 14
75
Chapter 15
81
Sidebar
50
89
Chapter 16
91
Chapter 17
Laserdisc Games
Mark J.P. Wolf
99
Chapter 18
103
107
Chapter 19
Sidebar
Chapter 20
109
115
113
Contents
Chapter 21
CD-ROM Games
Carl Therrien
121
Chapter 22
127
Chapter 23
135
Chapter 24
143
151
Sidebar
Chapter 25
149
159
Chapter 26
161
Chapter 27
173
Chapter 28
177
Chapter 29
183
Chapter 30
187
Chapter 31
197
Chapter 32
203
Chapter 33
211
Sidebar
Sidebar
181
194
vii
viii
Contents
Chapter 34
223
229
Chapter 35
231
Chapter 36
239
Chapter 37
251
Chapter 38
259
277
Chapter 40
283
Chapter 41
293
303
Sidebar
Chapter 39
Sidebar
Sidebar
Chapter 42
275
281
301
311
Resource Guide
317
Notes
329
Index
343
377
ILLUSTRATIONS
38
42
46
47
48
49
85
86
87
97
153
154
154
157
199
200
202
240
241
242
243
244
244
247
247
248
249
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I would first like to thank all the contributors to this volume, who are some of the best
people writing about video game history today: David H. Ahl, Thomas H. Apperley,
Dominic Arsenault, Kelly Boudreau, Brett Camper, Leonard Herman, Lars Konzack, Alison McMahan, Benjamin Wai-ming Ng, Bernard Perron, Martin Picard, Eric Pidkameny,
Bob Rehak, Carl Therrien, Feichin Ted Tschang, and David Winter. Without their work,
this volume could not have appeared. Thanks also to Kristi Ward at Greenwood Press,
who initiated the project. Earlier versions of some of my essays in this book appeared in
my books The Medium of the Video Game (2001), Virtual Morality: Morals, Ethics, and
New Media (2003), and The World of the Dni: Myst and Riven (Italian version, 2006),
and in Paul Messaris and Lee Humphreys, editors, Digital Media: Transformations in
Human Communication (2006); I am thankful for these presses interest in my work.
Thanks to Keith Feinstein, Sascha Scheuermann, Adrian Purser, Cody Johnson, Bill
Esquivel, Andreas Kraemer, Henry Jenkins, and Tom Krenzke, who also provided assistance for which I am grateful. Thanks also to Concordia University Wisconsin for the sabbatical in spring of 2006 that gave me additional time to work on this book, and to my
wife, Diane and my sons, Michael, Christian, and our dear departed Edward. And, as
always, thanks be to God.
INTRODUCTION
Mark J.P. Wolf
Video games have now been around long enough that an interest in their history is growing. Many who grew up with the games as they developed are looking back fondly on
those early days, and some of them are still active gamers. Others have become game collectors, trying to preserve the history along with the games themselves. And some who are
too young to remember the first generations of video games are curious about them, and
are perhaps dismayed at how difficult it can be to find older games (or they may dismiss
them as too simplistic and graphically unsophisticated, without realizing their importance
or understanding how they were seen when they first appeared). Still others may look
upon games as a part of popular culture and ask how they fit into the broader cultural
scheme of the past few decades.
As a history of video games, this book owes much to its predecessors. Before there were
books on video game history, there were detailed magazine essays, like the multipart
Electronic Games: Space Age Leisure Activity by Jerry and Eric Eimbinder, which
appeared in several months issues of Popular Electronics and chronicled the industry and
technology up to 1980, when it was written. Not only are these early histories valuable
for research, but they also embody the enthusiasm of the time as well, and provide some
insight into how the games were received when they appeared. The first history book
appeared a few years later, George Sullivans Screen Play: The Story of Video Games (New
York: F. Warne, 1983), a 93-page book for a juvenile audience. Perhaps publishers had
to be persuaded in undertaking a history for an adult audience, since the first such book,
Leonard Hermans Phoenix: The Fall and Rise of Home Videogames, did not appear until
1994 (Springfield, NJ: Rolenta Press), and was initially self-published when no commercial publisher could be found (the book was a success and is now in its fourth edition). Steven Kents The First Quarter (Colorado Springs, CO: BDW Publishing, 2001) and its
enlarged revision, The Ultimate History of Video Games (New York: Three Rivers Press,
2001), focuses on the industry and the men and women behind it, while Rusel DeMaria
and Johnny L. Wilsons High Score! The Illustrated History of Electronic Games (San Francisco: McGraw-Hill Osborne Media, 2003) and Van Burnhams Supercade: A Visual History of the Videogame Age, 19711984 (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003) are both
xiv
Introduction
mainly visual histories rather than scholarly works. Some reference works are available,
like Bill Kurtzs Encyclopedia of Arcade Video Games (Schiffer Book Farm, PA: Schiffer,
2003), or the online Killer List of Video Games (www.klov.com). And then there are books
about individual companies, like Scott Cohens Zap! The Rise and Fall of Atari (New York:
McGraw-Hill, 1984) or David Sheff s Game Over: How Nintendo Zapped an American
Industry, Captured Your Dollars, and Enslaved Your Children (New York: Random House,
1993).
This book differs from its predecessors in several ways. It is intended both for the general reader interested in video game history as well as for students with chapters thematically organized around various topics, which are generally arranged in chronological
order and tell the story of video games from their earlier inception to the present day.
Other features of the book include sidebars and profiles that highlight various aspects of
video game history and a glossary of terminology relating to video games and their technology. Some of the best people writing on video games today have contributed their
scholarship to form this comprehensive history. While other books on video games have
been written from a journalistic, sociological, psychological, or nostalgic point of view,
here the video games themselves occupy a central position. Other aspects of history, such
as the companies, game designers, technology, merchandising, and so forth, provide a necessary background, but games always remain in the forefront.
The book is divided into five parts. The first part, Looking at Video Games, begins
with the question of what video games are, where they came from, and what influenced
their development. Imaging technologies and the modes of exhibition are also examined.
Finally, the ways in which the study of video games differs from the study of traditional
media are explored. Together, these chapters serve to introduce video games as the complex, unique, and interesting medium that they are.
The second part, The Early Days (Before 1985), looks at the formative years of video
game history during which time games developed from a novelty into an industry. In the
early 1970s, games were being made on mainframe computers and were available in
arcades alongside pinball games. Relatively simple home systems were appearing and gaining in popularity, in both the United States and Europe, along with home computers. The
most prominent company of this era was Atari, which also became the only company to
produce arcade games, home console systems, and home computers. Various types of
new technology, like vector graphics and laserdiscs were incorporated into games during
the late 1970s and early 1980s. Finally, a glut of cheap product and changing consumer
demand helped to bring about an industry crash in the mid 1980s, ending what we now
think of as the early days of video games.
The third part, The Industry Rebounds (19851994), begins with a look at the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), the success of which helped to end the crash and
show that the video game industry was still a viable one. After Nintendos success, other
companies followed suit, releasing a new generation of home video game console systems.
Arcade games found themselves competing with home games and began offering threedimensional graphics and innovative interfaces to lure players back to the arcades. Handheld games became more sophisticated, and consequently more popular during this time.
New technologies like the CD-ROM helped rejuvenate the industry, and shareware games
also brought new ideas into gaming.
The fourth part, Advancing to the Next Level (1995Present), covers the rise of
another new generation of even more powerful home game systems, including the Sony
Introduction
PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and Nintendo 64. Online role-playing games grew into big business during this time, attracting hundreds of thousands and later millions of players. Today video games are a worldwide phenomenon, and because much video game study
tends to focus on the industry in North America, several chapters cover video games in
Europe, Asia, and Australia as well.
The last part of the book, A Closer Look at Video Games, examines the video game
design process, the development of graphics and sound in games, and video games relationship with other media. Other chapters explore video game genres, the video game as
an object of controversy, the moral and ethical aspects of video games, and finally the
future of video games. Also included in the book are a brief timeline of video game history, a glossary of video game terminology, and a resource guide for video game research,
which includes print and online sources as well as organizations which researchers may
find useful.
A wide variety of contributors have made this volume possible. Offering their knowledge of early games are David H. Ahl, the founder of Creative Computing magazine,
author of 22 books and over 50 computer games, and David Winter, whose website,
www.pong-story.com, has extensive information on early games culled from his personal
collection of over 800 early game systems. Leonard Herman, author of Phoenix: The Fall
and Rise of Videogames, traces the history of home video game systems and handheld
games through a number of essays. Lars Konzack, Benjamin Wai-ming Ng, and Thomas
H. Apperley give the book a global perspective, writing about video games outside of
North America. Looking outside the commercial video game industry, Brett Camper
examines the history of shareware and experimental video games, and other authors,
including Bernard Perron, Bob Rehak, Alison McMahan, Ted Tschang, Dominic Arsenault, Martin Picard, Carl Therrien, Kelly Boudreau, and Eric Pidkameny, touch on a
range of topics from their expertise, from video games graphics, sound, technology, and
production process, to home computers, retrogaming, and other media, as well as various
genre, company, and system profiles.
The history of video games now spans over four decades, and while this is a relatively
short time compared to the histories of other more traditional media, it is fast moving
and exciting, with innovations and advances occurring at a rate unparalleled in other
media. The history of video games is dense and multifaceted, as it coincides with other
areas such as film, television, the Internet, and other interactive media; storage technologies such as diskettes, laserdiscs, CD-ROMs, DVDs, and computer technology in general;
various transmedia entertainment franchises, popular fads, and of course, merchandising.
In the past decade or so, people have begun to study various aspects of video games,
approaching them from a variety of disciplines, while a discipline specific to video game
study is also developing. While an increasing amount of historical information has been
appearing, particularly on the Internet, in scholarly work more attention has been paid
to theory than to history, and newer games are discussed more than the earlier ones that
preceded, and in many cases, inspired them. A broad knowledge of video games origins
and development, then, is necessary and crucial to the understanding of their current
state, and this book hopes to provide that.
xv
xviii
1976 General Instrumentss AY-3-8500 chip is released, which had all the
circuitry necessary for a video game on a single chip. The Fairchild/
Zircon Channel F, the first cartridge-based home game system, is
released. Ataris Night Driver is the first game to simulate a first-person
perspective, though it did not have true 3-D graphics. Ataris Breakout
is released.
1977 The home video game industry suffers its first crash, and many
companies quit the industry. Ataris VCS home console system (later
renamed the 2600) is released. In Japan, Nintendo releases its first
home video game, Color TV Game 6. Kee Gamess arcade game Super
Bug introduces 4-directional scrolling.
1978 Taitos Space Invaders appears and becomes the inspiration for many
vertical shooting games to follow. Ataris arcade game Football
introduces 2-directional scrolling.
1979 Vectorbeam releases Warrior, the first one-on-one fighting game.
Ataris Asteroids and Lunar Lander, both vector graphics games, are
released. Namcos Galaxian is the first game to have 100 percent of its
graphics in RGB color (a standard used for color video using red,
green, and blue signals). Namcos Puck-Man (later renamed Pac-Man)
is released in Japan.
1980 Pac-Man is released in North America, and other influential games
Battlezone, Defender also appear. Ataris Battlezone is the first arcade
game to feature a true 3-D environment. Ultima becomes the first
home computer game with 4-directional scrolling. Star Fire is the first
cockpit game, and the first arcade game to feature a high-score table
using players initials.
1981 Nintendos Donkey Kong and Ataris Tempest are released. The United
States arcade game industry reaches $5 billion.
1982 Gottliebs Q*bert is released. Segas arcade game Zaxxon becomes the
first arcade game to be advertised on television. Late in the year, arcade
game income drops, and it appears that another video game industry
crash is coming, one that is larger than the 1977 crash.
1983 The video game industry crash affects the home video game industry.
Nintendos Famicon system is released in Japan. Ataris I, Robot is the
first raster video game with filled-polygon three-dimensional graphics.
Ataris vector game Star Wars is released.
1984 The video game industry crash continues. Nintendo releases the
Famicom system in Japan. RDI releases the Halcyon, a laserdisc-based
home video game system.
1985 Nintendo releases a new version of its Famicon, renamed the
Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), in America. Its popularity
helps to bring an end to the industry crash. Nintendo also releases
Super Mario Bros., which becomes one of the best-selling games of all
time. Alex Pajitnov designs Tetris.
1986 The Legend of Zelda appears (for the Nintendo Famicom), the first in a
long series of Zelda games. Taitos Arkanoid and Bubble Bobble appear
in arcades. Sega releases the Sega Master System (SMS).
1987 Cyans The Manhole becomes the first computer game to be released
on CD-ROM. Yokai Douchuuki, the first 16-bit arcade game, is
released in Japan. LucasArtss Maniac Mansion is the first adventure
game with a point-and-click interface. Incentive Software releases
Driller, a home computer game with breakthrough 3-D graphics.
Taitos arcade game Double Dragon is released.
1988 Namcos Assault is released. Williamss NARC is the first game to use a
32-bit processor. Nintendo releases Super Mario Bros. 2.
1989 Atari releases the arcade games Hard Drivin and S.T.U.N. Runner.
Gottliebs Exterminator is the first game to use all digitized imagery for
its backgrounds. Two handheld video game consoles are released:
Nintendos Game Boy and Ataris Lynx. The Sega Genesis home
console system appears.
1990 Maxis releases Will Wrights SimCity, the first in a long line of Sim
games. Nintendo releases Super Mario Bros. 3. Sega Game Gear is
released in Japan. Squaresofts Final Fantasy series is introduced to
North America.
1991 Nintendo releases the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES)
in North America. Capcom releases Street Fighter II. Sega releases
the home video game Sonic the Hedgehog, the main character of which
would go on to become Segas mascot. Philips Electronics releases
the CD-i (compact disc interactive) system which uses compact
discs.
1992 Midway releases the arcade game Mortal Kombat. Virgin Gamess The
7th Guest is released and becomes the best-selling home computer
game. Sega releases Virtua Racing, a 3-D racing game. id Software
releases Wolfenstein 3D, a 3-D home computer game. Virtuality
releases Dactyl Nightmare, an arcade game with a VR (virtual reality)
headset and gun interface.
1993 Cyans Myst is released and becomes the best-selling home computer
game of all time, a title it will hold until 2002. id Software releases
Doom. The World Wide Web goes worldwide. Sega releases Virtua
Fighter, a 3-D fighting game. New home systems include the Pioneer
LaserActive CLD-A100 and the Atari Jaguar.
1994 Nintendo releases the home game Donkey Kong Country. The Sega
Saturn and the Sony PlayStation are released in Japan. Ernest Adams
forms the Computer Game Developers Association. Blizzard releases
the real-time strategy game Warcraft. Sega releases the arcade game
Daytona USA, a racing game with texture-mapping. SNKs NeoGeo
home console system appears.
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1995 The Sony PlayStation and Sega Saturn make their North American
debut. Nintendo releases Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddys Kong Quest.
Blizzard releases Warcraft II.
1996 The Nintendo 64 appears in Japan and North America. Nintendo also
releases the Virtual Boy, a portable game system with a separate screen
for each eye which when combined creates a three-dimensional image.
Digipen Institute of Technology becomes the first school to offer
college degrees in video game development.
1997 The Nintendo 64 is released in Europe and Australia. DreamWorks,
Sega, and Universal open the first GameWorks arcade in Seattle.
Bandais Tamagotchi appears. Cyans Riven, the sequel to Myst,
appears. Sega releases Top Skater, an arcade game with a skateboard
interface. Nintendo releases Mario Kart 64. The MMORPG Ultima
Online begins.
1998 Konami releases Dance Dance Revolution and the first games in its
Beatmania series and GuitarFreaks series. The Nintendo Game Boy
Color appears. Sierra Studios releases Half-Life. SNK releases the
NeoGeo Pocket handheld video game system. Rockstar Games
releases Grand Theft Auto.
1999 The Sega Dreamcast is released. The MMORPG EverQuest begins.
Nintendo releases Donkey Kong 64. The Game Developers Conference
holds the first Independent Games Festival. Tony Hawks Pro Skater is
released. The MMORPG Asherons Call begins.
2000 Sonys PlayStation 2 appears. Nintendo sells its 100 millionth Game
Boy console. Maxiss The Sims is released. The United States Post
Office issues a stamp depicting video games.
2001 Microsofts Xbox and the Nintendo GameCube appear. Midway
Games leaves the arcade video game industry. Bungie Studioss Halo:
Combat Evolved appears. Sega announces that it will no longer develop
home video game consoles.
2002 The Sims overtakes Myst, and becomes the best-selling home computer
game of all time. The MMORPG Sims Online begins. Sega releases
Rez for the PlayStation 2. Microsofts Xbox Live online gaming service
begins.
2003 The MMORPG Star Wars Galaxies begins. Nintendo stops production of the NES and SNES. Ataris Enter the Matrix is released. Cell
phone company Nokia releases the N-Gage handheld video game
system.
2004 Sony releases the PlayStation Portable in Japan, and the PlayStation 2
in China. Nintendo releases the Nintendo DS (dual screen) handheld
video game system. Bungie releases Halo 2.
2005 Sony releases the PlayStation Portable in North America. Nintendo
releases the Game Boy Micro. Microsoft releases the Xbox 360. Tiger
xxi
PART I
In less than four decades video games have gone from simple bouncing block graphics to a
global industry of enormous proportions. In 2006 alone, the U.S. video game industry
made a record $12.5 billion. Video games have a growing influence on other media like
film, television, and the Internet and are played by hundreds of millions worldwide.
And yet the study of video games has only recently gained acceptance in academia, and
most of the writing that exists is mostly about newer games, and typically home computer
games at that. Relatively little has appeared regarding older games and game systems,
arcade games, or video game history in general. Part of the reason is that many of the
old games are already gone or very hard to find and play; although this may make writing
about them more difficult, it also suggests a greater need for historical research, before it is
too late.
Before we look at the history of video games, it is useful to ask what exactly we mean by
the term video game, and how it is distinct from other media forms. At the same time,
we also can look at the precursors and influences that shaped the video game and gave it
the form that it has. As the video game is very dependent on different types of technology,
these will be examined as well, including imaging technologies and modes of exhibition
through which video games are brought to the public. Finally, an examination of the study
of video games itself, and how it differs from the study of traditional media forms, is
included. Together, these chapters provide the necessary background from which a study
of video game history can begin.
CHAPTER
process user input, respond with reactions, and display the action on-screen, video games
are often designed to require fast action and reflexes, much like sports or games like
pinball or table tennis. Fast action is, for some, so important to the gaming experience that
narrower definitions of video game exclude text adventures, adaptations of card games and
board games, contemplative puzzle-based programs like Riven (1997) or Rhem (2002), or
any of the Ultima or Zork series, all of which generally do not require quick reflexes, and
some of which are more like puzzles and arguably not games in the classic sense.
Another element is the identity of the computer as a player. Keith Feinstein, the owner
of the video game museum Videotopia, has suggested that the playing of a video game
has a necessarily emotional element to it, similar to that of struggling against a playmate
of comparable skill and ability. In his view, the computer must be more than a referee or
stage manager controlling the video games world, but an active opponent who competes
with the human player. By assigning an identity to the computer player and creating a
one-on-one situation within the game, competition becomes possible and emotional
stakes are raised, just as they might be in a two-player game in which human beings
compete against one another.
The programs mentioned above, however, are all marketed as games, and would be
included in the broader definition of the term found in popular culture. Almost all
programs designated as games by their makers contain the criteria mentioned above, albeit
to varying degrees. For example, in SimCity (1989) and other Sim programs from Maxis
Software, outcomes are ongoing, as conditions of the simulated world improve or worsen
depending on the players decisions. Conflict occurs between the player (who is trying to
provide order to the city) and circumstances or situations (such as natural disasters,
taxpaying citizens, crime, pollution, and occasional wandering monsters). The rules
are built into the games responses; tax the citizens too much and they will move away,
cut funding to the police station and the crime rate will rise, and so on. In puzzle-based
games like Myst (1993) or Riven, conflict may arise from the difficulty of puzzle-solving,
pitting the players mind against the game-designers mind. Outcomes are also valued in
these games; in each, several different endings or outcomes are possible, one of which is
more desirable than the others.
A still broader (and less accurate) definition of the term video games sometimes
includes educational or utility cartridges made for dedicated game consoles. Some of
these, like Mario Teaches Typing (1991) incorporate gameplay into learning, although
many do not. Still, educational cartridges [like Atari 2600 cartridges Basic Programming
(1979) and Fun With Numbers (1977)] and utility cartridges (such as diagnostic and test
cartridges) often appear in lists of game cartridges, are sought by collectors, and are
included within the popular and very loose usages of the term video games found in stores
and Internet discussion groups. Even though these programs are not games (according to
the above criteria), the read-only memory (ROM) cartridges containing them are the same
as those used for games; they are also given identification numbers similar to the games;
and they receive much the same treatment as game cartridges in the marketplace. Thus,
the grouping of educational and utility programs together with games reflects their status
as commercial and cultural artifacts more than they reflect actual considerations of the
programs content or the players experience of that content.
While the degree to which a program can be considered a game depends on varying criteria, its status as video is less problematic. By the strictest definition, video refers to the
use of an analog intensity/brightness signal displayed on a cathode ray tube (CRT), the
kind of picture tube used in a television set or computer monitor, to produce raster-based
(filled-area images, as opposed to wireframe ones) imagery. The father of video games,
then, is Ralph Baer, who was the first to create games that used television sets as their
display devices, and the creator of the first home game system, the Magnavox Odyssey,
which appeared in 1972.
But popular use of the term video game in society, culture, and the industry itself has
grown much looser and broader than the original technical definition. Arcade games and
home game systems used CRTs as their displays, but not all of them were used to produce
raster imagery. Some displayed vector graphics, using a different signal and method of
creating screen images. Because both vector and raster games used CRTs, vector games
became included in the term video games, and later as the same games appear on
different imaging technologies, popular use of the term came to include games using
liquid crystal display (LCD) screens, like Milton Bradleys Microvision or Nintendos
Game Boy, and an even light-emitting diode (LED)-based screen in the case of Nintendos
short-lived Virtual Boy system. Indeed, with many games ported across many systems,
from arcade versions to versions for home consoles, home computers, and handheld game
systems, and games becoming available for new technologies like plasma HDTV screens,
the idea of a video game has become something more conceptual and less tied to a specific
imaging technology, at least in its popular usage.
The term computer games is sometimes used, though it covers a wider range of games
(including those without any graphical displays), and it is arguably more accurate, since the
majority of video games depend on a microprocessor. But by the mid-1980s, video game
seemed to have become the general term most used in both popular culture as well as the
commercial game industry itself, while computer game was often reserved specifically
for versions of games released for home computers. This may be due to the central place
of the image and screen in the gaming experience, while the computer itself remains behind
the scenes, quietly controlling all that goes on within the game. Such a demarcation might
also have been encouraged by the fact that the computers present in arcade games and game
consoles during the 1980s and 1990s were usually dedicated machines that only played
games, unlike home computers which had other uses.
On the other hand, the use of a CRTwith raster graphics is not enough to make a game a
video game; one would expect the action of the game to take place interactively on-screen.
Thus, certain games, like the Clue VCR Mystery Game (1985), a version of the board game
Clue which uses video clips on videotape, would not qualify since the video image is not
interactive, nor does the action of the gamesuch as the moving of a players pieces
occur on-screen. Some games walk the line between board game and video game, involving
elements of both. Three games for the Philips Videopac video game system, Conquest of the
World (1982), Quest for the Rings (1982), and The Great Wall Street Fortune Hunt (1982),
all involved on-screen video game play as well as a game board with movers, combining
video game and board game play. As the other cartridges available for the Videopac system
were all on-screen games, the three video/board games are usually listed along with them,
although they are really hybrid games. There are also games which used plastic overlays
placed on the screen, such as the early games for the Magnavox Odyssey 100 system or
the GCE/Milton Bradley Vectrex system. These overlays contained background images,
while the screen provided the moving elements of the player-characters and provided color
to black-and-white screen graphics. A number of early arcade games also added non-video
elements to their game screens, such as Warrior (1979), which featured two vector-graphics
knights in top view moving through scenery on the screens overlay. As long as the action
itself takes place on-screen, such games are generally considered to be video games.
Some adaptations of games occur on systems whose screens have far less resolution than
a television screen. Nintendos Virtual Boy system, for example, uses twin monochrome
screens (one for each eye), which are high-resolution LED displays of 384 x 224 pixels.
Segas Game Gear, a handheld system, has an LCD screen of 160 x 144 pixels. Nintendos
Game Boy system uses a reflective LCD screen of 160 x 144 pixels, but with the Super
Game Boy, a converter that plugs into the Super Nintendo Entertainment System
(SNES), Game Boy games can be played on a television screen through the SNES. And
with even lower resolution screens, there is the Atari Lynx, with an LCD screen of
160 x 102 pixels, and the Milton Bradley Microvision system, with an LCD screen of only
16 x 16 pixels.
As we move beyond games using CRTs and screen resolution decreases, the question
arises as to how much resolution is needed for inclusion in even the loosest definition of
a video game. The handheld game systems mentioned above are included in many lists
of video games because they are produced by the same companies (Atari, Nintendo, Sega,
etc.) who produce video game systems that use television screens, and because they are all
cartridge-based systems (as opposed to handheld electronic games which are hardwired to
play one game only).
One of the most important questions regarding the games visual display is whether or
not the games screen is pixel-based and capable of imaging (see next chapter). Many
handheld electronic games use LED and LCD displays but are not based on a grid of
pixels. Games such as Parker Brothers Merlin (1978) or Mattel Electronics Basketball
(1978) have banks of lights which can be turned on or off, and while in some cases the
lights may be said to represent players (as in Mattel Electronics Basketball), the lights
are not used together as imaging elements. Similarly, in games with LCD displays like
Bandais Invaders of the Mummys Tomb (1982) and Escape from the Devils Doom (1982)
or Mega Corps Fireman Fireman (1980) or The Exterminator (1980), the LCD elements
or cells that are turned on and off are often shaped like the games characters in different
poses and positions. These poses are laid out across the screen in such a way that they
do not overlap, since the cells must be discrete to function independently. Thus, the
positions that characters can occupy are limited to a few non-overlapping poses, which
are turned on and off in sequence to suggest motion through a marquee-like effect. In
other words, whole images of characters are turned on or off, as opposed to pixels arranged
in a grid which work together to create imagery.
The concept of a grid of pixels used for imaging, then, can be one criterion dividing the
video game display from those used in other forms of electronic games. Pixels, as abstract
picture elements (usually squares, rectangles, or dots), are all identical in shape and size
and can be used in any part of an image. Only collectively do they produce a design which
is recognizable as a character or object. (Pixels, of course, must also turn on and off and
use the same marquee effect to suggest movement, but the overall effect of movement it
produces is a much more subtle one and improves with resolution.)
The screen which is a grid of pixels is a useful way to draw the line between the video
game and many handheld electronic games. Yet even some handheld games are occasionally included in the widest, loosest definition of video game because they contain versions
of arcade video games, for example Nintendos LCD handheld versions of Donkey Kong Jr.
(1982), or Nelsonics Q*bert wristwatch game of 1983. In both cases the game appears on a
screen and play is analogous to the arcade game of which it is a version, even though it is
highly simplified and the imaging technology is quite different.
So while video games began as games played on a television screen with raster imagery,
advances in imaging technologies, the porting and adapting of game titles to hardware
with a variety of imaging technologies, and commercial marketing which tends to use
the term video game to describe all of these things have resulted in a broad, popular
definition of the term, the boundaries of which remain as blurred as ever as new software
and hardware continue to appear.
CHAPTER
IMAGING TECHNOLOGIES
Mark J P. Wolf
Video games require displays whose images can be changed quickly. A variety of different
imaging technologies are used to produce video game imagery, and the vast majority
of video games use either raster graphics, vector graphics, liquid crystal displays, lightemitting diodes, or prerecorded video imagery on laserdisc or compact disc or DVDROM. How the actual images are controlled by the computer and rendered on-screen
depend on the graphics techniques used.
Screen Technologies
The most common kind of screen that is used, a cathode ray tube, is used to
produce both vector graphics and raster graphics. The CRT, used in televisions and
computer monitors, contains an electron gun at the narrow end of a funnel-shaped
glass tube. The electron gun generates a very narrow, focused beam of electrons which is
fired at the screen, located at the wide end of the tube. En route to the screen, the electron
beam is deflected by electromagnetic means (such as coils or electrodes), which are
controlled by an external signal. The deflected electron beam hits the inside of the
screen, which is coated with phosphorescent (light-emitting) material of red, green, or
blue. The electrons cause the material to fluoresce, or glow, producing the pixels of the
image on-screen.
Vector graphics and raster graphics differ in the way they use the electron gun to
produce an image on-screen. Vector graphics are made up of points and straight line
segments, which are stored as coordinates in a set of display commands. The display
commands are sent to a vector generator, which converts the commands into a signal that
is sent to the monitors beam-deflection circuits. Using this signal, the electron beam is
deflected from one line segment endpoint to another, causing the beam to draw the vector
lines onto the screen one by one. In vector graphics, all images are made up of line
segments and points, and text characters are made up of collections of line segments.
Because the path of the electron beam follows the command list instead of a preset
scanning pattern, this process is also referred to as random scan. Vector graphics were the
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earliest CRT-based computer graphics and were widespread by the late 1960s. Vector
graphics appeared in a number of arcade video games in the late 1970s and early 1980s,
and in one home game system, the GCE/Milton Bradley Vectrex, which appeared in
1982. The best-known arcade games using vector graphics include Asteroids (1979),
Battlezone (1980), Defender (1980), Tempest (1981), and Star Wars (1983) (see Chapter 12,
Vector Games for more on these games).
Raster graphics use the electron gun to draw an image onto the screen in much the same
way that a television set does. Unlike vector scanning, raster scanning guides the electron
beam back and forth, scanning the entire screen row by row across the screen from top to
bottom, making an image from the glowing phosphors. By producing almost 30 images a
second, the image is made to appear continuous. This kind of imaging produces raster
graphics, and is the kind of imaging to which the word video refers. Raster images are
usually full screen and full color, since the raster signal causes the electron gun to cover
the entire screen during its scanning. Since raster scanning uses the same electron beam
deflection path for every image, the preset path can be hardwired into the hardware. Filled
shapes, text, and complex images are also easier to produce with raster scanning, and it is
the method used in almost all arcade video games, home games, and computer graphics
produced today.
Laserdisc games and many CD-ROM- and DVD-ROM-based games use prerecorded
video imagery in their games. While the images for these games are rendered on-screen
through the use of raster scanning, images are stored and read from a disc, rather than
calculated from mathematically represented computer models. Stored imagery is not as
flexible to use as imagery generated interactively during gameplay, and its use has declined
as computer-generated imagery has improved (see Chapter 17, Laserdisc Games, for
more on these games).
Some imaging technologies do not involve CRTs. A number of handheld games and
game systems use liquid crystal display technology. An LCD contains a thin layer of long,
crystalline molecules that polarize light, sandwiched between grids of fine wires and polarizers. The polarizers (which can reflect certain kinds of light) are lined up in such a way
so that light passing through the crystals is polarized and reflected back to the viewer,
resulting in a bright, clear square. When current is applied to the grids, the molecules line
up together in the same direction and have no polarizing effect, and light is absorbed,
resulting in a darkened square. Early LCD screens were black and white and can be found
in games from the early 1980s and game systems such as Milton Bradleys Microvision or
Nintendos Game Boy. Color LCD screens are now common, appearing in game systems
like the Atari Lynx or Game Boy Color, as well as in laptop computer screens.
Far less common are displays using light-emitting diode technology. LED displays use
diodes that produce light when a current is applied to the diode. LEDs can come in
red, yellow, or green, but red LEDs are the most common. Although many handheld
electronic games use LED displays, Nintendos Virtual Boy is the only pixel-based
imaging system to use one.
Another imaging technology gaining popularity is the plasma screen, which is used
for flat-screen HDTVs. The method of transducing the signal into an image is
different than that of a CRT; instead of an electron beam, the red, green, and blue
phosphor components of each of the plasma screens pixels are controlled separately,
resulting in a flicker-free, glare-free, sharp image, as opposed to one scanned onto the
screen row by row.
Imaging Technologies
Computer-Generated Imagery
While imaging hardware is certainly a determining factor, the look of a games graphics
also depends on such things as the amount of processor speed and memory, and the way
the computer program generates the imagery.
Early computer graphics were generally either wireframe or bitmaps. Wireframe
graphics are built of geometrical figures such as points and line segments drawn between
points, and the objects it depicts are stored as sets of coordinates and the mathematical
relationships between them. Vector graphics were typically wireframe due to the way in
which the images were drawn on the screen line by line. An advantage of wireframe
graphics was the speed at which they could be drawn on-screen, and also the fact that the
graphics being generated could be three-dimensional in nature (as games like Asteroids
show, they were not always three-dimensional, and sometimes appeared as flat graphics).
While they were good for drawing large geometric figures, wireframe graphics could not
easily be used to depict small, detailed figures like game characters. Bitmaps, on the other
hand, are grids of pixels which are used to define an image. Small bitmapped images that
are moved about the screen by being redrawn at different coordinates are known as sprites.
Examples of sprites are the individual space invaders in Space Invaders (1978), or the
Pac-Man or ghost characters in Pac-Man (1980), or the bouncing balls or bullets used in
shooting games.
Two-and-a-half-dimensional graphics, as they are sometimes called, involve overlapping
planes of two-dimensional graphics; this also is referred to as priority (referring to the determination of which plane is drawn over the others). Through the use of multiple planes of
imageryone behind the otherwhich scroll through the screen at different rates, a sense
of depth can be achieved; this is called parallax scrolling, since it simulates the varying of
parallax with distance. Objects can be made to appear to float over backgrounds and the
effect of multiple layers can be achieved. Yet, while the image is more than a single 2-D
plane, it is not real 3-D either, thus the and-a-half is added to denote something in
between. Two-and-a-half-dimensional graphics appear in the arcade games Moon Patrol
(1982) and Zaxxon (1982), and in home video games like Super Mario Bros. 3 (1990)
and Warioland (1995). Some games, like Pole Position (1982), simulated a 3-D space
through the careful use of scaling (zooming larger or smaller) sprites, enlarging them as
they move away from the vanishing point in the games background. Segas Space Harrier
(1985) could quickly scale and rotate 32,000 colored sprites at once. Sprite-based graphics
dominated arcade games throughout the 1980s but began to fade in the 1990s as games
with true three-dimensionally rendered graphics began to make them look outdated.
Three-dimensional graphics are those which have been encoded as 3-D objects in the
computers memory, for example, cubes, cylinders, spheres, pyramids, or other polyhedra.
These objects can be turned and rotated and appear at different angles, unlike the flat grids
of pixels in 2-D graphics. Interactive 3-D filled-polygon graphics first appeared in Ataris
arcade game I, Robot (1983) though they did not reappear until the late 1980s, and it
was not until the mid-1990s that they became the standard types of graphics used in
arcade video games, and later in home game systems including the Sony PlayStation, Sega
Saturn, and Nintendo Ultra 64. Some games, like Doom (1993), mixed the two types of
graphics; while background hallways were generated in three dimensions, the monsters
encountered in the hallways were still sprite-based. Other games, like Myst, Gadget
(1993), and Riven, used prerendered three-dimensional imagery rather than imagery
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generated in real time during gameplay (it is interesting to compare the original version
of Myst with the remake realMyst [2000] which generated all of its imagery as real-time
interactive 3-D imagery1). Still other games, like the laserdisc games Astron Belt (1983)
and Firefox (1984) had sprites overlaid on top of video imagery, combining two types of
graphics into one image.
Finally, some games like Johnny Mnemonic (1995) and Star Trek Borg (1996) rely almost
entirely on video clips for their graphics, resulting in 3-D graphics which are for the most
part not interactive; what is gained in image quality is lost in player input. Many laserdisc
games and interactive movies (see Chapters 17 and 22, respectively, on each) fall into
this category, and are often more like branching stories than interactive games. Other
games, like The 7th Guest (1993) and Riven incorporate video clips into their computergenerated graphic environments.
Now that computers and game systems have increased memories and processing speeds,
such hybrid combinations of graphics are no longer as necessary, as most systems can now
generate fully 3-D graphics in real time. Advances are now in the ways that games worlds
are designed, where increasing numbers of polygons provide more detail and subtlety,
more interactive lighting and simulated physics are possible, and artificial intelligences
control characters that interact with the players character. Graphical advances also open
up possibilities outside of photorealism, and narrative development, less hindered now
by graphical restrictions, will be able to expand into new territory.
CHAPTER
MODES OF EXHIBITION
Mark J.P. Wolf
Over the years video games have appeared in a number of different venues, each with their
own technologies, capabilities, market sector, and integration into the cultural production
surrounding them. These different modes of exhibition include mainframe games, coinoperated arcade video games, home video game systems, handheld portable games and
game systems, and home computer games.
The games created on the giant mainframe computers of the 1960s were limited to the
large, refrigerator-sized computers found only in laboratories and research centers
(see Chapter 6, Mainframe Games and Simulations). These games were experiments
and were neither sold commercially or generally available to the public. Some were quite
simple, for example, games that played tic-tac-toe. The most famous mainframe game, however, is Spacewar! created around 1962 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Written
by Steve Russell, J. Martin Graetz, and others for the PDP-1 mainframe computer, Spacewar! consisted of two spaceships (the needle and wedge) that could fly about the screen
and fire missiles at each other. Other additions to the game included a starfield background,
a star with gravity that pulled the spaceships into itself, and a hyperspace feature allowing
ships to disappear and reappear elsewhere on the screen. Spacewar! was copied and adapted
to other computers throughout the 1960s and influenced other programmers. In 1971 it
was adapted by Nolan Bushnell into the first arcade game, Computer Space, and later a
version of it appeared among the first cartridges for the Atari 2600 home video game system.
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The games controls might include joysticks, a trackball (also spelled track-ball or
trak-ball), paddles (round, rotating knobs), buttons, guns with triggers, steering wheels,
and so forth. Occasionally there are controls for more than one player, although singleplayer games are the most common. Smaller versions of these cabinets are sometimes
referred to as cabaret cabinets or mini cabinets.
The cocktail console is designed like a small table, with the screen facing upward
through a glass table-top. Often such games are designed for two players, and controls
are set on both ends of the table, with the screen between them. This type of console
was popular in bars or restaurants where patrons could sit and play a video game while
setting their drinks on the table-top. Two-player games in cocktail consoles are often
designed so that the screen can be viewed from either side, and usually contain games with
an overhead view of a playing field (for example, a football game which is viewed from
above) so that neither player has an upside-down view.
Sit-inside, ride-in, or ride-on consoles can even involve physical movement of the
players body, usually to simulate the driving or flying of a vehicle in the game, typically
with a first-person perspective point of view. These games range from merely having a seat
in front of the screen, to enclosing the player in a box, or even moving the seated player
around during the game. In driving and racing games, foot pedals and stick shifts are
sometimes included as well. Other types of interaction are possible; Prop Cycle (1993)
for example, has the player pedaling a bicycle, while Alpine Racer (1995) has the player
holding ski-pole handles and standing on movable skis. In Segas Top Skater (1997), the
player rides on a skateboard, while in Namcos Final Furlong (1997) the player rides a
horse. These games tend to be more expensive than other types of games, sometimes
requiring as many as four or five quarters per game (instead of only one or two).
Although virtual reality style games are often hyped in movies, they have yet to become
popular at the arcade; Dactyl Nightmare (1992) was the only one available throughout the
1990s, possibly because of its higher cost and need for an attendant. Each player stands
inside a circular railing on a raised platform, wearing headsets with miniature screens for
each eye while holding a gunlike device with a trigger, an image of which also appears
on-screen. The game consists of two players wandering around an abstract setting
composed of platforms, walls, and stairs, trying to find and shoot each other. Adding to
the action is a green pterodactyl that occasionally picks up players and drops them. The
players views are sometimes shown on two monitors so that bystanders can watch the game
from both points of view. Although the novelty of the game was its virtual reality interface,
the game cost about $4 for four minutes, and the setup required an attendant to be on duty,
raising the cost of exhibition. Besides appearing in arcades, Dactyl Nightmare has also traveled as a fairground exhibit, its monitors often successfully drawing a crowd of bystanders.
Modes of Exhibition
Console-based systems, like PONG, Wonder Wizard, or Atari Tank, have their games
hardwired into them and are ready to go when the console is turned on. Many of the very
early home video game systems were console based and had games such as tennis, hockey,
and table tennis, most of which were variants of ball-and-paddle games. (Magnavox
television model 4305 even had a built-in color PONG-like game with controllers that
connected to the TV.)
Cartridge-based game systems have their games hardwired into cartridges which
are plugged into the game console, allowing new games to be made for the console
and sold separately. The first cartridge-based system was the Fairchild Channel F
(which was first released as the Video Entertainment System) in 1976. The Fairchild
Channel F came preprogrammed with Hockey and Tennis, in addition to having a
cartridge slot for which 26 cartridges were eventually made. The best-known early
cartridge-based system is, of course, the Atari 2600 released in 1977. Cartridge-based
systems could provide more games than purely console-based systems (some systems,
like the Atari 2600 and the Nintendo SNES had hundreds of cartridges available for
them) and soon became the main kind of system produced, until the coming of the
CD-ROM.
Although most systems used the cards or cartridges with read-only memory hardwired
into them, one system, Rick Dyers Halcyon system, used laserdiscs, which could store
video images. But at a cost of around $2,000, this system was too expensive for most
consumers and was not a success.
Handheld portable games and game systems give players more flexibility than home
video game systems, since they run on batteries and can be carried along with the player.
Handheld games are usually small enough to fit in the palm of ones hand and have small
LED or LCD screens with buttons and controls beneath the screen or to the sides of the
screen. Some of these games (although perhaps not always technically video games themselves) are simplified versions of video games from other systems, such as Nintendos LCD
handheld Donkey Kong Jr., or games using the same characters, such as Marios Cement
Factory (1983). While most of these games are self-contained, there are handheld
cartridge-based systems as well, including Milton Bradleys Microvision, Nintendos Game
Boy, Game Boy Color, and Atari Lynx. Today, handheld games could also refer to
digital games played on a number of portable media devices, including cell phones and
personal digital assistants (PDAs).
Although many arcade games and home video game systems have computers built into
them, they are dedicated systems whose only purpose is that of gameplaying. Beginning
in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s, home computers became available and their
numbers grew quickly. Early video game systems helped to usher them in, as early home
game systems like PONG and the Atari 2600 were often the first computer products to
enter into peoples homes. Practically every type of home computer had game software
available for iton floppy disk, tape drive, cartridge, diskette, or CD-ROM. Systems
like the Texas Instruments 99/4a computer had a built-in slot for game cartridges, and
other computers like Colecos Adam and the Atari 400 and 800 were even made by
game companies. While cartridges for the Atari 2600 contained small amounts of ROM,
computer games stored on floppy disks could be several times larger in size. Storage media
like magnetic disks could also be written on, allowing games in progress to be saved, which
in turn meant that more complex games, taking more than an afternoon to play or solve,
could be produced.
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Today most home computer games have moved to CD-ROMs (compact disc, readonly memory) or DVD-ROMs (digital video disc, read-only memory). While a typical
5.25-inch floppy disk held around 164 kilobytes, and a 3.25-inch diskette held a little
over a megabyte, a CD-ROM holds around 650 to 700 megabytes (a megabyte is
1,000 kilobytes). The increased amount of storage on a CD-ROM allowed longer and
more detailed games, as well as higher-resolution graphics which added to a games
verisimilitude. Yet during the 1990s games were expanding so fast that even a single
CD-ROM was not enough; even some relatively early CD-ROM games, such as
Riven and Star Trek: Borg, took up multiple CD-ROMs. Newer technologies such as
DVD-ROMs, which hold several gigabytes of data, contain even larger games, and networked games played online are often so enormous that they take up several computer
servers and terabytes of data (a terabyte is 1,000 gigabytes, or 1,000,000 megabytes).
Networked games, which are often typically role-playing games (RPG), are games in
which multiple participants are connected via modem to a video game world on a server
and can interact with users around the world and with each others characters. These
games can be run locally, over a LAN (local area network), or on the Internet from anywhere in the world. Because many offices have computers networked together, gameplay
has entered the workplace with games like Quake III (1999), Unreal Tournament (1999),
and Half-Life (1998) occurring during lunchtime and after hours (and, no doubt during
the workday as well). Networked games grew in popularity and size, from games
like Sceptre of Goth (1983) in the mid-1980s, which could have a maximum of 16 players
online at once, to Everquest (1999), which has thousands of characters and requires
multiple servers. Networked games are some of the largest and most detailed video games
[for example, Ultima Online (1997) is said to have more than 189 million square feet of
virtual surface in its world] and have the largest numbers of players playing together. Most
of these games run 24 hours a day, with players logging on and off whenever they want.
Although some people make distinctions between video games and computer
games, games are often ported (rewritten into different computer languages or systems)
from one platform to another, broadening their markets and appearing in multiple modes
of exhibition. Many dedicated game systems now have larger memories, faster speeds,
and use CD-ROMs instead of cartridges. Computer emulation programs can simulate
different game systems on a computer, with varying degrees of success. Even the notion
of a dedicated system may soon be a thing of the past; Sonys PlayStation consoles, for
example, are designed primarily as game systems, but they also can play DVDs and audio
CDs, connect to the Internet, and download and store digital music and video from the
World Wide Web.
The wide range of modes of exhibition have contributed both to the size and success of
the video game industry, and today games are created for practically any computer-based
technology with a screen.
CHAPTER
Technology
Apart from the computer itself, much of the technology used by the video game was
already firmly in place by the 1960s. Television was well established in the majority of
American homes, and as the size of its cabinet shrank and its screen grew, it became more
of an appliance and less of a piece of furniture (except for the sets with the largest screens,
which were available in wooden floor-standing cabinets into the late 1970s). All that
remained to be added was the microprocessor (in the video game console) to supply
the television with image and sound, and it was a company that made televisions,
Magnavox, that would purchase and market the first home video game system, Ralph
Baers Magnavox Odyssey Model ITL 200.
By the 1960s, computer graphics were already into their second decade of development.
In 1949, the Whirlwind mainframe computer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology became the first computer to use a CRT as a graphic display. The Whirlwind was
shown to the general public on a 1951 episode of Edward R. Murrows See It Now and demonstrated a bouncing ball program and calculation of a rocket trajectory. Mainframes continued to be produced during the 1950s, and became more accessible outside the military
establishment. In 1962, around the same time Spacewar! was being written, Ivan Sutherland
completed his Sketchpad system as a doctoral thesis at MIT. The program allowed a user to
create graphics on-screen interactively, using a light pen to draw directly on the CRT screen.
By 1963, the trade periodical Computers and Automation was already sponsoring a
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competition for computer art, and the late 1960s saw a number of museum exhibitions
displaying computer graphics.
Once interactive display graphics were wed to the cathode ray tube, the only remaining
barriers to the commercial production of video games were public access and affordability.
During the 1960s, minicomputers were starting to replace mainframes in some areas, but
they were still neither small enough nor cheap enough for efficient mass production.
These problems were solved in 1971 with the microprocessor, invented by Marcian
E. Hoff, an engineer at the Intel Corporation. By placing a central processor on a chip,
computer components could be produced more cheaply and in greater quantity, allowing
for the development of the home video game and the personal computer, as well as
cheaper and smaller electronic calculators. Using the new technology, Nolan Bushnell
translated Spacewar! into a smaller unit containing the electronic circuitry necessary to
deliver interactive graphics, which he set, along with a monitor and a control panel, into
a tall, floor-standing plastic cabinet. The game was renamed Computer Space, and
appeared in 1971. The following year he used his profits to produce a second game,
PONG, which was more successful and widespread, and became many peoples first
experience of a video game.
One of Bushnells most important contributions to the video game was the addition of
a coin slot, making the video game a profitable venture and soon a commercial industry.
Video games were exhibited in arcades, where they joined a long line of coin-operated
machines reaching back into the 1880s, when saloon owners began installing coinoperated machines for bar patrons to compete on, or place bets on, as well as vending
machines. Due to their success, there was soon a wide variety of coin-operated machines
strength testers, slot machines, card machines, racing games, and other trade stimulators as well as the coin-operated mutoscopes and kinetoscopes, the early movingpicture machinesthat paved the way of the cinema.1
Free-standing and countertop coin-operated machines could be found in saloons,
parlors, and shop-lined arcades and continued to flourish into the 1930s and early
1940s. The pinball machine developed out of these machines during the 1930s and was
produced by companies that produced other games, like the Bally Corporation or the
Bingo Novelty Company. Through a series of innovations, the pinball machine gradually
evolved into the form players are familiar with today. In 1933 electricity was added, and
lights and backglasses were added in 1934. The pinball bumper was added in 1937, and
the flipper in 1947.2 After World War II, the pinball game saw its golden age during the
period 1948 to 1958.
Costing only a nickel a play, pinball games flourished as a source of cheap entertainment
during the Depression and the Second World War, and they were popular enough that
their prices rose to a quarter (today some even charge 50 cents or more). Other arcade
games that were even closer to video games were electromechanical games like Segas first
game, Periscope (1968), and Chicago Coin Machine Companys Apollo Moon Shot Rifle
(1969), which featured upright cabinets and game controls under a screen (but no video
monitors). These games were coin-operated and relied on mechanical figures staged inside
the games cabinet, some with mechanical sound effects as well. These games, perhaps more
than any others, helped to pave the way for video games, which were, for arcade players, yet
another technological development in the world of arcade coin-operated gaming.
During the early 1970s, the video game was able to achieve commercial success through
its integration into the same market venues as the pinball game (also a quarter a play).
In the years that followed, video games quickly grew into an industry, until they replaced
pinball games as the main games found in arcades. Besides new companies like Nutting
Associates and Atari, companies producing pinball games such as Bally and Gottlieb also
became producers of video games.
The early games content was also influenced by technology. The explosion of technological developments in the United States following the Second World War, and particularly the space program, renewed the publics interest in science and science fiction.
J. Martin Graetz acknowledges that science fiction novels, by authors such as E. E. Smith,
and the science fiction films of Japans Toho Films Studios (best known for Godzilla
movies) were the main influences on the writing of Spacewar! 3 Throughout their entire
history, video games have maintained a solid tradition of spaceships, shooting, and
monsters, and science fiction themes have dominated the market. Computer graphics of
the late 1960s and early 1970s, however, were not sophisticated enough to easily and
cheaply produce detailed, representational moving imagery in real time, so simple
geometric figures, made from dots, lines, squares, and rectangles, had to suffice. Detail
and complexity were sacrificed for immediate and interactive action; a player could
imagine the details, but action had to happen on-screen, and fast.
Art
Although their simplicity was due to technological limitations and not the result of
deliberate artistic choices, the minimal, often abstract graphics of early video games fit
in rather well with trends in the art world during the 1960s. During the 1950s, abstract
art came to dominate the New York City art scene, and many strands of it developed into
the 1960s. There were color-field painters, like Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko, and
the hard-edge painting style of painters like Ellsworth Kelly and Alexander Liberman,
emphasizing simple forms and geometric simplicity. Influenced by these and other
abstract movements, minimalist art developed in the mid-to-late 1960s. Artists such as
Donald Judd, Sol Lewitt, Tony Smith, and others worked with squares, cubes, stripes,
and geometric shapes, and other minimal forms to create abstractions. Early video game
graphics, with their points, lines, and blocks of color, often on a black background,
coincided with minimalist, abstract styles of art. Likewise, electronic music developed
during the 1960s and came to be known for its new, computer-generated sounds and
sometimes repetitious compositions. Electronic sounds could be generated and repeated
by a computer and soon synthesized beeps and boops became the computer-generated
soundtracks for video games.
The time-based and interactive nature of the video game also fit in with trends in 1960s
art. The happenings of artists like John Cage and Allan Kaprow emphasized experience
and process over product (sometimes including the audiences participation), and Sol
Lewitts famous essay of 1967, Paragraphs on Conceptual Art,4 placed more importance
on concept than a tangible art object. There also were performances known as light
shows, like Jordan Belsons Vortex Concerts, or the light works of The Single Wing
Turquoise Bird, a Los Angeles group who created abstract projections of light and color
for rock concerts in the late 1960s. These shows were huge projections of shifting, moving
light and color patterns which were designed primarily as experiences that could never be
repeated exactly; chance often played a part in their making. Art installations using video
cameras and monitors also appeared around this time. In 1970, Gene Youngbloods book
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Expanded Cinema explored the merger of art and technology of the time and included
sections entitled Television as a Creative Medium and Cybernetic Cinema and
Computer Films, acknowledging the growing role of television and computer graphics
in the visual arts.5
Further Refinements
The video game, then, was perhaps the most commercially successful combination of
art and technology to emerge in the early 1970s, and in many cases, the first computer
technology widely available to the public and the first to enter homes. As entertainment,
it would soon come to compete with film and television, providing another source of
on-screen worlds of sight and sound, and the only ones with which a player could
directly interact. As its memory and processing speeds grew, and its graphics capabilities
improved, more games appeared which licensed franchises from film and television hoped
to play on their appeal. Not only content, but cinematic styles of composition and editing,
storytelling devices, and other conventions from film and television made their way into
video games. Games became more character-centered, backgrounds had more scenery
and became locations, and there was often more narrative context surrounding the action
of the game. By the 1990s, video games had title screens, end credits, cutting between
different sequences, multiple points of view, multiple locations, and increasingly detailed
storylines. Many films and television shows were adapted into video games, and during
the 1990s, a number of video games became theatrical motion pictures.
But alongside these influences from outside, interactivity and the ability to depict a
navigable space have forced video games to develop their own styles and conventions, with
new ways of structuring space, time, and narrative that are unique to video games. As an
established cultural force and a vast commercial industry, video games continue to carve
out their niche among other media and act as an influence upon their form and content
as well.
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Although video games have been around for several decades, serious academic study
of them was slow to develop.1 At first there were mainly just essays for hobbyists in
electronics and books for gameplayers with playing advice. Some writings appeared from
designers, but only around the late 1990s did scholarly analysis really begin to appear,
when the generation who grew up with video games began entering academia and writing
about them. The Internet and the World Wide Web also helped to form online communities of video game enthusiasts and collectors, who collaboratively produced some of the
best reference resources on video games [like the Killer List of Videogames (KLOV)2],
many of which are still available online today. After 2000, academic writing about video
games gradually grew more fashionable as scholars who grew up with video games began
writing about them for a large audience who were familiar with the games. Today there
are a number of academic journals (like Sages Games and Culture) as well as online
journals (like Game Studies3) devoted to the study of video games. A growing number
of schools now offer degrees in the area of game studies, and there are even several annual
conferences [like DiGRA (Digital Games Research Association) or the International
Game Developers Association (IGDA) conferences] organized around the study of
video games.
Even when a copy of the original game is available, video games can be more difficult to
study than traditional media. Whereas someone can listen to a piece of music, read a
novel, or sit and watch a film from beginning to end and be satisfied that he or she has
seen all there is to see of it, this is usually not the case with a video game. Gameplaying
skills may be required to advance beyond the first few levels, or some puzzle-solving ability
may be needed just to enter a locked door encountered early on in the game. Instead of
fixed, linear sequences of text, image, or sound which remain unchanged when examined
multiple times, a video game experience can vary widely from one playing to the next.
Even if a player has the right skills, there are often courses of action and areas of the game
which are still left unexplored even after the game has been played several times. Mastery
of the video game, then, can be more involved (and involving) than mastery of a film; in
addition to critical skills, the researcher must possess gameplaying or puzzle-solving skills,
or at least know someone who does. Guides and cheat books are also sometimes available.
More time is also needed when studying a video game. Whereas movies are generally no
more than a few hours in length, video games like Riven, Tomb Raider (1996), Final
Fantasy (1987), Icewind Dale (2000), and so on, can average 40 or more hours to
complete, not including all the possible endings they may contain. Sometimes it is not
even clear how many choices a player has, and discovery of alternate narrative paths or
hidden features (known as Easter eggs) are themselves a part of game play. It make take
a good amount of playing time and attention to detail to say for certain that one has seen
and heard everything a game has to offer (that is, all the screens, sounds, and video clips),
and there is often an underlying logic that must be uncovered as well in order to do so.
There are some games, like the massively multiplayer online role-playing games
(MMORPGs) which run continuously 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and which are so
large, that no one can ever see all the events occurring, nor can the game be restarted
and replayed; they can only be experienced once in real time just like historical events,
and each players experiences will be unique.
Finally, the way a game is experienced is different from other media. Although one can
refer to film viewing as active, meaning that the viewer is attentive to what is being
shown and is applying imagination and critical thinking to make sense of or read a film,
video game play requires inputphysical action of some kindfrom the player in order
to function, and often quick reactions within a very limited timeframe. Only when a
player becomes attuned to the way in which a game operates will success be possible; thus
a certain manner of thinking and reacting is encouraged, sometimes at the reflex level. In a
film, all the steering of on-screen events is done for us by the filmmaker, whereas a video
game leaves more possibilities open. The manner and the degree to which a film or a video
game is a vicarious experience differ greatly.
While studying video games we should also consider the time in which the game
was made. Game design is always limited by what is technologically possible, and some
knowledge of the software and hardware available at the time when the game was made is
essential to appreciating the games themselves. The Atari VCS 2600, for example, which
appeared in 1977, had only 128 bytes of random-access memory (RAM) (and no disk
storage), a graphics clock which ran at roughly only 1.2 MHz, and plenty of other
programming limitations which had to be overcome with a limited amount of code, since
early cartridges had only 2 or 4 kilobytes of ROM. Knowing this, some of the early games
for the system are rather impressive, considering the restraints faced by the games
programmers. Cultural constraints also existed: early games had to have simpler controls,
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because players had to learn how to use them. For example, the controls of the first arcade
game Computer Space were thought to be confusing at the time, whereas today they would
be intuitively understood by players. After the various general restraints and limitations,
there is also the background specific to the individual game being studied to consider.
Looking at Interactivity
The smallest unit of interactivity would have to be the choice, which consists of two or
more options from which the player chooses. For any given moment in a game, there are a
number of choices facing the player, and in every game there is a sequence of choices made
by the player over time until the end of the game. A games replayability often depends on
its having a good number of options and choices, in at least one of the two dimensions just
mentioned. Simple action games, for example, have large grids along the time dimension,
while the number of options offered simultaneously may be small [at any given moment
in Space Invaders, the player has only four options: move left, move right, fire, or wait
(do nothing)]. Puzzle games, on the other hand, may have a wide variety of options open
at any given moment but need only a few dozen correct choices to be made for the game
to be won.
The speed at which options must be considered and choices must be made is also
crucial to an examination of a games interactive structure. Action games have a nearcontinuous stream of choices for the player, who may be in constant motion battling
opponents while avoiding danger. Although the sequential choices are made one after
another so quickly that they appear to be continuous, they are in fact still made in discrete
fashion due to the nature of the computer clock which regulates the game (and number of
choices made per second can depend on the speed of that clock). In the genre of interactive movies, a players choices are often spread out in time, in between video clips which
may be as long as several minutes each. Some games involving navigation or the solving
of puzzles may accept a fast series of choices to be input (for example, a player moving
through a location quickly) but at the same time not require quick decisions. The time
pressure under which a player must play determines whether the choices made by the
player are made as a result of reflex action or reflection (at least during the initial playing;
in fast-action games, more reflection can occur on subsequent playing once the player
knows what to expect).
Games requiring both reflection and reflex action may also increase their replayability
since players will need more playing experience and a foreknowledge of what they are
facing in order to make the right choices at a fast enough rate. Even in some early arcade
games and Atari 2600 games [like Activisions Stampede (1981), which features a horizontally scrolling track of cattle to be roped], a player always encountered the same scenarios
or patterns of opponents, so that it was possible to memorize where they would appear
next and anticipate their presence; indeed, at higher speeds, this would be the only way
to keep from getting defeated. Whether or not the conditions of the game include a series
of events or character positions which differs from one playing to the next should also be
considered in the analysis of a game, since it affects how prior knowledge of a game
changes gameplay.
Prior knowledge of a game, gained from multiple playings, may also be crucial if some
of the choices available to the player at a given time are hidden choices. The options that
are included in a choice can occur anywhere on a spectrum from apparent or obvious ones
to hidden options of which the player is completely unaware (for example, a character
might have three hallways to choose between, but not know about a hidden trapdoor
beneath their feet). Certain navigational paths, such as roadways, indicate an obvious
course of action, while hidden doorways, chambers, or objects may require thorough
searches to be found, or even an elaborate sequence of actions which the player is unlikely
to perform inadvertently and must learn from the game or some outside source. Such
inside knowledge of a game encourages players by rewarding them for their efforts, and
invites them to search further for more. The intentionally hidden Easter eggs and
unintentional bugs found in games also may add to a gaming experience as a player
finds them and learns to exploit them (or becomes frustrated by them). Such hidden
features add to the replayability of a game, as well as the playing of a game not to win or
complete an objective, but rather to explore the games world and the ways in which the
game functions.
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The above discussion of the timing given for the making of choices suggests that there
can be several layers of choices present at different scales in the game. Some fast-action
reflex decisions, like those in a fight or shoot-out, are made quickly and instantly and
are determined by other more large-scale choices which the player considers and executes
over a longer period of time, such as where to go or what strategy to use. Some choices
affecting all aspects of a game may even be made before the gameplay itself begins [for
example, in some adventure games, the choosing of an avatar (a player-character) and
the various attributes of that avatar]. Depending on the speed of the action, a player
may need to engage in short-term and long-term decision-making almost simultaneously,
as the player switches back and forth between different objectives (for example, fending
off attackers, finding certain treasures or supplies, and managing health levels) all while
navigating through locations and gaining information which may be needed for larger
decisions which determine the narrative direction of the game.
This leads to the next important area in analyzing the choices a player makes in a game:
what are the consequences of the choices made? Some choices may be trivial and have little
or no consequences (for example, wandering in a well-known area where there are no
dangers, without any time pressure), while others may determine whether or not the game
ends immediately (for example, when a players character gets killed). Looking at the interactive structure of a game, then, each choice can be considered for its importance (what
are the consequences of the choice made?), its difficulty (fending off attackers rather than
letting them kill you is an easy choice to make, whereas deciding what to do to get into a
locked room or which character to trust may be much more difficult to decide), and the
amount of time given for the player to decide (reflex action versus reflection, and how
much time for reflection). One could also consider how much information the player is
given on which to base a choice, and sometimes only in retrospect does the player realize
whether all of the available pertinent information was collected or even recognized.
The importance of consequences also depends on the irreversibility of the actions that
caused them. After a choice is made, can whatever has been done be undone, and can
the game return to the same state as it was before the choice was made? Irreversibility
may play a greater role in more narrative-based games or games involving strategy, where
a return to a previous game state is more unlikely or difficult. Many turn-based games, like
adaptations of board games, may feature an undo command similar to what one might
find in utility-based software; or like the games of the Blinx series, even allow the player
to rewind action sequences and go back in time, allowing for more exploration and
experimentation even in situations harmful to the player-character.
Every arcade game, console-based game, and cartridge-based game can of course
be restarted and replayed from its beginning, returning the game to its initial state.
This, however, is not true of large-scale networked games (MMORPGs), which contain
persistent worlds with thousands of players. The ongoing nature of these games and their
continually developing worlds make the consequences of players actions much more
long lasting, and the time and money investing in them raise the stakes of play and the
seriousness of player termination. Many MMORPGs have areas which do not allow
player-characters to be killed, and the acquisition of experience and game-world objects
and abilities, as well as the building of virtual communities within the games world, are
pursued as long-term objectives stretching over months or even years. The irreversibility
of players actions and their consequences weighs heavily in the consideration of the
choices faced by the MMORPG player.
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some cases interact with other people and parts of the world. Unlike a photograph which
always depicted the past, no matter how recent, or the live television image which depicted
a geographically distant present (although it, too, was already microseconds into the
past), the time depicted in the interactive image of the video game is that of the user, a
continuous now that invites involvement and offers a potential to be explored through
use. Even when one plays an old video game, like an old Atari cartridge from the 1970s,
there is a sense in which the events depicted in the game are occurring for the player in
the present.
The above description suggests two different areas to consider when analyzing
interactive imagery: the interior world of the image and the images connections to the
exterior world. Both can be found in video games. By the interior world, I mean the
self-contained on-screen world of the game itself, and the way the player is (or can be)
involved within it. Most existing methods of image analysis deal with two-dimensional
images and were not designed to deal with three-dimensional worlds seen through the
window of the image, much less interactive ones. Film theory perhaps comes the closest,
as areas of it deal with the on-screen world and its construction, but it, too, falls short.
The on-screen world seen in a film differs from that of a game in that all the events,
camera angles, and storyline are limited to those seen during the duration of the film;
one cannot look around a corner or change the course of events as is possible in most
games. Video game studies will have to propose new methods for the analysis of the
worlds seen through the window of the image, and the way in which the image becomes
a tool in the hands of the person controlling its point of view.
Game studies will almost certainly provide insights into interaction that will be of use to
the designers of interfaces, wherever they are used, and many of the experiences found in
gaming, such as navigation, puzzle-solving, hand-eye coordination and so on, will also
make their way into other media and need to be examined thoroughly. The study of video
games itself is still very young, and there is much left to be discovered and discussed. It is a
unique field of study, and one that is expanding quickly and will continue to expand for
many years to come.
PART II
CHAPTER
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primer on game theory and provided the theoretical foundation for many early computer
game programs.
The first computer game of blackjack was programmed in 1954 for the IBM 701 at the
Atomic Energy Laboratory at Los Alamos, New Mexico. Also in 1954, a crude game of
poolperhaps the first nonmilitary game to use a video displaywas programmed at
the University of Michigan.
The military set the pace for simulation games for many years, and in 1955, Hutspiel,
the first theater-level war game (NATO vs. USSR) was programmed at the Research
Analysis Corporation in McLean, Virginia.
Although Allen Newell, J. C. Shaw, and Herbert Simon, three computer science
professors at Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie-Mellon University) are
frequently credited with the first chess gameprobably because they stayed at it for over
20 yearsthe first version of computer chess was actually programmed in 1956 by James
Kister, Paul Stein, Stanisaw Ulam, William Walden, and Mark Wells on the MANIAC-1
at the Los Alamos Atomic Energy Laboratory. The game was played on a simplified 6 x 6
board and examined all possible moves two levels deep at the rate of 12 moves per minute.
It played at a similar level as a human player with about 20 games worth of experience.
In contrast, Deep Thought, the 1990 computer chess champion, examined about
1.5 million moves per second and used a combination of brute force and intuitive play
on a standard board. Although Deep Thought was rated at about 2600 on the FIDE system
(tournament chess players are rated by the Federation Internationale des Eches, which
orders players who participate in international games under strict tournament rules),
which places it among the top 40 human players in the world, the program was decisively
defeated by Garry Kasparov in a two-game match in October 1989. Except for a small
band of enthusiasts, the interest in computer chess has waned somewhat, probably because
the computer programs are so good that playing them is discouraging for all but a small
handful of championship-level players.
In 1958, a tennis game, Tennis for Two, was designed for an analog computer at Brookhaven National Lab by Willy Higinbotham. This game, played on an oscilloscope display,
was significant in that it was the first game to permit two players actually to control the
direction and motion of the object moving on the screen (the ball). The object of the game
was to maintain a volley for as long as possible by hitting the ball with one of the two
rackets at each side of the screen. A line down the middle indicated the net; gravity,
bounce, and even wind speed were calculated into game play.
In 1959, large-scale simulation games moved into the private sector with the programming of The Management Game by Kalman J. Cohen, Richard M. Cyert, and William
R. Dill, and others at Carnegie Tech in Pittsburgh. This game simulated competition
between three companies in the detergent industry and integrated modules on marketing,
production, finance, and research. Modified and updated for newer computers, but still in
use at many graduate schools of business today, this game may well have set the record for
the longest life of any computer game ever written. In this two-semester-long game, players
make decisions about manufacturing, advertising, distribution, finances, personnel
research and development, and all the aspects of running a real business over a simulated
period of three years. Each week of play corresponds to a calendar quarter of business
and the competition is fierce to have the highest profit and market share at the end of
three years. (It is interesting to note that the Bendix G-15 computer with its rudimentary
high-level GATE language, on and in which this game was initiated, is a direct descendent
of the very first electronic digital computer, Colossus, invented by Tommy Flowers in 1943
for codebreaking at Bletchley Park, United Kingdom.)
With the delivery in 1959 of the first Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) PDP-l
computer with its 15-inch video display, the continuing evolution from text-only games
to video games was dramatically hastened with the demonstration at an MIT open house
in 1962 of Spacewar!, an interactive game written by Stephen R. Russell, J. Martin Graetz,
and Alan Kotok. In this game, two crude spaceships orbited around a star that exerted a
powerful gravitational pull on each ship. Each opponent controlled his ship and
attempted to shoot the other ship while also trying to avoid being pulled into and burned
up by the star.
Also in 1962, but in a completely different area, Omar K. Moore at Yale built a device
called The Talking Typewriter for teaching reading to young children. In the device,
built by Edison Electric, a computer controlled a CRT display, slide projector, and audio
recorder. In 1964, a more general-purpose computer-assisted instruction (CAI) system
using IBM hardware, including a CRT with graphics, light pen, and audio, was developed
by Patrick Suppes at Stanford. Military research kept pace, and in 1964 the Bunker-Ramo
Corporation demonstrated a CRT display that simultaneously combined computer data
with a projected background.
Artists began to realize the potential of the computer in 1964 when A. Michael Noll at
Bell Labs produced the first computer art on a CRT display. Many years later, spurred by
such companies as Activision, Lucasfilm Games, and Cinemaware, artists began to play a
much larger role in the creation of games through computer animation.
Rounding out the landmark year of 1964, the language Basic was developed by John
Kemeny and Tom Kurtz on the GE 225 timesharing system at Dartmouth College.
Within a few months, the first interactive educational games and simulations began to
appear on the Dartmouth system.
Various types of graphics displays from many manufacturers were introduced in the
mid-1960s, opening the door to new video effects. Thus, we find a video pool game
developed at RCA (1967), a ball-and-paddle game by Ralph Baer at Sanders Associates
(1967, later to become the Magnavox Odyssey home video game in 1972), a rocket car
simulation by Judah Schwartz at MIT (1968), a graphic flight simulation by the computer
firm Evans & Sutherland (1969), a lunar lander game at DEC (1969), and a device to
permit computer output and standard television video on the same display at Stanford
(1968).
In the October 1970 issue of Scientific American, Martin Gardner devoted his
Mathematical Games column to a description of John Conways Game of Life. Easily
programmed, it began to appear on virtually every video computer terminal in the
country within weeks. In this game, colonies of figures reproduce, move around, and die
off according to certain rules with the object of the game being to devise patterns that
can sustain life for as long as possible.
In the late 1960s, the National Science Foundation was attempting to encourage the
use of computers in secondary schools to improve science education. One of the notable
NSF-funded projects that produced scores of simulation games in science and social
studies was the Huntington Computer Project directed by Ludwig Braun at Brooklyn
Polytechnic Institute (later at SUNY, Stony Brook). In the projects Malaria simulation
game, for example, students must try to control an outbreak of malaria in a Central
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CHAPTER
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coin slot, making it the first commercial video game and the start of a new industry, which
would soon eclipse the electromechanical game industry from which it arose.
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Figure 7.1 The eight-player game Indy 800 (1975). Indy 800 had a steering wheel and two
pedals for each player, arranged with two players on each side of the screen, which faced upward
in the middle beneath the canopy.
Most of the other games released in 1975 were sports related, including several shooting
games, some of which, like Segas Bullet Mark and Balloon Gun, had either mounted or
tethered guns that players used. While some games were patterned after a shooting gallery,
others involved vehicles that could shoot, like planes in Ataris Anti-Aircraft II, Electras
Avenger, or Allied Leisures Fire Power; or spaceships, like in Electras UFO Chase; or tanks,
as in Fun Gamess Tankers or Kee Gamess Tank III (the first game to be the third in a
series). One game, Midways Gun Fight, became the first to include detailed human
figures; the avatars were cowboys with discernible features such as hats, spurs, and eyes
(Taitos Western Gun, a copy of Gun Fight, came out the same year). Other sports appearing
for the first time were pool, in US Billiardss Video Pool; skiing, in Allied Leisures Ski; and
horse racing, in Ataris Steeplechase, which had horses for six players and one computer
player, making it the first seven-player game. Three video pinball games also appeared, Volleys Flip-Out, Midways TV Flipper, and Chicago Coins Super Flipper, which had a ball
puller on it and housed its monitor in a cabinet shaped like a pinball game. Finally, three
games of 1975 sought to cash in on Steven Spielbergs popular film Jaws released that year:
Project Support Engineerings Maneater, Ataris Shark Jaws, and US Billiardss Shark. In the
first two games, the player controls a diver who must avoid a shark, while the third is a fourplayer game in which the players control sharks, and the first shark to eat five divers wins.
Human beings had just barely appeared in video games, and already they were targets to
be killed and eaten.
The use of human figures as targets to be killed continued in Exidys 1976 game
Death Race, based on Paul Bartels film Death Race 2000 (1975); in both game and film,
competitors gain points by running over pedestrians. As the people (called gremlins)
are run over in the game, they scream and are replaced by crosses. Whereas the violence
in Shark apparently generated no protest, Exidys Death Race became the object of
controversy and began a debate about violence in video games which continues to this
day (see Chapter 39, The Video Game as an Object of Controversy).
The year 1976 also saw many new releases in the now-established genres of ball-andpaddle games (or table-top games), shooting games, driving games, racing games, video
pinball, and sports games, some with improved graphics and occasionally innovative
additions. Ataris Breakout (and its imitator, Mirco Gamess Block Buster) took the balland-paddle game and added a field of blocks that disappeared when hit, creating a new
kind of game. Most shooting games now involved airplanes of some kind, though there
were also bombing games like Meadows Gamess Bombs Away, target shooting games like
Model Racings Clay Buster which featured clay pigeon shooting, western-themed shooting
games like Ataris Outlaw, tank shooting games like Kee Gamess Tank 8 in which eight
players could all play on one screen, and even Ataris Starship I, a Star Trek-inspired space
shooting game. Midways Sea Wolf even had a periscope viewer and combined a video
screen with backlit transparencies that alerted players of various events during the game.
Ataris Cops N Robbers, with foot pedals and pistol grips, combined shooting and
driving and allowed players to play as either the cops or robbers. Other driving and racing
games of 1976 included those in which players avoided crashing into other cars, and
games like Taitos Crashing Race where the idea was to crash into as many cars as possible.
Four motorcycle driving games appeared, which had handlebars instead of steering wheels
for controllers: Ataris Stunt Cycle, Digital Games Incorporateds Heavy Traffic, and Segas
Moto-Cross and Fonz. The Fonz handlebars even vibrated when the players bike collided
with another, one of the earliest examples of haptic feedback equipment being used in
an arcade video game.
Two other driving games of the year marked the first time first-person perspectives were
used in video games; Ataris Night Driver and Midways Datsun 280 Zzzap had series of
white driving pylons that appeared to be coming towards the viewer, simulating a road
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ahead seen in perspective, even though no real 3-D computation was involved. At the
bottom of its screen, Datsun 280 Zzzap also had an information bar showing the time,
score, and a zero to 200 speedometer showing the speed, giving the game some of the
most advanced informational graphics of its day.
Baseball games like Midways Tornado Baseball and Ramteks Deluxe Baseball featured
better graphics that included small player figures whose arms, legs, and head were
discernible details. Other new games included Ramteks card game Hit Me, Project
Support Engineerings jousting game Knights in Armor in which knights rode on galloping
horses, and Segas Heavyweight Champ, which had unique boxing glove-like controls for
punching, and was probably the earliest one-on-one fighting arcade video game.
A few other games of 1976 are worthy of notice. Three games, UPLs Blockade, Ramteks
Barricade, and Meadows Gamess Bigfoot Bonkers had players moving around on a playing
field and leaving a trail of blocks behind them, which formed walls in which they would try
to trap other players [an idea that would later reach a wider audience in the form of Ataris
Surround (1978) for the Atari VCS]; this was a new game idea that was specific to video
games rather than an adaptation of some other kind of existing game or event. Finally,
two games, Kee Gamess Quiz Show and Ramteks Trivia, were both trivia question based
games which read questions stored on magnetic tape systems. Ramteks game stored
2,000 questions on an 8-track audio tape, and the company made several tapes, allowing
operators to change the tape and load new questions, an idea that was ahead of its time
and would later be revisited by the DECO cassette system in the 1980s (see Chapter 16,
Arcade Games of the 1980s.
One of the biggest graphical advances of the late 1970s appeared in a relatively
unknown game, Kee Gamess Super Bug of 1977. Whereas previously all games took place
on a single screen, Super Bug was a driving game that had a Volkswagen Bug that stayed
on-screen while the background scrolled behind it and could move in all four directions
(up, down, left, right), making it very likely the first video game to feature scrolling. [Electras Avenger (1975) may have been an even earlier scrolling game, but it is unclear whether
it really was, and if so, whether the scrolling effect was merely simulated by moving sprites
downscreen instead of actually moving the background graphics.] The first well-known
game with scrolling was Ataris Football (1978), and since Atari had merged with Kee
Games, they were able to patent scrolling and require other companies to license it from
them.
The other big graphical advance of 1977 was the appearance of vector video games in
the arcade, with the arrival of Cinematronicss Space Wars and Vectorbeams Space War,
which were both copies of the mainframe game Spacewar!. Both games had rather sparse
wireframe graphics on a black screen, tiny spaceship shapes and a small sun, and they
were still two-dimensional games.
By 1977, ball-and-paddle games had just about disappeared (except for a few, like Rene
Pierres Special Break or Segas World Cup). A large number of shooting games were being
produced, including hunting games like Amutechs The Great White Buffalo Hunt,
Midways Desert Gun, and Ataris Triple Hunt which had a two-part cabinet which placed
the player some distance away from the targets. There were western-themed games (like
Taitos Gunman and Midways Boot Hill), tank shooting games (like Midways M-4 and
Ramteks M-79 Ambush), plane shooting games (like Project Support Engineerings Desert
Patrol and Model Racings Flying Shark), games with mounted bazookas on their cabinets
(like U.N. Command and Bazooka, both by Project Support Engineering, and Taitos Cross
Fire), and sea battle and space battle games. In one game, Ataris Subs, each player had a
separate screen on opposite sides of the cabinet; players could not see each others screens,
and each had a different view of the games action, which involved trying to figure where a
players sub was located, and torpedo it. Players had to rely on sonar and only had quick
glimpses of each others subs during torpedo hits. [Exidy would later release Fire One!
(1979) based on the same idea, but with a single screen with a partition down the middle
so that each player could only see half the screen while playing.]
There were also some new variations on the shooting theme that year: missile launching
games (like Midways Guided Missile and Taitos Missile-X) in which the player launched
missiles from the bottom of the screen to hit targets appearing above, and their opposites,
bombing games (like Ataris Canyon Bomber, Taitos Sub Hunter, and Segas Bomber) in
which the players avatar moved at the top of the screen dropping bombs on the targets
below.
Racing games were also popular and included Taitos Super High-Way, Segas Main T.T.,
and Ataris Sprint 4 and Sprint 8 (for four and eight players, respectively). A few games,
like Ataris Sprint 4 and Taitos Cisco 400, came in color. More baseball and football games
appeared (Midways Double Play, Meadows Gamess Gridiron, and Sega/Gremlins Super
Bowl among them), as well as two bowling games, Meadows Gamess Meadows Lanes
and Exidys Robot Bowl, both of which featured on-screen scoring boxes for all 10 frames,
just like those used in real bowling.
And, finally, 1977 saw a number of games that were sequels or copies of earlier games.
Some copied the previous years games in which players moving squares left trails that
were used to surround and trap other players (Taitos Barricade II, Midways Checkmate,
UPLs Comotion and Hustle, Segas Crash Course, and Ataris Dominos); there were several
Breakout clones (Video Games GmbHs Super Crash, Subelectros Super Knockout, and
Taitos T.T. Block), and games which were a variation on Breakout, using men bouncing
on a seesaw to break balloons instead of blocks (Exidys Circus and Subelectros Springboard). Clones of these games would continue to come out in the years ahead, until new
and even more popular games would oust them from the spotlight; and some of these
were just around the corner.
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that were clearly inspired by the design of Space Invaders. Other games took their
variations farther, like Galaxian (1979) and Galaga (1981), and many other vertically
oriented shooting games would come out in the years following Space Invaders, so in a
sense the game was in large part responsible for an entire subgenre of shooting games.
Other games of 1978 included Ataris Football, mainly popular during the football
season, which used a scrolling screen for its playing field. Having patented scrolling, Atari
made good use of it and released other scrolling games that year. Sky Raider was a plane
bombing game, with scrolling scenery that the player viewed from above. The game also
demonstrates the growing importance of the international market for arcade games, since
the games message text could be set by the arcade operator to appear in English, French,
German, or Spanish as desired. Another Atari scrolling game, Fire Truck, was unusual in
its design; it was a two-player cooperative game, with one player seated in front of a steering wheel that steered the front of the truck, while the other stood behind the first player,
using a steering wheel on the back of the first players seat to control the back of the fire
truck. Players would have to work together to navigate the truck through the neighborhood streets without crashing it (the game was all about driving; there was no fire or final
destination). A one-player version of the game, Smokey Joe, was also released that year
(according to the games flyer, players chose to drive either the cab or trailer portion of
the truck, while the computer drove the other part). Cinematronicss second vector
graphics game, Starhawk, had larger spaceships and a background that looked like the
trench on the Death Star from the movie Star Wars (1977) (see Figure 7.2). Although it
Figure 7.2 An early attempt at a 3-D look. Star Hawk was an early vector graphics game which
attempted a 3-D look, even though it did not involve any real 3-D computation. Image from
www.klov.com.
was not true 3-D, it looked more like 3-D than any other game of the time, and it would
not be too long before vector games moved into the 3-D realm (see Chapter 12, Vector
Games).
Other derivative games appeared in 1978; clones of Ataris Breakout and games which
were a variation of Breakout, plane games, tank games, and a variety of other shooting
games, some with mounted guns (Sega/Gremlins Cartoon Gun), mines (UPLs Blasto), a
spear gun (Bally/Midways Blue Shark), and one, Ramteks Dark Invader, that even
featured a real neon laser. Two nonviolent shooting games even appeared; Bally/Midways
Dog Patch and Meadows Gamess Dead Eye had player-characters (hillbillies and a cowboy,
respectively) who simply shot at objects tossed in the air. Several racing games also
were produced, and one vector game, Vectorbeams Speed Freak, even had a first-person
perspective and more detailed graphics which included a highway with a dividing line,
oncoming cars, and objects off to the side of the road.
Along with more baseball, bowling, boxing, diving, and video pinball games, sports
games expanded into a few other sports in 1978, including those of Taitos Trampoline,
Midways Shuffleboard, Ataris Sky Diver, and Meadows Gamess Gypsy Juggler. Ataris
Tournament Table even offered 12 different games in a single cocktail-style cabinet,
including multiple versions of Breakout, Foozpong, Quadrapong, Handball, Soccer, Hockey,
Volleyball, and Basketball. Despite the unusually large selection, they were all ball-andpaddle games, which had long since seen their peak in player interest.
A few other games of 1978 are worth mentioning. UPLs Frogs had frogs jumping on
lily pads and competing at catching flying insects with their tongues and was a game
which was not afraid to be cute (cute games would later become almost a genre unto
themselves in Japan). Two strategy games also appeared; Nintendos Computer Othello,
based on the popular board game of the day, and Universals ComputerR-3, which was
essentially a copy of Othello using Xs and Os. Although strategy games would appear
in the arcade from time to time, they favored contemplation over action and their games
lasted longer than the few minutes typical in action games, meaning fewer quarters taken
in per hour. Strategy games, along with games of other more time-consuming genres like
adventure games, would eventually find their niche on home computers in the 1980s.
By 1979 arcade video games had grown into a stable and successful industry, displacing
pinball games and almost completely replacing electromechanical games at the arcade.
Competition from home games was beginning to provide an impetus for innovation,
though they also raised interest in video games in general. An increasing number of arcade
video games were being made in color, and color games outnumbered black and white
games for the first time. One game of 1979, Namcos Galaxian, was the first game to have
all of its graphics in true RGB color. Inspired by Space Invaders, Namcos Galaxian was an
improvement on the design, with more detailed graphics and ships that flew in varying
patterns as they descended. Besides the Space Invaders clones that continued coming out
in 1979, Galaxian had its share of imitators as well, including Subelectros Exodus and
Swarm, Midways Super Galaxians, Petaco S.A.s Zero Time, Nichibutsus Galaxian Part X,
and others.
With a number of other trends continuing from the year before, 1979 saw more baseball games, shooting games (many of which now included aliens), missile-launching
games, racing games, and still more Breakout clones, including ones made in Japan and
Italy, and two Breakout-inspired games with elements of pinball integrated into them,
Namcos Bomb Bee and Cutie Q. Through such games, one can see how ideas evolve and
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genres are hybridized until new types of games and game genres are created. One shooting
game of 1979, SNKs Yosaku, had players shooting up at birds while dodging their
droppings, a creative scenario with a structure essentially the same as Space Invaders (you
shoot up at an enemy shooting down at you). Atari released two sports games that year,
Atari Baseball and Atari Soccer, which were, along with Football from the year before, all
two-player games in a cocktail-style cabinet designed so that players stood on opposite
sides of the screen, sharing an overhead view with text oriented towards them at either
end of the screen, something that could only be done in cocktail format. And other
cabinet styles were emerging. Extending the idea of a sit-on console to a sit-in console,
Exidys Star Fire (1979) was the first game with an enclosed cockpit (advertised as a
TOTAL ENVIRONMENT on the games flyer) although an upright version was also
released. Star Fire was also the first game to feature a high-score table with players initials.
Amidst the driving and racing games released in 1979 were games which involved
driving within a series of concentric lanes which contained dots to be run over by the cars.
Zaccarias Dodgem, Sega/Gremlins Head On, Nichibutsus Rolling Crash, SNKs Safari
Rally, and Exidys Crash! all were of this design, which appears to have originated with
an arcade game, Ataris Dodge Em, produced sometime between 1975 and 1978; sources
do not agree on the date, and no collector is known to have the game if it exists (Atari later
came out with a cartridge of the game). Another interesting game involving driving of
some kind was Exidys Side Track, a train game which involved tracks that rerouted when
the player switched tracks.
More vector games appeared in 1979, including Ataris Asteroids, which went on to
become a classic arcade game; Cinematronicss Sundance, a space game with bouncing
suns, and Tail Gunner, a space shooting game; Vectorbeams Warrior, which featured an
overhead view of two swordfighting knights; and Ataris first vector game, Lunar Lander.
Lunar Lander was adapted from a mainframe game from 1973, in which players had to
safely land a spaceship on the moons surface without crashing it. The game included a
thruster with a proportionate throttle control and a limited fuel supply, which added time
pressure to the game. Atari was not the only one adapting an arcade version of Lunar
Lander in 1979; other variations included Taitos Galaxy Rescue and Lunar Rescue, and
Destination Earth, a bootleg version of Lunar Rescue.
Finally, two innovative maze games appeared in Japan in 1979. Denki Onykos
Heiankyo Alien, in which aliens chased a man through a maze while the man avoided them
and inflated bubble traps in which to catch the aliens. The other maze game of the year
was Namcos Puck-Man, which involved a yellow circle with a mouth that ate dots and
was chased by colored ghosts or monsters. The game was released in North America
the following year, where its name was changed to Pac-Man, and it would become one
of the most popular arcade games of all time, ushering in what many consider to be arcade
video games golden age.
CHAPTER
46
Back in 1974, less than five manufacturers were distributing home video games in
Europe. Magnavox exported the Odyssey in a slightly modified version that played 10
games (instead of 12 like the U.S. release), while Videomaster released their Home T.V.
Game, a British system which originally sold for 20. This latter is the most interesting
as it marked the beginning of the European home video game industry. Videomasters
Home TV Game played only three games: Tennis, Football, and Squash. There was no
on-screen scoring. But for the technology of the day, it was quite advanced. Seleco, a trademark of Zanussi (Italy), released the Ping-O-Tronic in late 1974 (possibly for Christmas).
At the same time, hobbyist construction articles began to appear in electronics magazines. Nowadays, it would be impossible to build a modern video game system on ones
own since technology has changed considerably. However, it was not difficult for a
hobbyist to build a video game in the 1970s, since such games were mostly designed with
discrete components (as opposed to chips containing entire games). The earliest European
construction articles, dated July 1974, were published by Practical Wireless andTelevision
Magazine. One article, split over seven issues because of its length, proposed not only a
video game project, but also a color video game project that could be upgraded (color
television sets were still very expensive in Europe in 1974). The system used discrete
components and initially played only one game: Football. Special improvements could
be made to add sound effects, on-screen scoring, and game variants. The last section of
Figure 8.1 The Magnavox Odyssey. Originally developed by Ralph Baer at Sanders Associates
between 1967 and 1969, and finalized by Magnavox between 1971 and 1972, the first commercial
home video game console was sold between fall 1972 and mid-1975.
the article was a discussion of the most interesting aspect of the project: Superman was a
plug-in module that replaced one player to give the impression of playing against the
machine. This was the first home video game to offer this feature. A few arcade games
did this, but no commercial system would offer this feature before 1976. A hobbyist
who read the entire article could easily modify his system to add more players, change
the game rules, and why not, add more graphics!
Figure 8.2 Interton Video 2000 (Germany, 1975). The first ball-and-paddle game to use cartridges after the Magnavox Odyssey, the Interton Video 2000 used discrete components and several
logic gates; it had no dedicated chips and no processor. Only five cartridges were designed for it.
This system also was cloned in Spain around 1976 under the TeleTenis name.
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Germany was another place where a more advanced video game system appeared:
the Interton Video 2000. This system had a feature that no other PONG system had:
the use of cartridges. Believed to be the first European PONG system to use this technology, the Interton Video 2000 contained the circuits used by every game, and the cartridges
contained additional components that set the players shapes, game rules, and drew
additional graphics. Although the system box shows 10 different games, only five are
known to exist. The most successful were Tennis and Super Tennis (Super Tennis even
displayed on-screen scoring using squares, which was novel for the time since no other
system did so). Another cartridge played the first two-player video game constructed by
Ralph Baer in 1967: the Chase Game, in which two spots representing the players could
be moved about the screen.
Italy also showed some interest in the video game market. Seleco, a trademark of
Zanussi, released a strange system called the Ping-O-Tronic. This was one of the most
basic systems, with only three chips and discrete components. It also played three games:
Tennis, Squash, and Attract. Surprisingly, Attract used two vertical lines instead of paddles
so that the ball kept bouncing forever; this could have served as a demo mode in stores
(the only other game known to do this is Table by Television). The Ping-O-Tronic had
other interesting features such as a way of adjusting the players sizes (from very small to
enormous) and centering the game field. It was improved many times: a Gun-O-Tronic
light gun was even added for models PP-5 and later (Ping-O-Tronic is believed to have
had 10 different models, ranging from PP-1 to PP-10).
Figure 8.3 The Ping-O-Tronic. Advertised during Christmas of 1974, this system was one of the
first European game systems and the first to be released in Italy (not including Magnavox Odyssey
imports and clones). It also was designed with discrete components and only three very simple
chips. The Ping-O-Tronic was sold by Seleco, a trademark of Zanussi.
Figure 8.4 The VideoSport MK2. Advertised by Henrys in early 1975 in England, the
VideoSport MK2 is believed to be the second oldest system from the United Kingdom and remains
one of the earliest European games after the first Videomaster Home T.V. Game (19741975).
Almost entirely analog, it uses discrete components and only two very simple chips.
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SYSTEM PROFILE:
THE MAGNAVOX ODYSSEY
David Winter
In 1966, Ralph Baer, an electronics engineer working at Sanders Associates, thought
again about an idea he had in 1951 when he was asked to build a television set: the
possibility of using a television set to do something else than watch broadcasts. After
writing his TV game ideas on paper, he started building a prototype to see whether
something could be drawn electronically on a TV screen. Soon after, a chase game
was designed. After many improvements, several other prototypes were built between
1966 and 1968, the most complete being the Brown Box, a double-chassis box
covered with wood grain adhesive paper. The best game designed in 1968 was
Tennis, a ball-and-paddle game which Atari later improved and sold under the name
of PONG. After calling the most important television manufacturers in late 1968,
Sanders Associates signed a first agreement with RCA in 1970, but it was cancelled.
Later in 1971, an agreement was signed with Magnavox and Odyssey, and the first
home video game console was released in September 1972 after two very successful
market surveys in late 1971.
Technically, the Odyssey was a very primitive system. It had no electronic chip, no
software, and no microprocessor, and it did not produce sound or color graphics.
It could only display two players represented by two squares, one ball, and one center
line which could be moved to the left of the screen or reduced to a third of its size.
The cartridges provided with the console connected the circuits together so as to
display what was necessary for each game, and manage collisions according to the
games rules; for example, the ball bounced when it touched a players square.
In another game, a players square could disappear when the ball touched it. So the
cartridges only contained wires to interconnect the Odyssey circuits.
Only two players could use the system using the big controllers provided, which
contained three knobs and one button. One knob moved the player horizontally, one
moved it vertically, and the last one gave the ball English, changing its angle,
because the system did not manage proper bounces according to the angle between
the ball and a paddle when a collision occurred.
Because of its limited graphics, the Odyssey required the use of plastic overlays
which were put on the television screen. They simulated the graphics that later
systems could display themselves. Some games were educational: one could learn
the states in America or learn basic calculations. Some were casino games like
Roulette, or primitive car racing games, or play Tennis. Similar sports games were
also available: Volleyball, Basketball, Handball, and Baseball, all based on the
ball-and-paddle graphics. Most games required special accessories provided with the
Odyssey: plastic chips, dice, carton boards, game cards, paper money, and so on.
Magnavox also released additional games which could be ordered individually or in
packs of six. Each game contained its accessories: overlays, chips, and so forth, or
even a cartridge (some used one of the six cartridges originally provided with the
console). An additional shooting gallery pack also was made available to play two
target-shooting games. It consisted of an electronic rifle and all game accessories.
Finally, Magnavox sold a special carrying case which allowed transport of the whole
system easily.
The Odyssey was very successful and over 350,000 units were produced between
mid-1972 and mid-1975. It was even exported to several countries in Europe, and a
couple of pirated versions appeared in Argentina and Spain. The Odyssey remained
successful until 1975 when better home systems and more advanced games
appeared. By the late 1970s, technology had improved so much that the Odyssey
and all similar ball-and-paddle games were replaced by software-programmed
systems like the Atari 2600.
But a major advancement would kill this fragile gaming world made of discrete components within the next year: the appearance of video game chips which became available to
every manufacturer. Commonly called PONG-in-a-chip, these devices contained the
equivalent of the discrete components of an entire system, and had more advanced
features such as digital on-screen scoring, more game variants, and difficulty levels. Atari
used its own PONG chips, but did not sell them to other manufacturers, as they would
have dominated most of the worldwide market in a few years. Texas Instruments released
several chips that could be used together to form different games, but these were not
successful. The main force of the new PONG market was General Instruments (GI).
GI started the development of a revolutionary single-chip video game device in
mid-1975: the AY-3-8500. A complete video game system could be built with this chip
and a few additional components. Since the chip was available to every manufacturer at
low cost, it was no longer necessary to design a whole and expensive electronic circuit
(GI provided the schematics for using the chip). This drastically changed the video game
industry. Between 1976 and 1977, hundreds of manufacturers released their video game
systems all over the world, and other chips appeared, some with color graphics, some with
more games, and so on. The period of early video game history was over and the market
was open to everybody. PONG stayed popular for a few years until more advanced
cartridge consoles like the Atari 2600, Odyssey2, and Intellivision appeared in the market
at affordable prices.1
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CHAPTER
54
After the Brown Box was shown to several TV manufacturers, Magnavox decided to
license the product in 1971. A year later they introduced the worlds first TV game, the
Odyssey. Unfortunately, the Odyssey was sold only in Magnavox shops so most people
never even heard of the unit. But when the world took notice of Ataris PONG in October
1972, Odyssey suddenly became sought after. It was the only way people could play
PONG at home.
Although the public did not differentiate between the arcade PONG and the version of
video table tennis that came with the Odyssey, the two were vastly different. For one, the
Odyssey could not keep score. Players tallied the scores themselves and games ended at a
predetermined limit.
Home PONG
While sales for the Odyssey increased with the arrival of PONG, the Odyssey was
capable of playing games other than forms of video ping-pong. Despite the fact that the
console could not generate detailed graphics, the system was packaged with 12 separate
games. On Baers original Brown Box, the different games could be selected by changing
the settings of 12 switches. Magnavox opted to include 12 circuit cards with the console
(see System Profile: The Magnavox Odyyssey sidebar). Consumers could change the
prepackaged games by merely changing the cards. Magnavox even sold additional cards
that allowed consumers to unlock and run more games that were built into the machine.
While a similar marketing technique helped ensure the success of the Atari VCS several
years later, it did not help Magnavox at all since they were the sole supplier of the Odyssey,
making the unit itself hard to find. The additional circuit cards were hidden under the
counter and rarely pushed by the salesmen.
In three years Magnavox managed to sell over 300,000 Odysseys.1 Historical records
cannot claim how many of those sales were because of the arcade PONG but the number
was probably high. Estimates could not even begin to set a number on how many units
Magnavox could have sold if they simply distributed the product through traditional
means outside of their own stores. And while history does not let us know if the Odyssey
had any impact on Ataris decision to sell a home unit of PONG, in 1974, an Atari
engineer named Bob Brown had aspirations of bringing PONG to the home. Most of
the top management was against Atari entering the consumer market. Their fears were
justified because they knew nothing at all about distributing consumer goods. They also
felt that Ataris cash flow would be tied up in inventory that would sell primarily at
Christmas. Nolan Bushnell, the founder of Atari, thought that PONG for the home was
a good idea and he gave Brown the go-ahead.
Brown began work on a home version of PONG in the fall of 1974 and completed it in a
matter of months. He was aware of problems that Magnavox had with the Odyssey and he
was careful not to make the same mistakes. Although PONG could only play one game
against the Odysseys 12, PONGs resolution was superior; its controls were more responsive; it displayed color graphics on color televisions, and it could keep score. The best part
was the price. Thanks to the declining cost of microchips, PONG cost less than the Odyssey.
Bushnell and his team tried selling home PONG on their own in January 1975 but were
not successful. They believed that the product should be sold in a toy store but they could
not find any that were interested. They then decided to try major department stores
starting with Sears. The toy buyer was not interested so then they tried sporting goods,
with the belief that a computer version of tennis would sell alongside the real thing.
The sporting goods buyer, Tom Quinn, was interested. Quinn offered to buy all the
home PONG games that the company could put together. After being told that Atari could
only manufacture 75,000 units, Quinn told Bushnell to double the production and
Sears would finance it. In return, Sears wanted the exclusive selling rights of the game
throughout 1975.
Bushnell jumped at the offer. Since Sears promised to pay for all of the advertising and
to assume complete control, Atari had little to risk. Because Atari had exposure in over
900 stores across the country, it gained a reputation in home games as well as arcade
games. Thanks to the Sears deal, Atari sold $40 million worth of home PONG games in
1975, netting $3 million.2
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not is anybodys guess since the three-knob configuration returned with the Odyssey 400.
In fact, the Odyssey 400 was basically the same as the 200 except that it contained an
additional chip that allowed on-screen scoring.
Magnavox followed the 400 with the Odyssey 500 in 1976. Externally, it was the same
as the 400 and it played the same games. However, on the 500 the games were in color,
whereas they were only in black and white on all the prior Magnavox systems. But the
biggest breakthrough was in the graphics. Instead of utilizing white squares for paddles,
the 500 actually had graphics of human characters. This was the first time human
characters appeared in a home video game.
The Odyssey 500s contribution was quickly lost in the annals of video game history.
This was because Fairchild Electronic introduced a console that same year, 1976, that
was far more innovative than the 500; it had cartridges.
The simple concept dated back to 1972 with the original Odyssey that played 12 games
and players exchanged small circuit cards to choose the game they wanted to play.
Naturally, everyone thought that the individual games were housed on the circuit cards
but they were wrong. It was not until a January 2000 interview in Electronic Gaming
Monthly magazine3 that Baer revealed that all of the games on the Odyssey were hardwired
into the machine. The circuit cards were used to unlock the individual games. Magnavox
had the marketing sense to sell additional circuit cards but the number of games that the
Odyssey could play was limited.
Also in 1976, RCA, the company to which Baer first brought his Brown Box prototype,
finally decided to enter the fray. Their Studio II, while utilizing game cartridges, represented modern technology at its worst. The games were played in black and white and
the controllers were nonexistent; instead, players used two sets of numeric keyboards to
control the action. Needless to say the system disappeared quickly.
In 1977 Magnavox released three systems and their boxes had the tagline The Originator of Home Video Games under the Magnavox name to let consumers know about the
companys video game heritage. The new consoles themselves were nothing special; the
Odyssey 2000 was the same as the 300 with an additional game. The 3000 was the same
as the 2000 except that the console was restyled and had detachable dial controllers.
Magnavoxs final dedicated system, the Odyssey 4000, had eight new built-in games and
detachable joystick controllers. Magnavox planned an Odyssey 5000, which was to
contain 24 games, but the system was never released.
The other major video game companies released new types of game systems, quickly
moving away from the old-fashioned ball and paddle games. Coleco released the Telstar
Combat, a console that contained two pairs of tank-like controllers. The system itself
played tank games so the controllers added the realistic effect of controlling an actual tank.
Atari released a pair of new consoles, in which the hardware was an integral part of the
games themselves. Video Pinball contained a set of pinball games and the console had
flippers buttons built into its side. Stunt Cycle gave players the ability to drive a motorcycle and jump over buses. The console featured motorcycle-type controllers that players
could rotate to accelerate.
Atari followed this with the Video Computer System (VCS) (later renamed the 2600).
This was Ataris answer to the Fairchild Channel F, a programmable system that allowed
players to play different games by changing game cartridges. But Atari had something that
Fairchild did not, a library of arcade games that were familiar to players. Another innovative feature was interchangeable controllers. The system was sold with a pair of joystick
controllers and a pair of paddle controllers so there was no limit to the type of games that
could be played.
In 1978 Magnavox released the Odyssey2, a cartridge-based system to compete against
the VCS. Although Magnavox did not have any arcade titles to offer, they tried to distinguish the system by including a flat membrane keyboard. The allure was that the Odyssey2
resembled an inexpensive computer.
Coleco released the Telstar Arcade, a system designed by Baer. The Arcade came in a
unique three-sided triangular console. One side played standard ball-and-paddle games;
one side had a built-in pistol for target games; and the third side had a built-in-steering
wheel for driving games. This was the first time a steering controller became available
for a home game. Coleco also made additional games in triangular cartridges but only four
were ever released and the system disappeared quickly.
Another arcade company entered the fray in 1978. Bally released its Bally Arcade, a
system that used cartridges that resembled audiocassettes. Priced $100 more than the
VCS, the Arcade had limited distribution and was no match against the VCS, which itself
had not yet reached mass popularity.
That was to change in 1980. Toy giant Mattel released its Intellivision, a $300 system
that featured exceptional graphics. While the VCS excelled in arcade-type games, its
library of sports games were weak at best. The Intellivision offered two-player sports
games which were as close to the real thing as was possible with the technology of the time.
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Mattel would have reigned supreme except for two things that happened. First, Atari
released a home version of Space Invaders for the VCS. At the time, Space Invaders was
the most popular arcade game in history and Atari scored a coup by licensing the home
console rights for it, the first time this was ever done. People rushed to buy the VCS just
so they could play it at home. But one game does not make a system, and the Intellivision
still looked better. Second, in 1979 when four distraught Atari programmers left to form
their own company, Activision, things changed. Activision was the first third-party
company to release software for the VCS, or any other console. And the games that
Activision released played and looked better than almost anything Atari ever released.
Their graphics gave the Intellivision a run for its money.
The threat of the Intellivision scared Atari enough that they designed a new system to
compete with it. Based on its Atari 400 computer, Atari released the 5200, a system with
arcade-style graphics. But before the 5200 could come out, Coleco came out with a system
that put the Intellivision threat to rest once and for all.
The Colecovision offered arcade-quality graphics and Coleco licensed games from Sega
and Nintendo including Donkey Kong. Two expansion modules were also available, one
which played all of the games in the VCS (now called the 2600) library.
And the 2600 library was growing rapidly. With the success of Activision, dozens of
companies jumped on the software bandwagon. Only a few companies actually spent
money on development; the rest merely took well-known games and made their own
versions of them. The stakes were high. Game cartridges only cost a few dollars to
manufacture and could be sold for many times that.
By the end of 1983 there was too much product available. Between the Intellivision,
Odyssey2, Atari 5200, and Colecovision, people had to decide how they were going to
spend their limited disposable income. And owners of the Atari 2600 had to contend with
literally hundreds of cartridges that were available. Stores had limited space and could not
stock everything and the smaller companies with the less desirable products got hit first.
As the smaller companies began to go bankrupt, they unloaded their games at fire-sale
prices. Pretty soon $5 Data Age cartridges were selling alongside $25 Atari cartridges.
Regardless of the fact that the cheap games were usually unimpressive or that companies
like Atari needed to charge higher prices because of their high development costs, people
went and bought the less expensive cartridges because they could purchase five games for
the price of one Atari game. A domino effect ensued. As the larger companies found their
profits shrinking due to the competition from the discounted titles, they too had to
discount their own products.
The casualties were high. By 1984 most of the third-party software vendors were
history. And while the crash had been caused by an oversaturation of games for the
Atari 2600, because it was the market leader, the entire industry suffered. Mattel and
Magnavox abandoned the gaming market when their consoles could not compete against
the 2600. And Coleco, which did have a system that most gamers admired, decided to go
one step ahead and develop their Adam home computer, and actually stopped manufacturing their popular Colecovision so they could concentrate on the Adam. When that
turned into a failure, the company nearly went bankrupt.
This left only Atari, whose new owner, Jack Tramiel, decided to abandon the game
business in favor of 16-bit computers (see Chapter 10, Company Profile: Atari).
For all intents and purposes, the American home video game industry had crashed, and
the era of early home game systems was over.
CHAPTER
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Warner Communications and renamed Atari Games. A year later the controlling interest
of Atari Games was sold to Japanese arcade manufacturer Namco, who quickly lost
interest in its new division by the end of the year. In 1986 a group of Namco employees
bought out Namcos share of Atari Games. In 1993, Warner Communications, now
Time-Warner Inc., bought a controlling interest in Atari Games and renamed the arcade
company Time-Warner Interactive. Arcade giant Williams Electronics purchased TimeWarner Interactive in 1996 and the companys name was changed back to Atari Games,
until 1998, when it became Midway Games West. In 2000 Midway released San Francisco
Rush 2049, the last arcade game to be released under the Atari Games brand name.
Midway finally left the arcade business altogether in 2001 and Ataris long legacy as an
arcade company finally came to an end.
Returning to 1984s split of the old Atari Inc., the computer and game divisions were
sold to Jack Tramiel, who recently had been fired from Commodore Computers, the
company he founded. Tramiels plan was to use Atari to compete against his old company.
Tramiel decided to scrap the game division and concentrate on computers. The company released two computers that were compatible with the 400 and 800 and were
dubbed the XE series. The 65XE featured 64 kilobytes of memory while the 130XE
boasted 128 kilobytes. However, Tramiels plan of revenge against his old company
included a new 16-bit computer built by a small company called Amiga, which Atari
helped fund. But before Atari could secure the rights to it, Commodore wound up gaining
the license. Atari quickly obtained the rights to a competing 16-bit machine, which it
labeled the ST.
The ST gained a fair following, although most of it was in Europe. Still, the Amiga
outsold the ST by about 3 to 2. Surprisingly, it was the video game market that helped keep
the Atari Corporation afloat. Following the success of the Nintendo Entertainment
System, in 1986 Tramiel released two consoles that had been sitting in warehouses for
nearly two years. The 7800 had graphics that could rival the NES and could play the
2600s huge library of cartridges, but by the time it was released, Ataris reputation as an
innovator was over. The other console was the 2600jra pint-size version of the console
that ruled store shelves only a few years earlier. Though its games were primitive compared
to the newer Japanese systems, the 2600jr had a retail price of only $50 and was targeted
towards lower income households that could not afford the Japanese consoles. The marketing gambit paid off and while the 2600jr was never the show-stopper that its larger brother
was during Ataris heyday, it still managed to net Atari Corporation $25 million in profits.
The 2600jr would continue until 1991, but by then Atari would move on to smaller things.
Atari confused everybody in 1987 when it released its first new video game console, the
XEGS (XE Game System). The system was basically an XE computer with a detachable
keyboard. Atari even released old 800 games for the XEGS such as Asteroids and
Space Invaders but instead of repackaging them, the games were sold in the old packages
that claimed that they were for the Atari 400 and 800. A sticker was placed on each
box saying the games could also be played on the XEGS. The XEGS was a failure and
disappeared rapidly.
Ataris next console came in 1989 with the Lynx, a handheld color system. The Lynx
enjoyed a small success. Unfortunately, it was released shortly after Nintendos Game
Boy, which, despite its monochrome screen, proved more popular thanks to its lower price
and its being packaged with Tetris. Still, the Lynx sold well enough to stick around for a few
years and in 1991 Atari released a smaller and less inexpensive version called the Lynx II.
In 1993 Atari once again focused on game consoles, rather than its computers which
still enjoyed some success in Europe. The company released a 64-bit console called the
Jaguar, which actually contained two 32-bit processors (32-bit and 64-bit refer to the size
of the words used by the computers processor, and partly determine the speed at which
programs can run). While some of its games such as Tempest 2000 became instant classics,
others, such as Club Drive, had graphics that would have looked inferior on the 2600.
Without third party support the Jaguar did not have a chance to compete against the Sony
PlayStation and Sega Saturn.
By 1996 Tramiel decided to quit. Atari Corporation was merged with JT Storage (JTS)
Inc., a manufacturer of hard drives of which Tramiel was a minor shareholder. The new
company became JTS Corp. and Ataris role was to simply take care of its intellectual
property and to supply badly needed funds to the cash-stricken drive manufacturer. Most
of the Atari employees were laid off and, basically, Atari ceased to exist.
In 1997 Hasbro Interactive released an updated version of the classic game Frogger for
the PlayStation. The game was such a success that Hasbro Interactive executives decided
to look into licensing more retro titles. They discovered they could buy Atari, and its large
catalog of well-known games, for a mere $5 million and jumped at the chance.
Atari became a division of Hasbro Interactive in 1998, alongside other former companies such as MicroProse and Avalon Hill, as well as Hasbro Interactive itself which was
busy releasing electronic editions of as many Milton Bradley and Parker Brothers board
games as possible. In a short period of time, old Atari titles such as Asteroids, Missile
Command, Centipede, and even PONG were updated and released for the new modern
consoles and personal computers. Even the original Atari 2600 games were released for
the modern systems, in anthologies containing dozens of games and pre-1984 arcade hits.
But the large number of titles that Hasbro Interactive released under the Atari brand
name was not enough to keep the entire company afloat. In January 2001, Hasbro Interactive was sold to the French software giant Infogrames Inc., which became the second largest
video game publisher in the United States and one of the largest in the world. Although
Hasbro Interactive was renamed Infogrames Interactive, little else changed. The company
still worked out of the same Beverly, Massachusetts, office building that had been home to
Parker Brothers for nearly a century and Atari was still merely a brand name.
That was to change two years later. On May 7, 2003, Infogrames Inc. officially renamed
its worldwide operations and all of the companys games were sold under the Atari brand
name. The U.S. division was renamed Atari, Inc., a name that was near and dear to many
fans of the original Warner Communications subsidiary. After seven years, Atari was a
company again.
The new Ataris first milestone occurred just a week later when the company released
Enter The Matrix (a game based on the Matrix movies). Within one month of its release
more than 2.5 million copies of the game were sold worldwide (excluding Japan), making
it the fastest-selling title in the companys history.
While the new Atari was primarily a software company, many Atari fans hoped the
company would return to its former glory and release consoles. That wish came true in
November 2004, when Atari introduced the Flashback. This console, which resembled a
smaller version of the 7800, featured 20 of the 2600 games built into the system. A year
later Atari followed this with the Flashback 2 which resembled a small 2600 and came
complete with 40 built-in games. As Atari reached its 35th anniversary, it was once again
a force in the video game industry.
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Atari engineers and executives realized they were on the right track with the new programmable system. Unfortunately, Atari did not have enough capital to put the product into
production. In order to raise the money to complete the project, Atari was sold to Warner
Communications in 1976 for $28 million.
With a great influx of cash behind it, Atari released the VCS in October of 1977.
The $199 console was sold with paddle and joystick controllers. Also included was
a cartridge, Combat, that featured several variations of Ataris hit arcade game, Tank as well
as biplane and jet plane games. Eight additional cartridges were available optionally
including home versions of popular arcade games like Surround and PONG.
Although the VCS outsold the Channel F forcing Fairchild to subsequently abandon it,
Ataris console did not sell in the numbers that was needed to sustain it. Even new releases
in 1978 like Breakout and a pair of games, Hunt & Score and Codebreaker. which incorporated a new keyboard controller, did not stir much interest in the VCS.
Shortly after the release of the VCS, Taitos Space Invaders invaded arcades around the
world. Atari executives realized that having Space Invaders available on the VCS would
be a major marketing coup. Without precedent, Atari quickly licensed the home rights
for Space Invaders and released it for the VCS in January 1980. This resulted in skyrocketing VCS sales as millions were bought just so Space Invaders could be played at home.
Atari grossed $415 million that year; more than twice the gross from the previous year.1
They followed up by licensing other arcade hits such as Defender (1980) and Berzerk
(1980), as well as releasing its own hits Asteroids and Missile Command for the VCS.
Because of its limitations, it was very difficult to write programs for the VCS. Steve
Mayer remarked in a 1983 interview with IEEE Spectrum:
Writing the kernels that make up the game programs is like solving acrostic puzzles with lots and
lots of possibilities. Theres a certain class of programmer that can deal in the microcode like that.
If it were easier to program, we wouldnt have these programmers, because theyd be bored.
The VCS is an absolute challenge.2
One such programmer was Tod Frye, who was given the task to design a VCS adaptation
of Ataris monster arcade hit, Asteroids. Frye discovered early that he could not create a
faithful rendition of the game within the confines of the allotted 4K of memory. Frye
decided to use a technique called bank-switching which had been developed, but never
used commercially, by an Atari programmer named Larry Wagner. The technique
involved dividing memory into disjointed sections or banks. Although all banks were
available to the program, only one could be accessed at a time. In the case of the VCS,
an instruction within the first 4K bank branched to an address in a second 4K bank from
which processing continued. The branch to the second bank of 4K was transparent to the
CPU. In effect this allowed the VCS to process games that were larger than 4K. Before
long 8K and even 16K games (usually using four banks of 4K chips) became the norm
for the VCS.
Ultimately, the Atari programmers grew restless. They resented that their creations
earned hundreds of millions of dollars for Atari while they were merely treated as employees and were not even entitled to royalties. In addition, Atari kept them anonymous
fearing that competitors might lure them away. Atari programmer Warren Robinett
decided to do something about it. While writing Adventure (1979), he decided to program
a hidden room into the game which would cause his name to flash on the screen if it was
discovered. When it was announced that a 12-year-old Utah boy found the hidden room,
it was too late for Atari to correct the code. One executive called the hidden message an
Easter egg, a term which has remained to this day. Todays games purposely have Easter
eggs designed into them.
Four other Atari programmers were not satisfied with hiding their names in games.
They teamed up with ex-record company executive, Jim Levy, and formed Activision in
1980, the first company to develop third-party software for video game consoles.
Activision games featured graphics that nearly rivaled those of the competing
Intellivision system and showed that the VCS was indeed capable of supplying both
good-looking screens and entertaining game play. However, Activision was a direct threat
against Atari. Previously, Atari could always depend that its releases, no matter how
mediocre, would be best-sellers as consumers hungered for new games. Now Ataris profits
were in trouble because the company did not earn a dime when consumers bought
Activision cartridges. Atari sued Activision but all it won was a disclaimer on every
Activision box stating that the game was compatible with the VCS.
With the success of Activision, many other companies began forming with the express
purpose of developing software for the video game systems. Some, like Imagic, were made
up of old Atari and Mattel programmers. By 1983 there were more than three dozen companies offering software for the VCS (renamed the 2600 in 1982 after its model number,
CX-2600).
Competition did not only attack the software side. The 2600 also battled for survival
against Mattels Intellivision and Colecos Colecovision, both of which offered adapters
which allowed them to play the entire library of 2600 compatible games. Atari fought
back with the 5200, a super console of its own. Although the newer consoles were technologically superior to the 2600, their higher price tags kept Ataris humble little machine
popular.
The 2600s immense popularity inevitably made it a magnet for a slew of add-on
peripherals. Although some were released, others never made it past the prototype stage.
Among them was CVC Gameline (1983), a modem that plugged into the cartridge slot
and marked the first time that video games could be download through the telephone
lines. Starpaths Supercharger (1982) and Amigas Power Module (1983) also plugged into
the cartridge slot but had games loaded into them from inexpensive cassette tapes. Amiga
also developed the Joyboard (1982), a stand-on controller that was sold with a skiing
game. Other controllers which never made it to market were a voice controller from
Milton Bradley, and Ataris Mindlink (1984) a controller which sensed a players head
muscles. Finally, several companies, including Atari, raced to release a peripheral that
would turn the 2600 into a personal computer.
Unfortunately, the popularity of the 2600 indirectly led to the infamous video game
industry crash of 1983. More and more companies jumped onto the 2600 bandwagon.
Before long there were hundreds of games available for the 2600, most of them badly
designed with little play value. Even Atari managed to release inferior games. Their
2600 rendition of Pac-Man bore little resemblance to the arcade mega-hit from which it
was derived. All of these companies competed to occupy a limited amount of shelf space.
The first companies to go bankrupt sold their inventory to salvage firms who then sold
them to retailers at very low prices. Consumers could then buy cheap games from clearance bins or expensive games from the companies still in business. Most chose the bargain
games and this created a vicious circle which bankrupted more companies and forced
more salvaged games onto an already crowded clearance table. The remaining companies,
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like Atari, discounted their games to compete against the low-cost games but wound up
losing money in the process. By 1984 only a handful of companies still survived and they
no longer had any justification to spend the money needed to develop new games. By all
accounts the 2600, as well as the video game industry, was dead.
After Nintendo gambled on video games in 1985 and won, the Atari Corporation, no
longer owned by Warner Communications, decided to share in the riches. In 1986 the
company released a smaller inexpensive version of the 2600 which it called the 2600jr.
The new $50 unit became a hit in households that could not afford a $125 Nintendo.
New software also was offered but it was too little to late. Ataris magic was gone. Even
with the release of the technologically advanced 7800 which played all of the 2600 games,
Atari could not duplicate the enthusiasm that it had created at the beginning of the
decade. Before long stores stopped offering the Atari titles, relegating Atari to mail order
before finally ending the 2600s life cycle in 1991.
Surprisingly, the console still enjoys a healthy life within the classic gaming community
to this day. In 1995, independent programmer Ed Federmeyer wrote SoundX, a brand
new release for the 2600. He followed this with Edtris 2600, a Tetris clone. Since then
dozens of brand new games for the 2600 have been written and released. In addition,
many older games that had been written in the early 1980s but never released such as
Elevator Action and Stunt Cycle have been rediscovered and sold in limited editions at
gaming events such as the Classic Gaming Expo and PhillyClassic.
But the enjoyment of the old 2600 games is not left only to the classic gamers. Even
modern gamers are now enjoying the old games too as collections of 2600 games have
been made available for the modern consoles and PC. Jakks Pacific marketed both an
Atari joystick and a paddle controller that plugged directly into a TV and played classic
2600 games. Even Atari got into the act and released the Flashback 2, a standalone system
that looked exactly like a small 2600, complete with a pair of joystick controllers, which
plugged directly into the TV and played 40 games, several of which never had been
released before.
The 2600 may be gone but it certainly has not been forgotten. By being in production
for 14 years, the 2600 enjoyed an availability record that still reigns among all consoles
and is only second to the Game Boy in home video game systems overall.
CHAPTER
12
VECTOR GAMES
Mark J.P. Wolf
The era of vector arcade video games was a short one, beginning in 1977 and lasting less
than a decade. Invented during the 1950s, vector graphics displays (also known as XY
monitors) created their imagery differently than raster monitors, like those used in televisions. Whereas the electron beam covers the entire screen in raster-scan monitors, in
vector-scan monitors it draws only the line segments that make up the image and leaves
the rest of the screen black (see Chapter 2, Imaging Technologies, for more explanation
of vector and raster technologies). Because vector monitors had less to draw, vector
graphics were faster with thinner, sharper lines that could be moved smoothly across the
screen, as opposed to the solid, blocky graphics of raster games for which movement was
more difficult to program. Since objects were drawn individually, more moving objects
were also possible; according to Steve Kent, even early vector games could have as many
as 40 independent objects, compared to only 10 or so in raster games.1 The main disadvantage of vector graphics was that bitmaps were not available; everything was constructed
from a series of line segments, so creating small, detailed graphics for characters or objects
was more difficult than it was in raster graphics. As a result, vector games tended to be less
character based and mainly consisted of wireframe imagery on a black background.
Vector graphics came to the arcade when Larry Rosenthal, who had done a masters
thesis on the mainframe game Spacewar! (1962) at MIT, developed vector technology that
could be used in arcade games, which he called the Vectorbeam monitor. Rosenthal
licensed his Vectorbeam equipment to the game company Cinematronics. After a dispute,
Rosenthal left the company and created his own, which he also called Vectorbeam. Both
companies produced games based on Spacewar!; Cinematronicss was called Space Wars
(1977), while Vectorbeams was called Space War (1977). (Instead of continuing to license
technology from Vectorbeam, Cinematronics would later buy the company in 1979.)
Cinematronicss next release was Starhawk, which had visuals inspired by the Death Star
trench scenes in the film Star Wars (1977) (see Chapter 7, Arcade Games of the 1970s,
for an image from Starhawk).2 Vectorbeams next game, Speed Freak (1978) was a driving
game with a first-person perspective similar to Ataris Night Driver. except that instead of
the periodic poles that demarcated Night Drivers roadway, Speed Freak drew its roadways
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edges, as well as the dividing line between lanes. Speed Freaks oncoming cars were more
three dimensional and resized more smoothly as they approached, unlike Night Drivers
blocky cars. And when the player crashed into an oncoming car, it exploded into line
segments that scattered across the scene, adding a more dynamic feeling of a crash, making
Speed Freak the best driving game of its day.
In 1979, the success of vector games led Atari to join in. Ataris first vector game, Lunar
Lander, was an adaptation of the mainframe game of the same name, in which players
tried to fly and land a spaceship without crashing it. In November of that year, Atari also
released Asteroids, which became an arcade classic and one of the best-known vector
games, exceeding 70,000 units3 produced (the production line for Lunar Lander was
eventually switched over to producing Asteroids units). Asteroids spawned sequels,
imitators, and a bootleg version [Alpha Denshis Planet (1979)], and arcade operators
had to make larger coin boxes because the game was taking in so much money.4 Atari
made another version of the game, Asteroids Deluxe (1981) with new additions including
a shield that could be turned on around the spaceship, and a killer satellite that came after
the player, and when fired upon, broke into smaller satellites that had to be destroyed.
Other games of the year included Cinematronicss Sundance, in which players opened
panels in grids to catch bouncing suns; Vectorbeams Warrior, in which two knights seen
in overhead view engaged in a swordfight, one of the first one-on-one fighting games
[perhaps the second one, after Segas Heavyweight Champ (1976)]; and Tail Gunner,
a space shooting game which began development under Vectorbeam and finished at
Cinematronics after they bought Vectorbeam. Tail Gunner was different in that its
starfield movement was reversed; instead of flying into the depicted space like other
games, the viewer was moving away from it, looking out the back of a spaceship at the
ships chasing it; hence the name Tail Gunner. Exidy purchased the rights for a cockpit
version of the game and released Tail Gunner II in 1980.
Other games of 1980 included Cinematronicss Star Castle, in which players fired at an
enemy ship surrounded by rotating rings that can be destroyed; Rip Off, a tank shooting
game where pirate tanks are stealing the players fuel canisters and hauling them
off-screen; and Armor Attack, which featured jeeps, tanks, and helicopters from a birds
eye view. Also released that year was Ataris Battlezone, probably the best-known vector
arcade game of all time. Battlezone had a first-person perspective view, but unlike Starhawk
and Speed Freak, it had new hardware which could do more 3-D computation. A radar
screen showed a schematic overhead view with enemy tanks represented as dots, making
Battlezone the first arcade video game in which players had to keep track of off-screen
events and could be killed by off-screen enemies [similar to the mainframe game Panther
(1975) developed at Northwestern University]. A version of Battlezone, known as the
Bradley Trainer, also was created for the U.S. military for tank training.
Using the same technology behind Battlezone, Atari produced another game,
Red Baron, in 1981.5 Red Baron was essentially a flying version of Battlezone with biplanes,
with rounds of shooting in the air as well as from on the ground. Another Atari vector
game of 1981 was the arcade classic Tempest, an abstract game with shapes moving up a
well that the player had to shoot at and stop before they got to the top, an idea that began
as a first-person version of Space Invaders. 6 (Although Tempests title screen lists
MCMLXXX1980as the copyright date, the game was actually released in 1981.)
The scaling imagery used in Tempest was easy for vector graphics and was something that
could not be done well in raster games. Vector games made good use of scaling and quick,
Vector Games
smooth movement, and around 1981 they began to appear in color, including Tempest.
Games before 1981 were typically either black and white or monochrome (Battlezone,
for example, had green lines on a black background). Some games, like Star Castle, had
color overlays on the screen to make the games lines appear to be different colors, but
the monitors themselves were not color.
Sega began production of vector games in 1981. (In 1979, Sega had merged with the
game company Gremlin, and so the games it produced are sometimes identified as Sega/
Gremlin games.) The company released two vector games in 1981: Eliminator and Space
Fury. Like Star Castle, Eliminator had its enemy spaceship situated inside a circular
enclosure, although Eliminators enclosure had a narrow tunnel which the player could
try to shoot down to destroy the enemy ship (reminiscent of the shots down the exhaust
port that destroyed the Death Star in the film Star Wars). Players attempted to destroy
the circular enclosure and the enemy ship (which came out after the players as the game
progressed), and shot at other players in the multiplayer versions. Eliminator was released
in a one-player upright version, a two-player cocktail version, and a four-player version
(with one player on each side of the screen, which faced upwards in the middle), making
it the only four-player vector game ever made. Space Fury was another space shooting
game, known mainly for its attract mode, which featured a one-eyed big-brained alien
commander that taunted players in synthesized speech with lines like Is there no warrior
mightier than I? and So, a creature for my amusement. Prepare for battle!
Other games of 1981 were different variations on shooting games. In Cinematronicss
Boxing Bugs the player controlled a cannon that fired from one end and had a boxing glove
on the other; both were used to knock out bugs that placed bombs near the octagonal
protective wall around the cannon. Cinematronicss Solar Quest was a space shooting game
around a sun with gravitational pull (similar to some versions of Spacewar!) but with an
odd twist; when enemy ships were destroyed, they left survivors floating in space, and
players were awarded more points for rescuing the survivors than for destroying them;
an early instance of players being rewarded for ethical behavior. Midways Omega Race, a
space shooting game, had an information box in the middle of the screen around which
the action of the game took place, though the object of the game involved shooting alien
ships rather than racing around the track.
1982 was another big year for vector gaming, with at least six new arcade games appearing along with the only vector home game console system. Three arcade games were from
Atari: Space Duel, Gravitar, and Quantum. Space Duel was Ataris only vector game which
two players could play simultaneously and was similar to Asteroids but with 3-D color
asteroids and either cooperative or competitive play. Gravitar, for two alternating players,
combined skills from Asteroids and Lunar Lander, and was made up of four universes
(with gravity that was either negative or positive, and landscapes that were either visible
or invisible); each universe had three solar systems; each solar system had four or five
planets (and a Home Base and a Death Star); and each planet had its own unique
terrain to navigate, giving players several dozen different screens to see. Quantum, inspired
by particle physics, was an abstract game in which players use a trak-ball controller to
encircle particles (capturing them) while avoiding hitting other particles.
Sega also had three new vector games in 1982; Zektor, Tac/Scan, and Star Trek (another
game, Battle Star, appeared in a flyer from Sega, though it may not have been released).
Zektor involved freeing eight cities from waves of attacking enemy fighters and roboprobes.
Tac/Scan was a three-stage space shooting game in which the player controlled a squadron of
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seven ships that all flew in formation and moved as one. A unique feature of the game
was its change in perspective. Tac/Scans first stage was two dimensional and similar to games
like Galaxian and Space Invaders, but its second stage was three dimensional, with players
firing into the screen instead of up or down it. The third stage, the Space Tunnel, was a
series of concentric rings leading into the screen through which players had to navigate.
Unlike the 1972 game of the same name, Segas Star Trek was licensed from Paramount,
and the game was released the same year as the film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
(1982). Star Trek had five different controls to learn, six different enemies, and 40 different
simulation levels of play, making it one of the most elaborate vector game ever made (along
with possibly Gravitar).
The release of the only home game system with vector graphics, GCE/Milton Bradleys
Vectrex, came in November 1982. Because television sets used raster graphics, the Vectrex
came with its own vector monitor. The screen was monochrome, and colored overlays
were used to color games graphics. Games released for the Vectrex included original
games (Bedlam, Blitz!, Fortress of Narzod, Minestorm, Hyperchase, and others), adaptations
of Cinematronicss vector arcade games (Space Wars, Starhawk, Star Castle, Armor Attack,
Rip Off, Solar Quest, Cosmic Chasm), adaptations of raster arcade games (Berzerk, Pole
Position, Scramble), games that used a light pen (AnimAction, Art Master, Melody Master),
and even some 3-D games (3D Crazy Coaster, 3D MineStorm, 3D Narrow Escape) which
involved an additional special 3-D viewer. Since the system has ceased production, Smith
Engineering, the manufacturers of the Vectrex, have allowed Vectrex materials to be
copied for noncommercial purposes. This has allowed a community of Vectrex fans to
continue creating homebrew games for the Vectrex, and there are now more of these
games than there were originally released for the system.
A few more vector games appeared in 1983: GCE/Cinematronicss Cosmic Chasm,
Centuris Aztarac, and Ataris Black Widow, Major Havoc, and Star Wars.7 In Cosmic
Chasm, the player had to fly through tubes inside a space station to fire at its core and then
fly out again before it blew up, an idea probably inspired by the film Return of the
Jedi (1983) released in spring of that year. Aztarac, another space game, had players
defending a star base from attacking ships. In Black Widow, players controlled a
spider on a spider web that it defended from invading bugs by shooting at them.
(Self-defense seems to be a popular way of justifying a games violence.) Major Havoc
was a detailed multistage adventure game that involved shooting enemy ships, landing
in a space station, and navigating a scrolling maze of hallways with a variety of objects
(such as robot guards and electrified barriers) which the player passed through on
the way to destroying the stations reactor. The game was rather difficult and has a cult
following to this day. Finally, the best-known vector game of 1983 was Ataris Star Wars,
which was licensed from Lucasfilm and was a colorful, 3-D take on the space battles and
Death Star trench chase scenes from the film, and even included digitized voice samples
from the films soundtrack.
1983 was the last year Cinematronics would produce vector games. That same year they
released their first laserdisc game, and its success redirected their efforts to the new technology (see Chapter 17, Laserdisc Games). No company appears to have released vector
arcade games in 1984, although work on a few games continued. Occasionally prototypes
of games would be produced but not released, or ideas might be reworked and appear in
later games (for example, Atari Gamess Tomcat, which does not appear to have been
released, even though screenshots for the game can be found on the Internet).
Vector Games
In 1985 another Star Wars-based game, The Empire Strikes Back, was released by Atari
Games (see Chapter 11, System Profile: The Atari Video Computer System, for the
difference between Atari and Atari Games) and was the last major vector game released.
Only one other game may have been produced that year, Exidys space game Vertigo
(1985, although some sources claim 1984). Probably the last vector arcade game ever
made, which may or may not have actually been released, is Exidys Top Gunner (1986),
a sit-in game that is said to be a modification to Vertigo.
By the late 1980s, sprite technology had improved greatly and three-dimensional
filled-polygon graphics were beginning to return to the arcade after their failed debut in
Ataris I, Robot. Raster games had improved graphically, the rise of three-dimension raster
graphics games in the 1990s was just around the corner, and in the eyes of many players
(and game companies), wireframe graphics could no longer compete with them.
The unique look and playing experience of vector games, however, has attracted a
following and vector games live on as arcade collectibles and in adaptations for emulators,
and they are remembered as an important part of the Golden Age of arcade video games.
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(When it was finally designed, the game was originally named Puck-Man, but changed
for its North American release when it was thought that kids would scratch away the
middle part of the P and make the name offensive.)
74
Pac-Man had characters with names, including Pac-Mans enemies, the four ghosts or
monsters: a red one named Shadow (nicknamed Blinky), a pink one named Speedy
(nicknamed Pinky), a cyan one named Bashful (nicknamed Inky), and an orange
one named Pokey (nicknamed Clyde). Each had a different algorithmic (preprogrammed) behavior, to keep them from all lining up behind Pac-Man and moving in
exactly the same way. Pac-Man and the ghosts also appear in three animated cut-scenes
or intermissions between levels, adding humor to the game as well as giving players a
short break between levels.
Before Pac-Man, the biggest hit games were Space Invaders and Asteroids. Pac-Man was
humorous and nonviolent and represented a departure from space themes and shooting
games. It was also one of the first crossover games, reaching a wide audience including
women and players of various ages who might otherwise not have played video games.
Its success also inspired game designers to innovate, and showed that there was a market
for cute games, and that a wide variety of game designs were possible.
Over the years, Pac-Man was ported to over a dozen different platforms, including a
variety of home game systems, and even to mobile phones and the iPod. Over a dozen
sequels were released in the arcade, including Ms. Pac-Man (1981), Ms. Pac-Man
Plus (1981), Super Pac-Man (1982), Pac-Man Plus (1982), Baby Pac-Man (1982),
Jr. Pac-Man (1983), Pac & Pal (1983), Professor Pac-Man (1983), Pac-Man & Chomp
Chomp (1983), Pac-Land (1984), Pac-Mania (1987), Pac-Man World (1999), Pac-Man
World 2 (2002), and even a three-dimensional first-person perspective game from
Pac-Mans point of view, Pac-Man VR (1996). Over the years more than two dozen
licensed sequels appeared for home game consoles and cell phones, as well as many clones,
pale imitations, and illegal bootleg versions of games.
Pac-Man was also the first video game character to be heavily merchandised in areas
outside of video games. There was a song and album entitled Pac-Man Fever (the song
even made it to the number 9 spot on Billboards charts in 1982), an animated television
series that ran two seasons (19821984), the animated Christmas television special
Christmas Comes to Pac-Land, two board games by Milton Bradley (based on Pac-Man
and Ms. Pac-Man), T-shirts, hats, handheld games, plush toys (some battery operated),
childrens books and comics, banks, backpacks, seat cushions, clocks, watches, jewelry, keychains, back-scratchers, basketballs, Chinese yo-yos, bubble soap, gumball dispensers,
pens, pencils, erasers, stickers, pinwheels, purses, jigsaw puzzles, playing cards, Rubiks
Cubes, needlepoints and crosstitch kits, magnets, stationery and paper goods, party
supplies, bumper stickers, air fresheners, license plates, trash cans, rugs, table lamps, night
lights, telephones, cigarette lighters, glasses, dishes, lunchboxes, pastas, cereal, candy, gum,
vitamins, a macaroni and cheese dinner, and other products.3 Finally, 2002 saw the appearance of the 160-page book Pac-Man Collectibles by Deborah Palicia (Schiffer Book Farm,
PA: Schiffer, 2002), who is also planning a second book on the topic.
Pac-Man had its 25th anniversary in 2005, which was commemorated by a new arcade
video game, the Pac-Man 25th Anniversary Model which featured Pac-Man, Ms. Pac-Man,
and Galaga all in one cabinet. More Pac-Man games are planned, and games continue to
be made for every new home console system that appears. Pac-Man remains popular to
this day and will likely remain an iconic figure synonymous with the video game industry
for years to come.
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consumer market! The result was a cultural as much as a technological revolution, responsible for new directions in hardware and software design, new audiences for computer
use and programming, that characterize the modern computing landscape.
Among all of these changes, perhaps no element was more emblematic than the video
game. As the first purely recreational use of computer hardware, video games represented
a redefinition of whatand whocomputers were really for. A generation of programmers honed their software skills writing games; home users built their own computers
in order to make and play games; entire companies were started in order to market games
to a new audience of personal computer owners; and the needs of gaming (better and faster
graphics and sound, input devices like the trackball and joystick, networked computing
environments for head-to-head play) drove technological innovation in the computer
industry. In a real sense, video games were the killer app that transformed the giant
machines of the 1940s and 1950s into the sleek plastic boxes that currently can be
purchased at Best Buy and brought home in the back seat of an SUV.
The earliest electronic computers, like the 40-ton ENIAC of World War II, used
vacuum tubes to switch bits of binary datathe operation at the heart of all digital
computerson and off. But the tubes were large and hot, preventing them from being
placed too closely together, which imposed a maximum size and power limit on the first
generation of thinking machines. Technical advances over the next several years made it
possible for computers to become much smaller, cooler, and faster. The vacuum tube
begat the transistor, the transistor begat the integrated circuit (IC), and the integrated
circuit begat the microprocessor. Each innovation packed more binary switches and logic
gates into a smaller space, increasing computer power by orders of magnitude while
reducing their physical footprint. By the 1960s, a small cadre of minicomputers had
emerged, taking up residence in college research labs and making inroads in the world
of business. It was here, using the refrigerator-sized LINCs, PDP-8s, and VAXes, that an
early generation of programmers began putting computers to recreational use, creating
the first computer games and designing ever more elaborate graphical hacks. Access to
the minicomputers was generally guarded by a priesthoodan inner circle of authorized
users who stood between the burgeoning population of enthusiasts and the machines that
so fascinated them. Hackers engaged in a perpetual contest to gain access to the machines
and run programs written in their spare time, outside the strictures of class assignments
and business projects. In pushing against the priesthoods authority and the interdiction
that computers were only for serious, public use, 60s hackers laid the groundwork for a
computing culture that would truly be open to all comerssmall, cheap, privatized
computers.
In the early 1970s, the development of Intels 8008 computer on a chipthousands of
logic circuits imprinted on a single piece of siliconmade it possible, for the first time, for
home users to build computers for their own enjoyment. Yet none of the big companies
like IBM and DEC that had dominated the 1960s seemed interested in exploiting the
home market. This oversight can be attributed in part to a cultural misperception: a belief,
possibly unconscious, that the values and passions of domestic space were incompatible
with the institutional definition of computers as tools for large-scale, serious computation.
While this was perhaps understandable given where computers had evolved, it failed to
take into account a generational logic by which those who had been teased with computers
in the 1960s came into the 1970s ready to make such a thing happen. The first personal
computers would come from hobbyists and fanatics, not from big corporations.
The first machine that can properly be called a personal computer, the MITS Altair 8800
released in 1975, may look primitive to us now, but it was by no means a simple device.
Rather than spreading its processor demands across a flotilla of circuit boards, the Altair
made use of Intels single-chip microprocessor. It arrived not as a finished machine but a
kit, a box of pieces that users had to assemble themselvesa laborious process that often
took months and encouraged hobbyists to communicate with each other, pooling resources
in order to answer questions and solve technical problems. Once assembled, the Altair had
to be programmed through a tedious process of flicking individual switches, literally
setting on/off registers in the computers 256-byte memory. There was no storage capacity,
so even the act of loading an operating system had to be performed anew each time the
Altair was switched on. And there was no display, so the unit could only communicate
through flashing the lights on its front panel. Nevertheless, the Altair was a success beyond
anything its creators planned, eventually selling 10,000 units.1
The Altair is significant not just because it represents the first time computers had fallen
within reach of the home user, but because the social and commercial trends it kicked off
directly fed into the next phase of the personal computer explosion. The technically
advanced community of Altair builders came together to form a grass roots organization
known as the Homebrew movement. As other kit computers joined the marketplace,
these groups found common ground in the Homebrew Computer Club, holding periodic
meetings in which announcements were shared and technical problems solved.
Homebrew also seeded an interest with many individuals who would go on to play
integral roles in the personal computers development, including a young Steve Wozniak,
Paul Allen, and Bill Gates.
Without a doubt, the most significant year of the decade was 1977, which saw the
launch of three separate machineseach different from the other in terms of technical
capability, audience, and brand identity, but equally epochal. The Commodore PET was
one of the first computers to incorporate a monitor, keyboard, and cassette-tape storage
device in the same case as the motherboard (the board with all the computer chips on it).
Pyramidal and white, PETs quickly began to appear in schoolrooms across America. The
TRS-80 was the first computer to be sold by the ubiquitous, low-end hardware store Radio
Shack. Developed by parent company Tandy, the TRS-80 packaged a combination
keyboard/motherboard, a cassette storage unit, and a black-and-white display for $599.
In its base configuration, it came with 4K of RAM (16 times that of the Altair 8800), which
could be expanded to 16K or 48K for an additional cost. The TRS-80 was a best-seller,
shipping 250,000 units2 before its discontinuation in January 1981. However, Tandys
vanguard machine never lost its air of essential cheapness, and this, along with its affiliation
with the little-respect Radio Shack, led many to dub it the Trash-80.
1977 was also the year that the Apple II hit the market. Steve Jobs and Stephen Wozniak,
two scruffy college kids who were part of the Homebrew culture, assembled the first Apple
in a suburban California garage, selling their Volkswagen to finance the project. While the
Apple I, in its wooden case, was built primarily to impress other hackers and hobbyists,
its followupthe Apple IIwas an immediate and unmitigated success, the first true
personal computer and the first commercial blockbuster. By 1980, only three years after
its introduction, Apple had become a billion-dollar company.
The Apple IIs streamlined beige case contained a motherboard, keyboard, and expansion slots. Wozniaks clever engineering placed 6502 microprocessor at the heart of a
complex circuit board that held a maximum of 48K of RAM. More significantly for home
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enthusiasts, the Apple II boasted a colorful display (both in blocky lo-res graphics and a
separate hi-res mode). The problem faced by the Altair 8800 only a few years earlier,
of limited memory and an almost completely inscrutable input-output scheme, was
decisively resolved by the Apple II, whose open architecture and multiple expansions slots
encouraged the home users creation of software and hardware. The Apple II came with a
programming language, Integer BASIC, prestored in ROM. The machine also shipped
with reference manuals laying out every detail of the circuit board and ROM architecture.
All of this contributed to a robust community of developers whose innovations supplied
the Apple II with programs and peripherals to meet many needs.
What kinds of software did these early personal computers run? Overwhelmingly, the
answer was video games. Machines like the Apple II were a gamers dream, offering color
graphics and sound capable of emulating the video games found in public arcades.
Conversions of games such as Space Invaders and Pac-Man existed alongside embryonic
versions of many of todays popular software genres, including flight simulators and even
rudimentary first-person shooters. Even computers like the TRS-80, whose graphics were
limited to the ASCII character set, thrived on a diet of text-based adventures. Other textbased games written for teletype terminalstitles like Star Trek, Eliza, Hunt the Wumpus,
and Colossal Cave Adventurefound their way into homes through the publication of
David H. Ahls Basic Computer Games in 1978. Outside the world of gaming, Visicalc,
an accounting spreadsheet, became the first killer app for the Apple II, serving both as
a home tool to manage finances and as a business tool for companies brave enough to
break with the minicomputer tradition and use microcomputers in the workplace. But it
was video games that introduced the notion of the personal computer as a plaything and
more importantly an interactive playmate: a logic that often motivated the computers
purchase by parents who saw in the machine a tool that would intrigue and entertain
their children.
A large factor in the proliferation of video games, both legal and illegal, was the development of cheap, fast storage media. Ever since the days of punchcard storage, software
had been copied and modified by one user after another, spreading virally throughout
the technical community. Now a similar practice emerged, first around paper printouts
of BASIC listings, then around electronic storage media. And here one of the personal
computers early limitations came into sharp relief. The first personal computers used
audiocassette players and tapes to read and write programs to memory. The tape drives
were slow and often unreliable. A faster alternative was the floppy disk drive, which wrote
data onto flat floppy disks in plastic sleeves, 5 14 inches across. Though floppies had been
in use for years as a storage medium for minicomputers, the Apple II was one of the first
computers to make this mode of storage practical on a home budget, utilizing a controller
card plugged into the motherboard. The TRS-80 and PET also featured floppy drives as
expensive upgrades. Once a computer made the move to DOS (disk operating system),
programs could be loaded and saved much more quickly and conveniently. Floppies also
enabled software to be copied more efficiently, leading to a spread of shared software
and the flourishing of piracy.
The troika of Apple, Commodore, and Tandy dominated the market throughout
the late 1970s. As the decade turned, however, several competitors appeared. Texas Instruments, heretofore a maker of calculators, introduced a color computer called the TI-99/4a
in 1979. Commodore offered a low-cost followup to the PET, the VIC-20, followed
in 1982 by the Commodore 64, which went on to become the best-selling personal
computer of the twentieth century. Also of note were the game-maker Ataris entries in
the field, the Atari 400 and 800. Like the TI-99/4a, the Atari computers featured add-on
slots for game cartridges, an alternative to floppies. All of the machines featured
color graphics, sophisticated sound, and chip sets specialized for the delivery of dazzling
audiovisuals, a sign of the important role played by video gaming in setting performance
agenda.
But this crowded field thinned out with the introduction of two machines that quickly
came to symbolize divergent trends in personal computer design. In 1981, IBM released
its Personal Computer, effectively branding the letters PC for any machine working to
IBM specifications and running an operating system known as PC-DOS. Initially too
expensive to make inroads on the home market, the IBM PC proved successful as a lowend business machine. Significantly, the DOS operating system was sold under the name
MS-DOS by its creator, the software company Microsoft, leading to a wave of PC
clonesfunctionally equivalent computers released by different companies. Throughout
the 1980s and 1990s, PCs and their descendents became a dominant sector of the
personal computer market.
The other landmark computer launched at the time was Apples Macintosh, released in
1984 amid an advertising campaign that stressed the Macs difference from the PC.
The Mac marked a major turn in Apples philosophy of computer aesthetics and set
forth a paradigm for the interface that profoundly shaped computer design from
that point onward. Molded into an all-in-one unit of off-white plastic, the Mac
comprised a black-and-white monitor and a 3.5-inch floppy drive. A keyboard connected
to it, but the real innovation was a second device which attached to the keyboard: a small,
square pointing device known as a mouse. The mouse was essentially a trackball, like
that on the arcade game Missile Command, but turned on its belly: moving the mouse
caused an arrow-shaped cursor to move on-screen. This was the key to the Macintoshs
interface, an all-encompassing graphic environment modeled on the metaphor of a
desktop, complete with folders and a trash can for deleting documents. Users could point
and click objects on-screenrepresented by iconsand drag them to new locations as
though they were physical objects. The cartoonish, simple, almost toylike nature of the
Mac interface was intended to make using the computer an easy, immediate experience
(further demolishing the wall of expertise that so forbiddingly surrounded more complex
machine surfaces) while hiding away the complex inner workings of machine language
and program listings. The interface was also interesting for its indebtedness to gaming:
the icons resembled avatars, and the visual layout of the desktop embodied a spatial
metaphor very much like the on-screen worlds of video games.
Many of the Macs features, which also included a suite of built-in applications like
MacPaint and MacWrite, were later appropriated by other software designers. Despite
Apples protests and attempts to legally protect its designs, the WIMP interface (for
windows-icon-menu-pointer) formed the core of other GUIs (graphical user interfaces).
The greatest such appropriation was undoubtedly Microsofts: In 1985, the company
introduced Windows as a module for MS-DOS. It followed up with Windows 3.0 in
1990, Windows 95 and 98 in 1995 and 1998, respectively, Windows XP in 2001 and
Windows Vista in 2006amid a host of other versions targeted at both professional
and home users. With each iteration, Windows became a more fully featured GUI and
operating system, paralleling but never exactly mimicking the Macintosh OS. To this
day, the Mac and PC worlds exist in a curious state of detente, establishing reluctant
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dialogue like two global superpowers, aware that they have to share the same planet but
resisting, on a core level, each others basic ideology.
Throughout the 1990s and into the first decades of the twenty-first century, the
personal computer has continued to grow in capability and flexibility. In general, PCs
have enjoyed access to a wider field of video game software, with the hardcore gaming
community investing much time and money in building ever more powerful and
elaborate rigsoften outfitted in neon-lit case modsto showcase the latest games
in both solo and multiplayer competition. The advent of the World Wide Web in the
early 1990s and its exponential growth in the years that followed was a direct result of a
broadly installed base of computers in the home, networked together over first phone
lines, then cableanother medium in which gamers have thrived. The contemporary
personal computer takes on many forms, from home-built PCs to all-in-one Macs to
packages put together by companies such as Dell. In the roughly 30 years that personal
computers have been in existence, they have continued to multiply in poweras
measured by microprocessor complexity, memory and storage capacity, and graphics
capabilityand drop proportionately in price. The personal computers of today have
long surpassed the monsters of yesteryear, and the trend does not seem destined to let
up. As high-end computing machinery reaches casual home users, the cultural meaning
of computers will continue to evolve, fitting ever more intimately into our daily existence.
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Attempting to define the genre in such a way as to be distinct from other genres, it appears
that the games world and the players use and experience of it are at the core of the
adventure game. Many adventure games, while they have monsters and other characters
opposed to the players character, often do not have an antagonist in the classic sense.
The games world itself takes on that role, as players attempt to learn its geography and
the navigation of it, to gain access to its hidden, closed, and locked areas, and learn to
use the various objects and devices within it. Exploration, navigation, areas to which access
is initially withheld, and tool usage are found in many other genres, but in the adventure
genre they occupy a central position, and are often the sub-goals necessary to the achievement of the main objective; the discovery of how such sub-goals contribute to the overall
objective is itself also a part of the experience and essence of the adventure game.
The evolution of the Adventure genre, then, relied on the development of navigable
space (space is so crucial to the genre that solutions of adventure games are often referred
to as walkthroughs). In the mid-1970s, William Crowther, a computer programmer,
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combined his interest in cave exploration and mapping, the role-playing game Dungeons &
Dragons, and his background in programming to produce what would come to be known
as the first computer game in the adventure genre, Colossal Cave Adventure (or sometimes
just Adventure).1 The all-text game consisted of descriptions of a series of connected rooms
through which a player moved by typing responses such as n for north or d for
down. Several objects, like keys or a lamp, were also needed by the player during the
game. The games geography was based on Bedquilt Cave in Kentucky and mentions many
of its features. The games description of the cave and its layout was accurate enough that
one first-time visitor to the cave was able to find her way around based solely on her
knowledge of the game.2 In 1976, programmer Don Woods found Crowthers program
and with his blessing, expanded the program, adding fantasy touches influenced by the
writings of J.R.R. Tolkien. From there the program was ported onto various computer
systems and spread to universities and across computer networks.
Crowther and Woodss Adventure was the first in a long line of text adventure computer
games, now referred to as interactive fiction. These games are still being produced today,
although no longer commercially.3 The innovations introduced by text adventures, particularly the concepts of rooms joined together into a navigable space, characters with which
one could have brief conversations or interactions, and objects (like keys) which gave
players access to new areas, would soon revolutionize the related field of video games. Video
games before 1977 consisted of single screens of graphics in which the action of the game
took place. Kee Gamess arcade game Super Bug was the first game to feature a screen that
could scroll in all four directions, revealing off-screen space as it scrolled up and down, or
right and left, but the space was still a single area, albeit one larger than the screen.
That same year, Warren Robinett developed the first graphical adventure game for
the Atari 2600, also called Adventure. After playing Crowther and Woodss Adventure at
Stanford, Robinett decided that it could work as a home video game and took on the
challenge of translating such a game into a 4096-byte Atari cartridge, a task that Robinetts
boss at Atari thought was impossible. Various problems that had to be solved included
how to represent such aspects as rooms and their connectedness, usable objects that could
be carried around, picked up, and dropped, and autonomous creatures that could be
encountered during gameplay.4
Released in 1979, Adventure featured 30 interconnected screens that used the cinematic
convention of cutting one to the next rather than scrolling, making it the first video game
to use multiple screens. The game also had disjoint regions which the player could only
access with the use of certain tools (the keys to open castle gates, and the bridge to pass into
walled areas), and even off-screen actions the player could encounter later (for example, the
bat could pick up and drop objects while the player was elsewhere). The game was far more
sophisticated and detailed than any of the other home video games available at the time and
a commercial success as well, selling over a million copies at $25 each.5
Robinetts Adventure, while not a literal translation of Crowther and Woodss program,
successfully did bring the format of the adventure game to video games. Robinetts work
was followed by other graphical adventure games for the Atari 2600, many of which
brought further innovations to the idea of a graphical navigable space. Superman (1979)
featured a subway that was entered from doorways located near the center of the screen
rather than at its edge, like Adventures castle gates, and the subway screens, when exited,
could not be reached by going back the way you came, resulting in one-way connections
between screens. Haunted House (1981) had staircases (in top view) which connected
identical looking floors that differed in color, so that the player-character did not
disappear and reappear elsewhere but stayed visible in place while the screen changed
behind it. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) mixed top-view screens with side-view screens
of its mesas depending on the action occurring and also had an inventory strip at the
bottom of the screen and 13 different objects that could be picked up and used. Venture
(1982) showed its scenery at two different scales, depending on where the player was;
the four rooms of the game appear together on one screen while the player is outside
them, but each room is shown on a full screen, with its interior visible, as soon as the
player enters. E.T.: The Extraterrestrial (1982), Krull (1983), Dark Chambers (1988),
and the Swordquest series of games also featured variations on the way their spaces were
depicted and connected, although all of them relied on cutting from screen to screen, or
two-way scrolling.
In 1980, Richard Garriots computer game Ultima was the first home computer game
to feature scrolling in both horizontal and vertical directions, resulting in a very large
playing field of which only a portion was seen at once. Ultimas four-way scrolling screen
technique, using tiled graphics which were added or removed from the edges of the screen
as it scrolled, was developed by Garriot with his friend Ken Arnold, who was one of the
programmers that developed the computer game Rogue the same year (Rogue was another
adventure game with a graphical display made of ASCII characters; for example, the
players character was represented by an @ that could be moved around the screen).
From the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s, adventure games generally fell into two
camps: graphical adventure games and text adventure games. The first, represented mainly
by home video games, relied mainly on graphics that had an on-screen character the player
could control and spaces that were navigated graphically. The graphics were simple, and
often mixed perspectives, showing the playing field itself in top view, while the characters
and objects were shown in side view (the practice of mixed perspectives existed long before
video games, and appeared in a variety of places including maps, medieval drawings, and
chess diagrams). What the games lacked in visual richness and narrative depth they
attempted to make up for in direct, on-screen action which was more immediate than
verbal descriptions and typed responses.
The other type of adventure game, the text adventure or interactive fiction described
above, relied on words for description and interaction, which enabled it to have much
larger worlds with hundreds of room and character responses, although the players interaction with the world was more indirect, even if it was more in-depth conceptually. From
1980 onward, beginning with Roberta Williamss Mystery House, these games began to
include graphics which acted as illustrations for the games text. Although very low resolution by todays standards, these illustrations were much more detailed than the typical
graphical adventure games of the time, but they were for the most part little more than
slides in a slide show with which players could not directly interact. These images did
introduce a first-person perspective into the games, which helped to engage the player
more and compensate for the lack of a graphical user interface.
The reason for the bifurcation of the adventure genre is due mainly to the technologies
of home video game systems versus home computers during the late 1970s and 1980s.
Home computers (like the Apple II) had keyboards and could display more text, and they
had more memory, which allowed for more detailed graphics and a larger world, while
home video game systems (like the Atari 2600) had smoother movement and were capable
of fast action.
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Advances in graphics display standards also made better quality graphics possible. Prior
to 1984, the CGA (color graphics adaptor) standard, which allowed image resolutions of
320 by 200 pixels with a four-color palette (or 620 by 200 with a two-color palette), was
used by DOS computers for graphic displays. Such harsh graphical restrictions made
representational imagery difficult, and it was not until the 1984 release of the EGA
(enhanced graphics adaptor) standard, which allowed image resolutions of 640 by 350
with 16 supported colors from a 64-color palette, that images began to dominate the screen
in what were still mainly text-based adventure games. In 1987 graphics improved again
when the VGA (video graphics array) standard appeared with images of 640 by 480 pixels
and a 256-color palette. Later, SVGA (super VGA) would increase image resolution to 800
by 600 pixels. Figure 15.1 shows examples of three different graphics standards: the top
screen, from Deja` Vu 1: A Nightmare Comes True (1985) is CGA; the center screen, from
Kings Quest III: To Heir is Human (1986) is EGA; and the bottom screen, from Mean
Streets (1989) is VGA.
During the 1980s, and especially after the appearance of the graphical user interface,
home computer adventure games began to add features originally found in console video
games, making them less like the early all-text adventures. Roberta Williamss Kings Quest
(1984) introduced the idea of the animated walking character that walked over the
background graphics, and Kings Quest III: To Heir is Human had a clock on the titlebar
(see the second screenshot in Figure 15.1), with events occurring at specific times, adding
an element of time pressure to the game. ICOM Simulations, Inc.s Deja` Vu 1: A Nightmare Comes True had an inventory box (see the first screenshot in Figure 15.1), similar
to video games like Raiders of the Lost Ark for the Atari 2600. It also was one of the earliest
home computer games to use a mouse and cursor, giving it point-and-click capability
similar to home video games using joysticks with firing buttons, although it used pointand-clicking mainly for the selecting of objects from an inventory window or choices from
a menu, rather than avatar control or spatial navigation. Despite these advances, however,
the images used in many of these games were still more or less illustrations of what was
essentially still text-based interaction.
A more user-friendly and graphically oriented interface came in 1987 with the
introduction of the SCUMM (script creation utility for Maniac Mansion) engine written
by Ron Gilbert and Aric Wilmunder of Lucasfilm Games (now LucasArts). Used (and
named) for the game Maniac Mansion (1987), the engine was described in detail in the
games manual:
The large top portion, The Animation Window, is the largest part of the screen where the animated
world of the mansion is displayed. It shows the cameras eye view of the room that the currently
active character is in. The Sentence Line is directly below the Animation Window. You use this line
to construct sentences that tell the characters what to do.. . .Each character has his or her own Inventory. It is empty at the beginning of the game; the name of an object is added to a characters Inventory when the character picks the object up during game play. There is no limit to the number of
objects a character can carry. You may need to scroll up or down to see all items in your inventory.
. . .To move a character around, select Walk to from the Verbs by positioning your cursor over it
and clicking. Then move your cursor into the Animation Window, point it where you want the
character to go, and click. If you point to an open door and click, the character will walk through it.6
Lucasfilm Games would go on to use the SCUMM engine (and updated versions of it)
for their games into the 1990s (see Figure 15.2). Although characters could be directed by
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Figure 15.2 An advancement in interactivity. Examples of Lucasfilm Games using the SCUMM
engine, Maniac Mansion (1987) (top left), Zak McKracken and the Alien Mindbenders (1988)
(top right), Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) (bottom left), and The Secret of Monkey
Island (1990) (bottom right).
clicking in the Animation Window, the interface did not allow direct avatar control, as
was found in even the earliest home video games, but it did provide, along with
cut-scenes, on-screen action that the earlier graphically illustrated games lacked. After
the release of the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) in 1985, home video game
systems had improved to the point where home computer games could be ported to them,
resulting in the cross-platform release of many home computer adventure titles. Likewise,
more adventure titles were originating in home console systems, such as the Legend of
Zelda series, which first appeared on the NES in 1987.
As the 1990s began, many cross-platform games were available, and after the appearance
of VGA a number of early games were rereleased with updated graphics (see Figure 15.3),
especially those which were a part of ongoing series (1990 and 1991, for example, saw the
rerelease of Kings Quest I along with Kings Quest V, Space Quest I along with Space Quest IV,
and Leisure Suit Larry I along with Leisure Suit Larry V).
After 1987, an increasing number of games began to be released on CD-ROM (beginning with Rand and Robyn Millers The Manhole in 1987) for both home computers and
home console games, like the NEC Turbografx-CD expansion for the Turbografx-16 console system, and later CD-ROM game systems from Sega, Sony, and Nintendo. Adventure
games, because they featured navigable environments, typically needed more memory than
single-screen or scrolling-screen games, and the CD-ROM, at roughly 650 megabytes,
encouraged the use of better graphics, better sound, and even integrated video clips.7
Advances in computer animation meant more photorealistic graphics, and full-motion
video (FMV) began appearing in games, beginning with Trilobytes spring 1992 release,
Figure 15.3 The Quiki-Mart in 1987 and 1991. Two incarnations of The Quiki-Mart from the
original 1987 version (top) and 1991 update (bottom) of Leisure Suit Larry 1: Leisure Suit Larry
in the Land of the Lounge Lizards.
The 7th Guest, which was over a gigabyte in size (due to its video clips), and the first
CD-ROM game to require two discs.
In September 1993, another game was released which would surpass The 7th Guest as
the best-selling game of all time; Rand and Robyn Millers Myst. Myst brought with it
new twists on familiar ideas, innovating and developing existing traditions and
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COMPANY PROFILE:
ELECTRONIC ARTS
Alison McMahan
Electronic Arts (EA) (originally known as Amazin Software) was started in 1982 by
Trip Hawkins, a veteran of the earliest days at Apple Computer, with an unusual goal:
to make stars out of its computer game designers. For example, game boxes were
designed as colorfully as album covers and game designers were named and
promoted in the marketing. He attracted key talent and in their first year they published
three now-classics: Hard Hat Mack (1983), Archon (1983), and Pinball Construction
Set (1983).
Console game makers, starting with Nintendo in the mid-1980s, began to approach
EA about designing games for their consoles. But Hawkins found their licensing
structure oppressive and did not think the 8-bit consoles were powerful enough
for EA games. By the late 1980s, EA worked out a favorable licensing deal with
Sega and in 1990 released Populous, Budokan: The Martial Spirit, and Zany Golf
for the Genesis. Their Genesis version of John Madden Football (Hawkins was the
first to license star athletes images for his games) was phenomenally successful.
Hawkinss innovative sales strategy entailed selling directly to retailers, something no
other game developer had done. Within 12 years, Hawkinss initial investments of
$200,000 had grown into a billion-dollar business.8 Hawkins left Electronic Arts in
1991 to form 3DO, leaving Larry Probst, who had originally joined the company in
1984 as vice president for sales, as chairman and CEO of EA.
Following Hawkinss departure, the company took a new direction with EA making
exclusive deals for sports licenses with the NFL, ESPN, the Collegiate Licensing
Company (for college football content), and NASCAR. EA now has exclusivity on so
many sports franchises that critics contend that the quality of sports video games as a
whole is dropping due to reduced competition.
EAs innovative treatment of game designers evolved to a Draconian work policy in
which employees were expected to work 80-hour weeks (9 a.m. to 10 p.m. seven
days a week), even during non-crunch time, without additional compensation.
As a result, game artists brought a class-action lawsuit in 2004 which was settled for
$15.6 million,9 and many of the lower-level artists are now working at an hourly rate.
A similar suit brought by programmers in 2006 was settled for $14.9 million.10
EA is most often criticized for its lack of support and follow-through on its own
games, especially from European players, and for forcing current players to pay full
price for the next upgrade, without which continued play is impossible.11 Nevertheless,
at the end of 2005, EA was one of the worlds largest third-party publishers, best
known for its EA Sports label, games based on popular movie licenses and games
from long-running franchises like Need for Speed, Medal of Honor, and The Sims.
In its original tradition of supporting creativity, EA supports the Game Innovation Lab
at the University of Southern California.
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of enigmas. An understanding of the games geography was also crucial, not just for
navigation as it was in most other games, but for the solving of the puzzles themselves
(an idea which would also be central to the Rhem series of games). A grasp of the layout
of the islands is needed to comprehend the puzzles involving alignment, both visually
(as in Myst Islands map and rotating tower) or aurally (as in the Selenitic Ages dish antennas which had to be aligned to the transmitters of various sounds around the island).
These ideas would appear in the later games of the series as well, for example, Rivens
map room on Survey Island or the rotating pentagonal room on Temple Island, or Exiles
rotating reflectors which reflect a beam of light around the island, the rotating plant which
picks up sounds depending on where it is aimed, or the cameras that must be aligned with
the symbols found on other parts of the island.
Mysts puzzles also used geography in another way. Often the machinery used to power
other machines or to gain access to new places was spread out over different locations,
rather than being localized in a single place, making the connection of cause and effect,
or even an understanding of what the player needed to do, more difficult to figure out.
Power lines, pipes, gear systems, and so forth stretched consequences of actions out across
the landscape, requiring the player to move about the island to see where they led. (Some
connections, like those between the sunken ship in the harbor and the sunken ship model
in the fountain, or the large gears and the small gears in the clock tower, did not have
visible physical connectors like wires or pipes, but rather symbolic connectors that relied
on visual resemblance.) These ideas as well would be further elaborated on in later games,
especially Riven, where physical connections and symbolic connections would extend
between islands as well as across them.
While Mysts innovations set new standards for the adventure genre and inspired a number of games that followed, including such games as The Lighthouse (1996), Rhem, Rhem 2
(2005), and Alida (2004), as well as Mysts own sequels, Riven, Myst III: Exile (2001),
Uru: Ages Beyond Myst, Myst IV: Revelation (2004), and Myst V: End of Ages (2005). Other
games like those in the Shenmue, Tomb Raider, and Grand Theft Auto series included
developed narratives with cut-scenes and interacting characters and three-dimensional
worlds that the player moved through in real time, unlike the still images of the earlier
games. Nonplayer-characters in the games became more interactive, due to a degree of
artificial intelligence programming that responded to the player-characters actions.
Finally, alongside the single-player games mentioned above, MMORPGs took the
adventure genre in a new direction, with large, persistent (24 hours a day, 7 days a week)
worlds that featured hundreds of thousands of players within them. As descendents of the
multiplayer online text adventure games from the mid-1980s (like the 16-player Sceptre of
Goth), these games offer an experience so different from single-player adventure games
that they arguably constitute their own genre; they are an extension and development of
the worlds developed in the single player adventure games whose history is described
above. Many single-player games have also incorporated elements from other genres and
influenced the design of their game worlds. Due to such overlapping, the boundaries of
the adventure genre have become rather blurred, but we can still ask whether the exploration, navigation, and tool use so central to the genre are present in a games main focus, as
these will always remain at the heart of the adventure genre.
CHAPTER
16
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The decade opened with many games inspired by Space Invaders and Galaxian, many of
which were nearly identical in design and gameplay (in fact, several were actual bootleg
versions of the games, released in other countries). The 1980s also saw its own trends in
games; many wrestling games and racing games, and during Olympic years, Olympic
sports games. In Japan, dozens of Mahjong games appeared, though these were not
as popular in the United States. The popular games of the early 1980s, among them
Pac-Man, Defender, Frogger (1981) and Donkey Kong (1981), also had many imitators in
the years following their appearance. Pac-Man and Defender, in fact, would go on to earn
over a billion dollars each.2 Games of the decade, then, would represent a careful balance
between innovation and imitation, as each company tried to produce the next hit game
that would be different yet familiar enough to attract a large number of players.
game from 1980 worth noting is Radar Scope, a submarine game which did not do well
commercially but was the Nintendo Companys first entry into the U.S. arcade video
game market released under the Nintendo name.
Nintendo did find success with a game they released in 1981. Donkey Kong became one
of the years hit games, and the games Jumpman character, later given the name Mario,
became the symbol of the Nintendo Company itself. Other popular games of 1981
included Segas Frogger, Namcos Galaga, Konamis Scramble, Exidys Venture,
Taitos abstract game Qix, and Midways Ms. Pac-Man (a strange title; why not PacWoman?). The use of synthesized speech was growing and could be found in several
games, including Century Electronicss Space Fortress and Segas Space Fury, and one game,
Pacific Noveltys Shark Attack, even used a cassette tape loop of recorded screams as a
sound effect. Gottliebs Caveman was their first and only pinball and video game hybrid
machine, an experimental combination of the two types of games. Electro Sports Quarter
Horse, a horse racing game, was the first video game to incorporate a laserdisc, though its
video imagery was not interactive; players bet on horses on one screen and watched the
races on another. Segas Eliminator was a rare, four-player vector graphics game.
In the area of game design, Exidys Venture and Centuris Route 16 both featured games
whose spaces alternated between maps showing large areas and close-ups of those areas
that were displayed when the player entered them, an innovation that helped players keep
track of where they were in spaces that, when seen at full resolution, were much larger
than the screen. Other games, including Exidys Mousetrap, Centuris Loco-Motion, and
Nihon Bussans Lock N Chase were variations on maze games, following the popularity
of Pac-Man. Finally, the competition between game companies resulted in some
hidden references within at least one game of the time. Williams produced Stargate, a
sequel to Defender which is sometimes known as Defender II, which featured enemies
named The Irata and Yllabian Space Guppies, which were Williamss competitors
(Atari and Bally) names spelled backwards.
The year 1981 also saw the appearance of Ataris Warlords, Tempest, and Centipede (the
first arcade game designed by a woman, Dona Bailey), all three of which it would later
try to port to its VCS 2600 home console.4 Whereas Asteroids, Warlords, Battlezone,
Centipede, and a number of Ataris other arcade games did come out in home versions,
Tempest never made it beyond the prototype stage. Part of the reason was that vector games
had to be adapted into raster versions before they could appear on the 2600, and games
like Tempest in which objects were continually being resized did not adapt well at all.
Battlezone, which did appear as an Atari 2600 cartridge, only did so in a much changed
form. Throughout the 1980s, the growing popularity and number of home game systems
had an interesting effect on the production of arcade games; the arcade games had to be
able to provide an experience that could not be found in home games, usually that of
fast action and better graphics, yet arcade titles might see less profit if they could not
eventually be ported to home systems.
The ease with which cartridge systems could change games was something arcade owners
did not have. In 1981, game company Data East introduced the DECO Cassette System,
which allowed new games to be uploaded into an arcade cabinet from tape cassettes.
The magnetic tapes, however, proved to be unreliable and easily demagnetized, and the
games released on the tapes were not popular. The system met with some success in Japan
but was a failure in the United States, and after producing around 40 games for the DCS,
Data East ended it in 1985. Other systems, like Segas Convert-a-Game, saved the price of
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a new cabinet, but was still expensive due to the replacing of the printed circuit board
which contained the game.
In 1982 a variety of games were being produced. Among the usual science fiction shooting games like Irems Moon Patrol, Ataris Space Duel, and Williamss Robotron: 2084, there
were games like Bally/Midways BurgerTime, which involved the building of hamburgers,
and Segas Pengo, the title character of which was a little penguin who pushed ice blocks
around. Both games revealed game design possibilities outside of the typical activities of
shooting and getting shot at.
Atari had several games of note that year. Dig Dug featured characters that dug the paths
they wandered through, Joust had flying, jousting knights which alternated between
cooperative and competitive play, Quantum was an abstract game inspired by particle
physics, and Pole Position (made by Namco, but released by Atari in the United States)
had sprite-based scaling foreground and background objects which gave the racing game
a three-dimensional feel even though it did not involve any real 3-D computation.
Other games of the year included Gottliebs Q*bert, Centuris Time Pilot, which featured enemies taken from different time periods from 1910 (biplanes) to 2001 (UFOs),
and Cinematronicss Jack the Giantkiller, which had six different screens or stages that
the main character Jack had to pass through to complete the game, each from a different
part of the story Jack and the Beanstalk on which it was based. Two games were tie-ins to
movies, Nintendos Popeye (1980) and Bally/Midways Tron (1982), which actually outgrossed the movie it was based upon.
But many of the games released in 1982 were sequels, including Baby Pac-Man, Pac-Man
Plus, Super Pac-Man, Donkey Kong Jr., Missile Command 2, Frenzy (a sequel to Berzerk), and
Millipede (a sequel to Centipede). Although innovative games would continue to appear
throughout the mid-1980s, the presence of so many sequels suggests that the industry
was beginning to rely more on the familiarity of past hits. And by late 1982, signs of
stagnation began to appear in the arcade video game industry.
turning the surface it passed over from blue to red. The game also featured the first camera
controls that allowed the player to view the action from different angles, and a doodle
mode outside of the game. But in 1983, the three-dimensional graphics were too new
and confusing to players, and the game was unfortunately a financial failure, discouraging
any more experimentation in that direction for years to come.
Other important games of the mid-1980s included Ataris Crystal Castles (1983) and
Star Wars (1983) (a vector game based on the film), Atari Gamess Gauntlet (1985) (which
had an interactive environment that multiple players could experience simultaneously
(see Chapter 11, System Profile: The Atari Video Computer System [VCS], for the
difference between Atari and Atari Games), Irems platform game Lode Runner (1984),
Capcoms Ghosts N Goblins (1985), Gottliebs Q*bert (1982), and Nintendos Mario Bros.
(1983), Punch-Out!! (1984), and Super Mario Bros. (1985). After Pac-Man, the title
character of Q*bert was one of the more popular and most merchandised characters, with
a board game, card game, action figures, plush figure, lunchbox, books and coloring
books, wristwatch game, wastepaper can, and even a short-lived TV show. But on the
whole, the period of 1983 to 1985 saw few hit games produced, and a large number of
sequels hoping to cash in on their predecessors successes: Discs of Tron (1983), Donkey
Kong 3 (1983), Jr. Pac-Man (1983), Pac & Pal (1983), Pac-Man & Chomp Chomp
(1983), Pole Position II (1983), Professor Pac-Man (1983), Galaga 3 (1984), Pac-Land
(1984), Return of the Jedi (1984), Dig Dug II (1985), Pitfall II: The Lost Caverns (1985),
Return of the Invaders (1985), and Super Punch-Out!! (1985). While game designers
retrenched in an effort to find something new, game producing companies turned to game
hardware in an attempt to revive the industry and cut costs.
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Home consoles were advancing and narrowing the gap between arcade games and home
video game systems, and the Nintendo Entertainment System helped close the gap.
In 1985, Nintendo began using its Vs. System (also known as the UniSystem [singleplayer games] or DualSystem [for two-player head-to-head games]). The system was a
version of the NES with some additional arcade game hardware. Many of the games had
two video screens, one above the other; one screen for text and game instructions
and the other for the actual gameplay. Some NES home video games were ported to
arcade machines, perhaps the first time that games from a home system were adapted into
arcade games.
Almost all of the Nintendo Vs. System games ran on the same hardware and used
the same controls, so games could be changed simply by changing their circuit boards.
The following year Nintendo released the PlayChoice system, which had games on extension cards that plugged into the main circuit board of the game and allowed players to
choose from up to 10 different games in the same cabinet. (Although the games were
NES games, the cartridges from the NES were not compatible with the arcade game
hardware.) Other companies also developed their own arcade game systems, including
Atari Gamess Atari System 1 in 1986, Capcoms CP System 1 in 1988, SNKs NeoGeo
MVS in 1989, and Segas Mega Tech System in 1989. These interchangeable systems also
changed the look of arcade games; because a variety of different games would use the same
cabinet, the cabinets were often bland and lacked the colorful artwork that appeared on
dedicated cabinets.
An industry-wide standard for interchangeable hardware was also in place by the mid1980s. With the decline of Atari and the rise of Nintendo, Japan became a center of video
game production, and in 1982 the Japanese Arcade Machine Manufacturers Association
(JAMMA) was founded. Around 1985, JAMMA introduced a wiring standard for arcade
machines, known as the JAMMA conversion class, which would become the main one
used in Japan for the next decade or so, and many American game companies also
conformed to this standard. All games using the JAMMA standard could be converted
from one to the other by changing the printed circuit boards inside. These standards also
have been helpful to arcade video game collectors, who can plug a large variety of printed
circuit boards (PCBs) of games into the same cabinet, so long as the cabinet uses the
JAMMA standard.
While the arcade systems kept arcade operators from the expense of having to buy new
cabinets, some game companies limited the lifespan of their games through the use of
what are now referred to as suicide batteries. Presumably installed to fight piracy, these
batteries supplied power to a small amount of RAM which holds a decryption key.
The decryption key is used to decode the program code in the games ROM, so when
the battery dies, the RAM is erased, and with out the decryption key, the game can no
longer run. Several companies used suicide batteries in their arcade games, the largest
two being Sega, who began using them around 1987, and Capcom, whose system used
them from 1989 onward.7
In the late 1980s, the industry failed to return to the heights of its glory days before the
crash. Fewer games were produced that are today acknowledged as classics, but there were
some, including Segas Outrun (1986), Bally/Midways Rampage (1986), Taitos Arkanoid
(1986), Bubble Bobble (1986) and Double Dragon (1987); Nintendos R-Type (1987),
Capcoms Street Fighter (1987) and 1943: The Battle of Midway (1987); and Tetris
(1988), which was originally written in the Soviet Union in 1985 and made its way
around the world as it was ported to a wide variety of systems. By the end of the decade,
the arcade games biggest competition came from home video games on console systems
and home computers.
Home consoles were improving and catching up to arcade games, and arcade games had
to find experiences that it could provide that home games could not. This may account for
an increased interest in cockpit games which players sat inside of and driving and racing
games with seats built into them, games like Space Harrier (1985) or Outrun (1986) with
their hydraulic systems that could shake players as they played, or After Burner and After
Burner II, both from 1987. Other sit-in games included Segas AB Cop (1989), Namcos
Winning Run (1988), and Taitos airplane simulator game Top Landing (1989). Some
games, like Taitos Darius (1986) and Data Easts Round Up 5 Delta Force (1988) connected three video screens together into one wide panorama. Segas Heavyweight Champ
(1987) had unique controls that simulated the physical activity of boxing.
Game graphics was another area awaiting innovation. Gottliebs Exterminator (1989)
was the first game to use all digitized imagery for its backgrounds, apart from laserdisc
games which used digitized video for their backgrounds (see Figure 16.1). Although the
3-D graphics of I, Robot had been ahead of their time, the time of 3-D was approaching
fast. Three-dimensional dungeons with a first-person perspective could already be found
in home games like Phantasy Star (1988) for the Sega Master System, only a year after they
had debuted in Xybots (1987) at the arcade. For much of the decade, arcade games had
achieved a three-dimensional look through the use of scaling sprites, which are small
images or parts of images which are enlarged or shrunk to give the appearance of moving
closer or farther into the distance. Space Harrier, for example, could scale 32,000 sprites
quickly, creating its illusion of 3-D. But filled polygons and true three-dimensionally
generated graphics were used in a few games like Atari Gamess Hard Drivin (1989) and
S.T.U.N. Runner (1989) by the decades end and stunned players with their graphics.
By the end of the 1980s, 3-D polygonal graphics began to reach the limits of what was
possible within the JAMMA standard, which had not been designed for such games, and
in the 1990s the industry would undergo changes again as the era of 3-D gaming began.
Figure 16.1 Gottliebs Exterminator (1989). This game was among the first to have backgrounds made from digitized imagery. Image from www.klov.com.
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The 1980s, then, now stands as the peak of sprite-based graphical games, most of which
involved fighting, shooting, or driving. The 1980s also saw the end of the golden age of
arcade video games, with many hit games, like Pac-Man and Defender, that were introduced at the beginning of the decade and enjoyed their heyday throughout it, and in some
ways it is these games from the 1980s that represent the height of the arcade video game
experience.8
CHAPTER
17
LASERDISC GAMES
Mark J.P. Wolf
The era of laserdisc games was only about a decade and a half long, lasting from the early
1980s to the mid-1990s. The laserdisc, a type of optical storage disc technology, was first
commercially available in 1978 and used mainly for movies, as an alternative to videotape.
Laserdiscs had several advantages over videotape, including better horizontal resolution
and sharper images and the ability to jump from one point to another for instant access.
Both of these capabilities would allow laserdisc technology to be adapted to arcade video
games, and laserdisc games would be the first appearance of full-motion video in video
games.
In 1981, David H. Ahl, the founder of Creative Computing magazine, wrote a program
for the Apple II computer that could control a laserdisc and play scenes from the
movie Rollercoaster (1975), demonstrating that the new technology could be used in
games. The first time a laserdisc was used in an arcade video game was in 1981, in Electro
Sports Quarter Horse. The game had two screens, one for computer graphics and one
for video. Players placed their bets and interacted on the screen with the computer
graphics, and then the game would randomly select a winning horse and play a video
clip from the disc on the video monitor. While the game used a laserdisc, the use was
not very interactive, but others were conceiving ways laserdiscs could be incorporated
into games.
Laserdisc games typically fell into two categories. The first used laserdisc imagery as a
background and placed computer-generated vehicles or characters over it (including the
players character, enemy characters, and objects like projectiles and laser shots); in such
cases the background imagery is a prerecorded sequence to which players must coordinate
their movements, for example, racing games in which players must steer their vehicles and
avoid crashing. The video clip is the same each time, and players try to fly or drive as far as
they can without crashing and ending the game. One such game, Astron Belt, was manufactured by Sega and licensed to Bally/Midway and introduced at the 1982 Amusement
and Music Operators Association convention and then perfected for its release in arcades
in 1983. In it, the player steers a spaceship through space, over land, through tunnels, and
other locations seen in the video backgrounds, while shooting at enemy ships and
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avoiding computer-generated mines. Other games with overlaid graphics that came out in
1983 included Bally/Midways space shooting game Galaxy Ranger, Funais space shooting
game Interstellar Laser Fantasy (also known as Interstellar), Mylstars flying game M.A.C.H.
3, and Williamss Star Rider, a racing game in which computer-generated competing racers
could appear on-screen either in front of you or in your rearview mirror. The laserdisc
imagery used in these games was typically live-action video, or prerendered computer
animation.
The other kind of laserdisc game used the technologys random access capability to
create branching narratives which were steered by the players input at crucial moments
in the game. Instead of controlling overlaid characters, players played by making
quick decisions and interacting with precise timing to avoid sequences ending in the
player-characters death. This type of game is also sometimes called an Interactive Movie
(see Chapter 22, Genre Profile: Interactive Movies).
The most famous of these types of games was one of the first ones released; Dragons
Lair (1983) by computer consultant Rick Dyer, who had teamed up with the game company Cinematronics and former Disney animator Don Bluth to create the game. Dragons
Lair featured a knight, Dirk the Daring, who fought various creatures and had adventures
the outcomes of which were partially determined by the player. With hand-drawn cel
animation from Bluth, the games graphics were far better than the usual arcade game
imagery. The novelty interested players and arcade operators alike, and there were hopes
that laserdisc technology could revive interest in arcade gaming and raise income after
1982s crash-related sagging profits (see Chapter 18, The Video Game Industry Crash).
According to one Newsweek article from August 1983, while the average arcade games
take per week was $140 in 1981 and $109 in 1982, the Dragons Lair machine discussed
in the article was taking in up to $1,400 a week.1 Other games with hand-drawn animation appeared in 1983; two anime-based games, Nihon Bussan/AV Japans Begas Battle
and Sterns Cliff Hanger both had action-packed narratives with branching storylines.
Two other games of 1983 added another element of player choice; Bally/Midways NFL
Football and Sterns Goal to Go, both football games with live action video, allowed players
to select plays and then showed the teams running them.
By the end of 1983, the video game industry crash was affecting home games as well as
the arcades and profits were falling. But the industry was still hopeful about laserdisc
games, and over a dozen more appeared in 1984, with over a dozen different companies
producing games. Cinematronics, Dyer, and Bluth returned with Space Ace, a sciencefiction-themed game, and Dyers own company, RDI Systems, also produced Thayers
Quest, an adventure game that was a conversion kit for Dragons Lair and Space Ace
machines. A few more adventure games appeared: Funais Eshs Aurunmilla, Universals
Super Don Quixote, and Taitos Ninja Hayate, and the only abstract laserdisc game,
Simuteks Cube Quest, which featured some of the best computer animation in video
games of the day. Other releases of the year included shooting games (Laserdisc Computer
Systems Atomic Castle, Konamis Badlands, Nihon Bussan/AV Japans Cobra Command,
Ataris Firefox, and Mylstars Us Vs. Them), racing games (Taitos Cosmos Circuit and Laser
Grand Prix, Segas GP World, and Universals Top Gear), and one sports game (Sterns Gold
Medal With Bruce Jenner).
Because of derivative games and expensive technology that frequently broke down,
laserdisc games failed to revive the arcade as people had hoped. As Electronic Games
magazines Dan Persons put it,
Laserdisc Games
To say that the predictions have not come true is an understatement. Laser machines that once
commanded a hefty price of three and four thousand dollars are now being sold off at a thousand
dollars apiece, so eager are distributors to clear out their inventory.2
Another reason for failure of laserdisc games was the nature of the games themselves.
Due to the use of prerecorded imagery, the games could only vary slightly from one
playing to another, if at all. Once players had played through to the end of a laserdisc
game and seen everything, they lost interest; so the games had little replay value and no
staying power.
For all these reasons, it is no surprise, then, that home video game systems using laserdiscs also failed. In January 1985, Rick Dyers company RDI Systems released the
Halcyon home system, which cost over $2,000 and had only two games for it,Thayers
Quest (which actually had more animated footage than the arcade version did) and the
football game Raiders Vs. Chargers which used real NFL game footage. Four more games
were in the planning stages, but the company went bankrupt before they could be
released. In Japan, Microsofts MSX home computer (released in Japan in 1983) could
use certain laserdisc players from Pioneer and Sony to play laserdisc games, and 11 games
(Astron Belt, Strike Mission, Badlands, Starfighters, Umi Yakuba, Interstellar, Cosmos Circuit,
Eshs Aurunmilla, Rolling Blaster, Mystery Disc 1: Murder, Anyone?, and Mystery Disc 2:
Many Roads To Murder) were released for the MSX and available only in Japan (they are
also sometimes referred to as Palcom games, after Pioneers laserdisc player).3
In the mid-1980s, only a few more games were released, including Segas space game
Albegas (also known as Cybernaut), Statuss Casino Strip, Nihon Bussan/AV Japans Road
Blaster (also known as Road Avenger), and Taitos Time Gal, all from 1985, and Millennium Gamess Freedom Fighter from 1986. Around the end of the 1980s and into the early
1990s, raster games with 3-D graphics were improving and offering more variety than the
limited prerendered sequences of laserdisc games in which the player could not control
their point of view.
But laserdisc technology attempted a comeback during the first half of the 1990s.
Namco produced two games, Galaxian 3 (1990) and Attack Of The Zolgear (1994), both
space shooting games that sat six players in front of an enormous image stretching across
three giant projection screens placed side by side in an enclosed booth, giving players a
unique arcade experience. Dragons Lair II: Time Warp, a sequel that had begun production in 1984, was finally released in 1991 by Leland Interactive. Nova Games released a
driving game, Street Viper in 1993, Atari Games released a driving and shooting game
COPS (1994) based on the television series of the same name, and Sega released, Time
Traveler (1991), which reflected its laserdisc imagery in a parabolic mirror to attempt to
give it a 3-D effect (the games marquee had the word Hologram on it in large letters,
even though no holograms were involved). A Spanish company, Web Picmatic, produced
a few games, including Zorton Brothers (Los Justicieros) (1993) and Marbella Vice (1994),
and in 1993, Pioneer Corporation even released the Pioneer LaserActive home laserdisc
game system, though by this time CD-ROM games were replacing laserdisc as the technology for games using full-motion video.
The company most responsible for the attempted revival of the laserdisc game industry
was American Laser Games. Started in the late 1980s, American Laser Games would use
better computer technology and produce a series of laserdisc games that used light guns
and live action video, including Mad Dog McCree (1990), Who Shot Johnny Rock?
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(1991), Gallaghers Gallery (1992), Mad Dog II: The Lost Gold (1992), Space Pirates
(1992), Crime Patrol (1993), Crime Patrol 2: Drug Wars (1993), Fast Draw Showdown
(1994), The Last Bounty Hunter (1994), and Way of the Warrior (1994). A tenth game,
Shootout At Old Tucson was a prototype that did not make it to the arcade as they decided
to release it on CD-ROM instead.
Technologically speaking, the efforts behind the revival were too late. By 1992 CDROMs were starting to incorporate full-motion video into computer games, and in 1997
the first consumer DVD equipment would become available. Smaller, more compact discs
and more reliable technology which was less expensive pretty much sounded the death
knell for laserdisc technology. Movies were moving over to DVD and by 2001 would no
longer be released on laserdisc. Probably the last arcade video game to use a laserdisc was
Nihon Bussan/AV Japans Burning Rush (2000), which only used it for its opening and
closing sequences and cut-scenes, while the rest of the game used interactive computergenerated graphics.
Games using full-motion video, however, continued to be made and played on home
computers and systems (see Chapter 22, Genre Profile: Interactive Movies). In 1997
the company Digital Leisure, Inc. was formed for the purpose of rereleased laserdisc games
on DVD. They bought the rights to Dragons Lair, Space Ace, and Dragons Lair II: Time
Warp, which they released over the next couple of years on CD-ROM, DVD-ROM, and
for the PlayStation 2. In 2000 Digital Leisure bought the rights to Segas Time Traveler,
and in 2001 it acquired the rights to all nine arcade games made by American Laser Games,
rereleasing them as well. Today a number of laserdisc games can be played on emulators,
like Daphne, which are specially designed for laserdisc games.4
Laserdisc games had a brief history due to the quickly changing technology of optical
storage media, but they introduced full-motion video into video games and are now
fondly remembered by collectors, while the games themselves are still sold and played
on other media.
CHAPTER
18
Not only was the growth phenomenal, but more was expected. An article in Business Week
in May 1982 supposed that the home market will continue to expand at least until 1985,
at which point nearly half of all U. S. homes with television sets will own a video
game machine, and CBS Inc., the television network which itself was getting into game
production, predicted that the European market for video games will explode from
$200 this year to $800 million by 1983.4
Besides CBS, there were a flood of new cartridge-producing companies flooding
the market with games, many of which were derivative, substandard, and cheaply
produced. Many new startup companies appeared, hoping to cash in on the video
game craze, and some, like Imagic, were started by former employees of Atari and Mattel.
Board game makers like Parker Brothers and Milton Bradley, and companies from
other industries, like 20th Century Fox, and even Quaker Oats, had game divisions and
published games hoping for a hit. With so many companies producing hundreds
of games, many of which were poor, and home computers coming down in price
while more software was becoming available, the video game industry was heading for
another crash.
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An Earlier Crash
The video game industry crash of the early 1980s would not be the first the industry
had seen. In 1976, electronics manufacturer General Instruments produced the
AY-3-8500 chip, which had all of the circuitry necessary for a video game on a single chip,
making the production of video games much easier. According to a 1980 article in Popular
Electronics,
For companies thinking about going into the TV-game business, the GI chip was the convincer.. . .
It promised total system costs of $25 to $30 and retail prices in the $60 to $75 range.. . .The GI
chip made it possible for companies to establish simplified production lines and build lower-cost
games.5
By January of 1977, GI had shipped over 7,000,000 AY-3-8500 chips and planned a new
series of chips that could do even more. Cartridge-based game systems were slowly taking
off around this time; in August of 1976 the Fairchild Camera and Instrument Company
introduced the Video Entertainment System, the name of which was soon changed to
the Channel F, and the following year Atari released its VCS 2600 game system. But the
surge of all the new games entering the market proved to be too much:
Despite the shortage of TV games during the Christmas 1976 season, the market collapsed in
1977.. . .One by one, most of the video game manufacturers dropped out. The casualties included
the three semiconductor companies who were building games with their own chips: Fairchild,
National Semiconductor, and RCA.6
Even the new cartridge-based systems were unable to stave off a crash. Fairchild, Atari,
Bally, Coleco, and RCA all produced cartridge-based systems, but none of them caught
on immediately, leaving a lot of leftover inventory in 1978.
Although Bally and Fairchild got out of the home game system market, Atari started a
$6 million advertising campaign in 1978, and Mattel introduced its Intellivision system in
1979. Eventually, with better games and less competition, the industry recovered, and in a
few years was booming again.
Just like the new companies that would soon go bankrupt and distributors who ended up
with leftover inventory, many arcades would close and those that remained open would
buy fewer new arcade games.
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The crash finally ended in 1985 when a new system appeared that advanced home video
games to a new level. The Nintendo Entertainment System already was a success in Japan,
where it had been released in 1983 as the Nintendo Famicom, and it, along with its large
library of games, helped revive the American video game industry and helped to bring an
end to the problems it was suffering.
PART III
CHAPTER
19
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anywhere.) Fifty thousand units were sold.2 The NES caught on and was soon for sale
through the whole country and eventually around the globe, thriving until the 16-bit
consoles arrival on the market. Nintendo tried to prolong its life by releasing an updated,
stylish version known as the New NES or NES 2 in 1993, but many consumers
had moved on to the Super NES or Sega Genesis by then, and it was a commercial failure.
Nintendo officially stopped supporting the NES in 1994; today, the company claims to
have sold over 60 million units worldwide.
Licensing Terms
One of the reasons behind Ataris demise was the flood of poor-quality titles that glutted the market because the company had lost exclusive control of the content developed
for its console. Nintendo wanted to make sure this would not happen with the NES,
but also realized the importance of having a huge library of games, which could not be
large enough with only Nintendos own games. The company thus approached many
successful Japanese publisherssuch as Bandai, Taito, and Namcoand arranged partnerships to have them develop games for the NES. Nintendos conditions, however,
proved to be Draconian;
Yamauchi protected [the NES] with a security chip that locked out unauthorized cartridges. This
meant that the only way to make games for the NES was to allow Nintendo to manufacture them,
and Nintendo maintained final authority in deciding which games would be manufactured and in
what quantities.3
While Nintendo claimed these regulations existed to ensure that games made for the
NES were of sufficiently high quality, many developers saw them as strong-arm tactics,
often citing Nintendos censorship policies in particular. Conscious of the importance of
keeping a clean image, especially in the United States where the NESs primary target
audience consisted of kids, Nintendo had set up an NES Game Standards Policy to prevent the appearance and bad publicity of games like Custers Revenge, an infamous game
developed and published by Mystique in 1982 for the Atari 2600 console, in which the
player controlled a naked man who had to dodge obstacles in order to reach a Native
American woman tied to a pole and rape her. (Predictably, the game caused controversy
and tarnished Ataris reputation, even though the latter had no involvement in this game.)
Every game developed or translated for a North American release had to be sent to
Nintendos censors first, who would review the content and request that the developer
make any number of changes to meet the concerns of the members of [Nintendos] target
age group and their parents. 5 Some of the forbidden things included illegal drugs,
explicit or suggestive sexuality, alcohol, smoking materials, graphic depictions of
death, gratuitous or excessive violence, foul language, and ethnic, religious, nationalistic,
or sexual stereotypes of language or symbols. As a result, many games had to be significantly altered from their original versions, sometimes for things as seemingly unwarranted
as removing all crosses from hospitals or tombstones (the cross being recognized as a
symbol of Christianity).6
Many licensees thought Nintendo of Americas inflexible enforcing of these regulations
was disproportionate and stymied their creativity and freedom in making games. Douglas
Crockford may speak for many in The Untold Story of Maniac Mansion, an account of
his relationship with Nintendos censors when he converted Maniac Mansion for the NES:
They insist that their standards are not intended to make their products bland, but that is
the inevitable result.7 Nintendo kept enforcing these policies rigorously until the home
version of Mortal Kombat flopped in 1994 (due to censorship, much of the violence
players expected was gone from the game), at which point it released its grip a little. But
it was too late: by then, many developers were disgruntled with the company. When rival
Sony offered in 1995 a viable alternative with its PlayStation console and liberal licensing
policies, these developers flocked out. Nintendos dominance over the home video game
market had ended.
Games Library
It should first be noted that while the hardware of the NES and Famicom were
essentially the same, one important difference makes their games library very distinct.
The NES was fitted with the 10NES lockout chip, which acted as a software lock that
would scan a game cartridges code for a key. Upon recognizing the specified code
needed (which was inputted into the cartridge directly by Nintendo when it manufactured
the cartridges), the NES would proceed to launch the game. If the code was not found, the
game would not start. This made it difficult to create games without becoming an official
Nintendo licensee. Some developers worked around the chip itself, selling their game
cartridges with special adapters that would bypass the 10NES chip, and others managed
to reverse-engineer the system to figure out the needed authentication code. Nintendo
actively prosecuted any known offender to further discourage such enterprises. Thus
unlicensed games for the NES were probably fewer in number when compared to the
Famicom, which was not equipped with a lockout chip; in Japan and the Far East,
Famicom piracy proved to be rampant, significantly increasing the number of games
available for the system.
Another factor that further divides the Famicom and the NESs libraries is the Nintendo
of America licensee regulations. Since the video gaming culture in Japan was well established among all layers of society, the Famicom had as much success with adults as with
kids, and its market could accommodate a very large offering of games without fear of
collapse. Therefore, there was no need for Nintendo to monitor the games made by
third-party developers. The censorship reviews, limit on the number of published titles
per year, and centralized manufacturing and pricing of cartridges by Nintendo were all
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absent from the Japanese licensing agreements. Most developers released many titles for
the Famicom, and translated five of their best for a North American release.
According to a Nintendo of America representative Joel Hochberg, the amount of
published NES games is difficult to establish with certainty: over 650 North American
titles are confirmed, but if unlicensed games are to be included, that number would
probably reach over 900. This indicates that even with the 10NES chip and legal actions
by Nintendo, piracy was still a serious issue. Nintendo of America estimates that internationally, the total number of games released for NES and Famicom is well over 1,000.8
This number, however, seems rather conservative, considering the NES was victim to an
estimated 250 unlicensed games; since the Famicom had no lockout chip, it is reasonable
to expect that it saw many more unauthorized games, in addition to various adult and
pornographic games which were systematically refused entry into the North American
market. A closer estimate of the total number of NES and Famicom games would
probably be higher than that, though how high exactly is difficult to tell.9
Identifying the most successful games of the library proves to be much easier. The
Video Game Chartz website10 hosts a chart of video games whose worldwide sales have
surpassed one million copies. Of the 64 NES games listed there, Nintendo has published
41, with Capcom, Enix, and Square sharing the responsibility behind the other platinum
hits. Nintendos Super Mario Bros. series, Donkey Kong (1989), Metroid (1986), The
Legend of Zelda series, Mike Tysons Punch-Out!! (1987), Kirbys Adventure (1993), and
Kid Icarus (1986) all became franchises that churned lucrative sequels in the following
years. Other Nintendo games such as Tetris (1988), Duck Hunt (1984), F1 Race (1984),
Gyromite (1985), and the sports games [World Class Track Meet (1986), Ice Hockey
(1988), Pro Wrestling (1987), Golf (1984), Tennis (1984), and Baseball (1983)] sold
extremely well, but did not develop into sequels. Capcom was one of the major thirdparty developers for the NES, with its Duck Tales (1990), Ghosts N Goblins (1986), and
Chipn Dale Rescue Rangers (1990) all selling over a million copies; but Capcoms greatest
contribution to the NES library undoubtedly lies in the Megaman series, which has
spawned over 50 games to this day. Other games and series of note include Squares Rad
Racer (1987) and Final Fantasy series, Konamis Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1989),
Contra (1988), and Castlevania series, Capcoms Bionic Commando (1988), Enixs Dragon
Warrior series, and Tecmos Ninja Gaiden series. While this list is far from exhaustive, it
showcases the biggest advantage the NES had over its competitors: a huge library of
high-quality games.
Technical Specifications
The NES is known as an 8-bit console, which means it can access 8 bits of data in a
single operation.11 The CPU has access to 2KB of RAM and 48KB of ROM, though
various multi-memory controllers (MMCs) can increase those numbers. MMCs were
chips designed by game developers and included in their cartridges to expand the features
of the NES. For instance, Nintendos MMC1 chip allowed the player to save his progress
in The Legend of Zelda, and the MMC2 chip was used in Myke Tysons Punch-Out!! to
portray the boxers using bigger sprites than normally allowed by the console hardware.
The CPU also is responsible for the consoles audio playback. The NES supports five
sound channels: two square pulses, one triangle pulse, one noise channel, and a DPCM
(differential pulse code modulation) channel. The square pulses can be set to different
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censorship issues in the past (as described in Chapter 19) and is reflected by Nintendos advertising for its 2006 console, the Wii.
As of 2006, Nintendo has offices in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada,
Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden,
the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the United States. Its consolidated net sales in fiscal
year 2005 were 515 billion (approximately U.S. $4.81 billion), with a gross margin of
217.4 billion (approximately U.S. $2.03 billion).16 The company is headquartered in
Kyoto (Japan) and employs 2,977 people worldwide according to recruitment website
WetFeet.com (http://www.wetfeet.com/). Satoru Iwata succeeded Hiroshi Yamauchi
as the fourth Nintendo president in 2002.
CHAPTER
20
A NEW GENERATION OF
HOME VIDEO GAME SYSTEMS
Leonard Herman
Before the great crash of 1983, the home video game industry was predominantly
American. The major systems were all exported to Japan and Europe (Magnavox was
owned by Philips, which was a Dutch company). The Odyssey2 was sold as the Videopac
in Europe and was much more popular there than it was domestically. In 1983 the
Japanese companies decided to get in on the action too. Sega released a pair of consoles,
the SG-1000 and Mark III, and Nintendo released the Famicom. All these systems were
originally intended to be released solely in Japan.
The Famicom became a huge success in Japan and it was not long before Nintendo
began setting its sights upon selling the console worldwide. The only problem with this
plan was the fact that Atari dominated the video game industry and Nintendo felt
that it just could not compete against Atari. So Nintendo approached Atari with
the opportunity to license the Famicom for worldwide distribution outside of Japan.
After taking a look at the Famicom, Ataris executives were very interested in the deal.
Agreements were made and the final signings would be made at the Consumer Electronics
Show (CES) in June 1983.
Something funny happened at that CES. Coleco unveiled its Adam computer system.
But was it a computer or was it a video game system?
There is a distinct difference between video game consoles and home computers that
played games. Back in 1983, Coleco had the exclusive license to produce and distribute
Nintendo titles for home video game consoles. On the other hand, Atari had the license
to produce and distribute Nintendo games for home computers.
So when the Atari executives visited the Coleco booth at the summer 1983 CES, and
saw Donkey Kong proudly playing on the Adam, they were deeply concerned. Coleco
was touting the Adam, which was an inexpensive home computer, so therefore it should
have been Ataris Donkey Kong playing on it. On the other hand, the game-playing
capabilities of the Adam made it a Colecovision in sheeps clothing and the Coleco camp
contended that since the Colecovision was a game console, then Colecos Donkey Kong
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could play on it. Atari did not buy that logic. After all, the Adam was clearly a computer.
Atari representatives told Nintendo to clear it up with Coleco, or else they would not sign
the agreement to market the Famicom.
Nintendo cleared up the mess but it took a little time. In fact by the time the mess was
cleared up, Atari posted substantial fourth quarter losses for 1983 and the video game
crash had occurred in the United States. Atari was no longer the mighty power that it
had been just a year earlier and it was no longer in any position to license the Famicom
from Nintendo. In fact, Atari was no longer the threat that Nintendo feared. The Japanese
company was free to distribute the Famicom worldwide on its own.
Of course, that was contingent upon anybody even caring about a new video game
system any longer.
Nintendo unveiled the Famicom to the American public at the Winter (January) 1985
CES under the name Nintendo Advanced Video System (NAVS). The system was able to
generate 52 colors and was totally wireless. Its controllers used infrared light to send
signals to the console. The controllers were also different in another respect. Instead of
the popular joystick, the NAVSs rectangular shaped controller featured a touchpad that
could move in one of eight directions. A light gun was also going to be sold with the unit
for target games such as Hogans Alley and Duck Hunt.
Despite the fact that video games were selling so poorly everywhere, Nintendo received
much attention at the Consumer Electronics Show. Nintendo promised that the
NAVS would be available by the late spring of 1985. Naturally that deadline came and
went without any sign of the NAVS. However, in June the company again had a booth
at the CES. This time the console on display was called the Nintendo Entertainment
System.
The wireless controllers were gone but a 10-inch-high robot called R.O.B. (Robotic
Operating Buddy) accompanied the system. Although R.O.B. was used to play some
games, its basic purpose was that of a Trojan horse. Since electronic retailers did not
seem to want anything to do with video game systems any longer, Nintendo promoted
R.O.B. as a toy to get the system into toy stores.
Nintendo successfully test marketed the system, thanks partly to a game called Super
Mario Bros., finally in mid-October 1985 in the New York metropolitan area, proving
that people still wanted to play video games. The $159 system was released nationally in
February 1986.
Nintendo displayed the NES at the Consumer Electronics Show in January. Alongside
the main booth were satellite booths that housed third-party companies who were also
releasing games for the NES. However, unlike the third-party companies that manufactured games for the early American systems, the companies producing the games for
the NES did it with Nintendos blessing. In fact, to prevent a glut of games on the market,
Nintendo licensed the right to produce games to the third-party companies. Further, to
make sure that the companies indeed went to Nintendo for licensing, Nintendo alone
manufactured all of the cartridges for every one of the third-party companies. To prevent
companies from manufacturing their own game cartridges, Nintendo designed a lockout
chip into the NES. If any rogue company decided to avoid paying for a license and
manufactured games themselves, they still could not bypass the lockout chip and the
games would not play on the NES. Each game sold by a licensed company had Nintendos
seal of quality on the box to assure consumers that the game had been approved by
Nintendo.
But the NES was not alone in 1986. Following Nintendos success, Sega decided to do
likewise and released an American version of the Mark III, which they called the Sega
Master System (SMS).
The SMS was very similar to the NES. Both consoles came with similar-looking
controller pads and both were sold with light guns for target shooting games. Although
the NES came with R.O.B., the robot was not supported after a short while. The SMS
utilized game cards in addition to the standard game cartridges. The cards could contain
games that were the size of the games available on the cartridges and were therefore less
expensive to manufacture and sell.
Although many in the industry declared that the SMS technology was superior to the
NES, the buying public favored the NES. The SMS simply did not have any stand-out
games that made people rush out and buy the system, as Nintendo had with its
Mario-based games.
In addition to Nintendo and Sega, Atari also released two game consoles in 1986. This
was surprising because the companys then chief executive claimed that Atari would no
longer be involved with video games.
In May 1984, Atari announced a new console, the 7800. Despite the crash, Atari
believed that the industry was still alive since 20 million game cartridges had been sold
between January and April 1984 and over half of them had been sold at their full retail
price. The company commissioned a market study to determine exactly what the public
wanted in a new console. With this information in hand, Atari worked with General
Computer Corporation of Massachusetts and came up with the $140 Atari 7800, a system
that would be 100 percent compatible with the 2600 library. However, before the console
could be released, Warner Communications sold the consumer division (the division
which produced the video games and computers) of Atari Inc. to Jack Tramiel, the
founder of Commodore. The new company was called Atari Corp. Tramiels intention
was for Atari to market computers that would compete against his former company.
Tramiel had no interest in game consoles, and the 7800s, which had been manufactured
already, were banished to warehouses.
After Nintendo proved successfully that there was indeed an interest in video game
consoles, Tramiel decided to make some money off of the 7800s that were languishing
in the warehouses. In 1986 he released the two-year old system along with the seven game
cartridges that had been designed for it. To the surprise of very few, Atari could not
compete with Nintendo or Sega.
But the 7800 was not the only surprise that Tramiel had in store for video game fans.
The company released a newly designed 2600 that resembled a small 7800 and retailed
for less than $50. The console was targeted for lower income households that could not
afford the higher-priced consoles. During the following years, Atari released seven new
games for the 2600. Although it never regained the popularity it had enjoyed during the
early 1980s, the 2600 remained on the market until 1991. This 14-year run remains a
record to this day for a console. Only the Nintendo Game Boy, in one incarnation or
another, has remained on the market longer (17 years).
When Atari Inc. was sold in 1984, Jack Tramiel only purchased the consumer division
of the company. The arcade division was retained by Warner Communications and was
renamed Atari Games. A year later a controlling interest in the company was sold to
Japanese arcade company Namco, which turned around and sold its interests in Atari
Games to a group of Namco employees. In 1988 Atari Games started a subsidiary called
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Tengen, which would market cartridge-based games for the NES. Tengen quickly became
a licensed publisher for the NES but it was not long before the company became a
problem for Nintendo.
In late 1988 Tengen took Nintendo to court, claiming that Nintendo had an unfair
monopoly on the video game industry that it achieved through illegal practices such as
price fixing and the use of the computer chip lockout technology that prohibited
unlicensed development of NES software. Tengen then discovered a way to get around
the lockout chip and produce NES compatible games without Nintendos approval.
Tengen quickly announced that it would develop, manufacture, and distribute NES
compatible games without obtaining Nintendo licensing.
Among the titles that Tengen released for the NES without Nintendo approval was
Tetris, an enormously popular game designed in the Soviet Union by Alexey Pajitnov in
1985. The object of the game was to keep blocks from piling up to the top of the screen.
Robert Stein, the founder of a European software company called Andromeda, discovered Tetris while in Hungary and he quickly negotiated with Pajitnov for the worldwide
rights to the game. Once acquired, Stein quickly licensed them to Mirrorsoft, a British
software company, and Spectrum Holobyte, its American subsidiary. Mirrorsoft then
licensed the Japanese arcade game rights to Sega and the North American arcade game,
home console, and handheld rights to Atari Games. An NES version of Tetris was released
quickly from Tengen.
But while Mirrorsoft was doling out rights to the game, Nintendo also was interested in
getting home console rights to the game, particularly for their new handheld Game Boy.
Nintendos Howard Lincoln and Minoru Arakawa flew to Moscow to deal directly with
the Soviet Foreign Trade Association where they learned that Robert Stein had only
obtained the computer rights to Tetris. Nintendo quickly obtained both the console and
handheld rights to Tetris and churned out copies of the game. Since Tengen did not have
the legal right to distribute the game, it had to recall all of the Tetris cartridges that were
still on store shelves. In all, 268,000 cartridges were returned and destroyed.1
the United States, it chose a name that more honestly reflected its processing power:
The TurboGrafx-16.
Games for the TurboGrafx-16 came on small plastic cards very similar to the ones that
were used in the Sega Master System. The cards themselves were packaged in plastic jewelcases similar to the type that housed audio CDs. Although NEC did not make history by
releasing the first true 16-bit console, it claimed its place in history for another reason.
In 1989 NEC released a CD player for the console that gave it the ability to read data
from compact discs. While the CD player could be used to play standard audio discs, it
had been designed especially for video game use. CDs were a great breakthrough in video
game technology. Prior to their introduction, the maximum amount of code that a game
could utilize was 256 kilobytes. A compact disc was able to contain 550 megabytes of
code; or 2,000 times that of the most powerful cartridge. Since the CD could be accessed
randomly and quickly, the console was able to load new information without the gamer
being aware that such input was taking place. Because the disc could hold so much information, CD-based games offered the ultimate in complexity, detail, and sound.
Despite its claim to history, the Turbografx-16 was not the runaway best-seller that
NEC had hoped for, even with the addition of the optional CD player. That claim went
to Sega.
Shortly after the release of the PC-Engine in Japan, Sega announced its intentions to
release a true 16-bit console. That promise became a reality in the United States when
Sega shipped the first Genesis units in late August 1989 to stores in the New York and
Los Angeles areas. Nearly everyone who bought one was pleased with the consoles high
resolution and crisp stereo sound. The unit was quickly compared to the Turbografx-16
and while many felt that NECs console offered better graphics, most gamers were
impressed by the Genesiss speed.
Sega also offered exciting peripherals for the Genesis. One was the Telegenesis modem,
which allowed gamers to compete against one another online via the telephone. For Sega
Master System owners, Sega released a power base converter that plugged into the Genesis
and played Master System games. Finally, Sega released a CD player for the Genesis,
which it simply called the Sega CD. Sony manufactured the CD-ROM player that sat
beneath the Genesis and the two units worked in tandem to produce outstanding games.
The Sega CD contained its own processor that ran at 12.5 MHzmuch faster than the
7.5 MHz speed at which the Genesiss processor ran. Together, the two CPUs eliminated
any game pauses while the system loaded new information from the CD.
In addition to the 68000 CPU, the Sega CD also had two custom graphics chips. These
chips allowed the CD player to add more colors and sprites to the TV screen than the Sega
Mega-Drive (released in North America as the Sega Genesis) could do by itself. The two
chips also added scaling and rotation to Sega games. Along with the custom Sega CD
games, the unit also could play standard music CDs and the new CD+G discs (CD plus
graphics). In Japan this was a big deal because it meant that gamers could play karaoke
discs.
Nintendo was expected to respond and release its own 16-bit console following the
release of the Genesis, and eventually the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES)
was released in 1991, nearly two years after the first appearance of the Genesis. But before
that occurred, a new type of gaming console was released.
SNK was a manufacturer of arcade games. Its NeoGeo looked like any other arcade
upright except that players had a choice of five different games to play. As in previous
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home video game systems, each game was stored on a cartridge. In the case of the
NeoGeo, each cartridge was the size of a VHS videotape and could store 330 megabits
of data. When a game began to lose its appeal, the arcade operator simply had to change
the cartridge instead of the entire machine. Players also could purchase 4K memory cards
from the arcade operators which could be inserted into the machine to save games.
Following a successful introduction of the unit in Japan in 1989, SNK released a home
version of the NeoGeo in the United States a year later. The home version utilized the
same cartridges as the arcade machines so gamers could play exactly the same games in
the arcades or at home. It also accepted the memory card which allowed gamers to save
their games in the arcades and then play them at home.
Although SNK flaunted the NeoGeo as a 21-bit machine, it actually used the same
16-bit processor as the Genesis. It also had an additional 8-bit processor that was the same
as the one in the Sega Master System. The dual processors allowed the NeoGeo to display
4,096 different colors on the screen at one time (as opposed to the TurboGrafx-16 which
could only display 512 simultaneous colors). The NeoGeo also produced sounds from
15 different channels (the Genesis used only 10 separate channels).
Unfortunately, all of the features that the NeoGeo offered came at a separate price.
SNK sold the NeoGeo in two different packages. The basic Green System retailed for
$399 and included a console and one controller. For an additional $200, a consumer
could purchase the Gold Set, which came with an additional controller and one game
cartridge. The cartridges themselves carried a suggested list price of $199. While the
system attracted hardcore gamers who liked the type of games that SNK was known for,
it was in no way any competition for the Genesis.
That competition would be provided by Nintendo. With the eight-year-old NES
beginning to show its age, Nintendo knew that it had to have a more advanced system
on the market. Nintendo planned a September 1, 1991, release for the $200 Super NES
which would boast a 16-bit processor. Many NES owners quickly wondered how much
support their 8-bit machine would continue to receive. Nintendo announced at the
Summer CES that the SNES would be backward compatible with the NES via a plug-in.
With the release of the SNES, Nintendo again had a serious contender in the home
console race. However, despite the popularity of the SNES and Nintendos reputation,
during the 1991 Christmas season, the company lost its position as the top-selling video
game company to Sega, which had taken control of 55 percent of the 16-bit market.
In many cases, the Genesis had outsold the SNES by as much as two to one.2 Many of
the sales were in part due to a new game that Sega released called Sonic the Hedgehog,
a Super Mario-type game that played at lightning speeds.
Despite Segas slight dominance, their success would be short lived. Even as they fought
it out with Nintendo over the 16-bit machines, the console designers were already looking
into the following generation of machines. And along with the 32-bit machines would
come new competition.
CHAPTER
21
CD-ROM GAMES
Carl Therrien
While it became a standard relatively recently, disc-based storage goes a long way back in
the history of video game distribution. The term encompasses a wide range of technologies, from magnetic floppy discs, analog laserdiscs, and a variety of digital optical media.
Of the latter, the CD-ROM enjoyed the strongest following and the longest life span; as
of 2006, a significant number of PC games are still burned on CDs. When it became the
most common video game distribution format in the mid-1990s, the compact disc was
already a standard in the music industry. In contrast to the magnetic tapes used for the
distribution of albums and movies, optical discs allowed relatively fast, random, nonlinear
access to the content. But these features were common already in the realm of cartridgebased video game systems; the ROMs in the Atari 2600 or Super Nintendo game cartridges
were directly connected to the systems working memory and could be read instantly.
The CD drive optical head could not compete; as a matter of fact, optical discs introduced
the infamous loading screen to the console gamer. Video games benefited first and foremost from the storage capabilities of the CD-ROM. While the CD format shares its core
technical principle with the more recent DVD standard (found in the Xbox and
PlayStation 2) and other dedicated formats (such as the Dreamcasts GD-ROM and the
GameCube optical disc), the integration of CD-ROM technology and its consequences
on game design and development are beyond the scope of this chapter.
In 1980, Sony and Philips agreed upon the specifications of the audio CD format. This
agreement, known as the red book standard, was followed in 1985 by a yellow book
specifying the data structure of CD-ROM technology. In 1986, a single 12-cm diameter
disc could hold 550 megabytes of data; as of 2006, the same disc could hold up to 700
megabytes. In the mid-1980s, even the biggest players in the industry could not possibly
produce enough content to fill the extra space. By comparison, cartridge sizes for home
consoles were commonly referred to in megabits; converted back to megabytes, the storage
space available to what is known as the 16-bit generation appears relatively meager: up to
2.5 megabytes for the Turbografx-16s TurboChip (or HuCard), 4 megabytes for the
Sega Genesis cartridge, and 6 megabytes for the Super Nintendo Entertainment
Systems cartridge. On the personal computer side, the largest games at the beginning of
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the 1990s required a handful of high-density floppy disks (1.44 megabytes per disk).
Of course, these sizes were adequate for most of the games produced in that generation.
But at the same time, new ways of producing game assets were emerging: digitization of
sound/picture/video and computer-generated imagery (CGI), for example. The ability to
integrate this variety of assets defines one of the most salient buzzwords of the CD era:
multimedia. In reality, multimedia was associated first and foremost with the development of full-motion video. This fascination for a cinema-like illusion of motion actually
led to a multitude of video compression techniques, typically specific to a given developer,
with no actual norms in terms of image quality, frame rate, and proportion of the animation on the screen. The introduction of the CD-ROM format created a need to expand
the content, and many different strategies emerged.
CD-ROM Games
in 1992, a new design for a system essentially equivalent to the Turbografx-CD with the
latest system card. The MPC norms were reevaluated in 1993, the same year the 3DO
Company and Commodore launched their CD consoles. Featuring a 2X CD-ROM drive,
the 3DO and Amiga CD32 could be upgraded to read the MPEG-1 movie standard developed by the Motion Picture Expert Group. With the U.S. releases of the Sega Saturn and
the Sony PlayStation in 1995, developers now had the technical means to integrate good
quality FMV in their CD games: 2X transfer rate, sufficient work/video memory, and
graphical processors that could display millions of colors. The multimedia capabilities of
CD gaming matured, but at the same time, these systems were among the first to hardwire
real-time 3-D manipulation. It is interesting to note that, notwithstanding their relative
abilities, FMV games appeared on most of the CD systems mentioned here.
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Virgin, 1993, Sega CD; Zool, Gremlin, 1993, Amiga CD32). At first glance, the seminal
CD-ROM adventure game Myst (Cyan Worlds, 1993, PC CD-ROM) appears to follow
the same logic. By the nature of its gameplay, the graphic adventure genre had a different
representational economy than action-oriented games; the game world is usually depicted
through a series of fixed, but very detailed, game screens. While Myst oriented the adventure genre into its brain-teaser branch, its most striking feature resides in the multiplication of completely unique game screens. From this perspective, Myst is clearly part of what
we have called the extended games tendency; it adds content to an existing game genre
without affecting the gameplay fundamentals. But at the same time, this particular extension affects how we perceive the game world in a way the narrative load of adjacent
cut-scenes, the beauty of an orchestral score, and the extra thrills of additional levels do
not. Myst does not increase the actual size of this world, but rather its density. It is also
devoid of the repetition that usually plagued games with first-person exploration such as
the Eye of the Beholder (Westwood Studios, 1990) or Ishar (Silmarils, 1992) role-playing
game series, while retaining the same continuity. In Myst, the world becomes saturated
with detail; it partially achieves a certain representational variability that is at the heart
of the second tendency associated with CD-ROM gaming.
Contemporary to Mysts release, Trilobytes The 7th Guest (1992, PC CD-ROM) made
a statement about what CD-ROM technology could achieve. In the games haunted
house, the player assumes the role of a floating point of view whose identity constitutes
the notorious final revelation. One may argue that the depiction of this point of view
floating from one exploration node to the other is a first clue to the mystery, but it is obviously the technical aspect that deserves our attention here. Trilobyte managed to develop a
system capable of streaming intensive graphical information (high-resolution 256 color
prerendered animations, with more than 10 frames per second) directly from the CD.
In the gaming industry, there might have been as many FMV techniques as there were
developers, but one thing is certain: the more-or-less convincing illusion of motion is
indeed a central element of the saturated world tendency. By saturated, we refer to a significant increase in verisimilitude, an illusion abstracted from the typical shortcomings of
video game representation such as repetition and rigidity of motion. Another early feature
of CD-gaming complies with this definition: digitized voices. Talkie versions of popular
adventure games were edited on CD, including Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis
(LucasArts, 1993, PC CD-ROM) and Kings Quest V: Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder!
(Sierra On-Line, 1992, PC CD-ROM). Like FMV, digitized sound proposes an illusion
forever changing as it evolves through time. Both illusions would come together in the
ideal of interactive cinema. Many clones built on the Myst and The 7th Guest models
had no significant human presence to speak of. But the explosion of live-action FMV
games shows that the human figure could only linger backstage for so long. Games such
as Under a Killing Moon (Access Software, 1994, PC CD-ROM), The Beast Within:
A Gabriel Knight Mystery (Sierra On-Line, 1995 PC CD-ROM), and Ripper (Take-Two
Interactive, 1996, PC CD-ROM) rely on character interaction as much as the typical
graphic adventure game; as a matter of fact, these games required up to 6 CDs to store
all the live-action sequences. Earlier examples include Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective
(ICOM Simulations, 1991, released on PC CD-ROM, Turbografx-CD, and Sega CD)
and It Came from the Desert (Cinemaware, 1991, Turbografx-CD).
The fascination for gameplay-integrated FMV spread way beyond the predictable
graphic adventure enclave. American Laser Games brought their arcade laserdisc titles
CD-ROM Games
to home gaming systems (Mad Dog McCree, 1993; Crime Patrol, 1994) and many other
live-action shooters were produced for the Sega CD (Surgical Strike, Tomcat Alley, Code
Monkeys, 1993 and 1994, respectively). Shooting courses using CGI were also common,
with key titles appearing in the major formats (Rebel Assault, LucasArts, 1993, PC
CD-ROM; Sewer Shark, Digital Pictures, 1992, Sega CD; Microcosm, Psygnosis, 1994,
Amiga CD32; Cyberia, Xatrix, 1996, 3DO). Some racing games also had prerendered
courses whose display would be affected by the players speed (MegaRace, Cryo Interactive,
1993, PC CD-ROM). Even platform games were produced; side-scrolling 3-D levels integrated slight point-of-view modifications at specific moments (Bram Stokers Dracula,
Psygnosis, 1993, Sega CD; Time Commando, Adeline Software, 1996, PlayStation). However, the most unlikely genre to undergo FMV treatment is undoubtedly the fighting game.
In Supreme Warrior (Digital Pictures, 1994, 3DO) and Prize Fighter (Digital Pictures,
1994, Sega CD), live-action sequences depict street fights and boxing as seen through the
eyes of the protagonist.
In the global production landscape, however, action games were clearly outnumbered,
and few actually acquired critical or popular recognition. This failure can be explained
partially by a gameplay discrepancy between FMV CD-ROM games and contemporary
prime examples in any given genre. As the industry began its transition towards
real-time 3-D mechanics, and as the virtual worlds visual representation could be affected
more by the users manipulations, the worlds depicted by FMV appeared fixed and rigid
even compared to most 2-D games of the time. In FMV shooters, the player would typically control a simple crosshair on top of the movie sequence, and exploding targets were
presented on separate shots, whereas any 2-D side-scrolling shooter could dynamically
integrate the players animated avatar and the havoc it created in a single, continuous scene.
Movie sequences could not be altered and manipulated with ease, and many action games
ended up relying on Dragons Lair gameplay mechanics (hit the right key at the right
moment). Even adventure games eventually frustrated players; live-action conversation
sequences could not be assimilated and skipped as easily as their text-based predecessors,
changing the typical pacing of the genre. Ultimately, these worlds were not only saturated
with detail, but also with authorship, and the creators authority over the experience was a
reflection of the authority exerted by the technology itself.
In the end, CD-ROM technology did affect the face of gaming for a few years. Its
massive storage capabilities led developers to embrace the latest visual attraction, and this
emphasis on FMV favored slow-paced genres and/or simpler gameplay mechanics. With
the CD-ROM, the quality of in-game assets increased but at the expense of gameplay itself.
This regression of game language in favor of verisimilitude evokes the introduction of
sound in filmmaking technology. And just as film language eventually integrated the new
expressive resources more seamlessly, the gaming industry found a way to develop the ideal
behind FMV through techniques more suited to the nature of games. Nowadays, the assets
incorporated in a real-time 3-D world are so data intensive that many games nearly fill up
the 8.5 gigabytes available on a double-layer DVD. Already, a new generation of optical
media is available; a single PlayStation 3 Blu-ray disc can store up to 50 gigabytes of
information. Even though the increase factor is nowhere as significant as it was when CD
technology was integrated in the early 1990s, this storage space exceeds the needs of most
current productions. It remains to be seen if and how this extra storage will affect production strategies, favor certain types of contents and genres, and, ultimately, if it will play the
same decisive role as the CD-ROM did in the tendencies that defined its generation.
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Although the genre came to be associated with live-action video, its first occurrence is
an animated interactive movie now displayed in the Smithsonian Institution alongside
the only two other video games there, PONG and Pac-Man. Dragons Lair was the first
analog laserdisc-based coin-op video game to be released. The idea became clear to
designer and programmer Rick Dyer at a 1982 coin-op trade show when he saw Astron
Belt (which was finally released by Sega/Bally in 1984), the first arcade game ever created
with a laserdisc generating the background footage (computer graphics where used for the
foreground ship and lasers). Dyer then approached former Disney animator Don Bluth,
who the previous year had created the acclaimed film The Secret of NIMH (1982) (and
who teamed up with Gary Goldman and John Pomeroy for Dyers project), in order to
create a game based on the new laserdisc machine. The production cost of Dragons Lair
was 10 times the average budget of the era ($1.3 million), but it grossed $32 million in
its first eight months. This was due to the 22 minutes of prerecorded full animation that
really stood out in comparison to the computer-generated graphics displayed on the
screens of other arcade games. It was so impressive that it cost 50 cents instead of 25 cents
to play, and some arcade owners even installed a monitor over the cabinet so people could
watch the game as it was played. Dragons Lair was not just another game; as Bluth said in
September 1983, Weve combined the unique capabilities of both computer and animation and formed a new style of entertainmentparticipatory movies.2 The gamer was
indeed invited to play his own cartoon, to embark in a fantasy adventure by becoming
Dirk the Daring, a valiant knight gone to rescue the fair and voluptuous Princess Daphne
from the clutches of Singe the Evil Dragon. His actual participation consisted of making
decisions by using a joystick to give Dirk directions or hitting an action button to make
him strike with his sword. If the direction chosen was good or the sword button pushed
at the right moment, the obstacle was overcome or the monster slaughtered. If not, Dirk
died in horrible and funny ways. This decision-tree branching gameplay would attract a
following and remains the basic design model of interactive movies. Indeed, the popularity of Dragons Lair saw the release of similar games like Space Ace (Cinematronics/
Magicom, 1983), Cliff Hanger (Stern/Seeburg, 1983) and Badlands (Konami/Centuri,
1984). In the 1990s, Sega TruVideo Productions like The Masked Rider: Kamen Rider
ZO (Sega, 1994) and Mighty Morphin Power Rangers (Sega, 1994) even recreated a similar
experience using footage from the popular TV series. Nevertheless, those games never
achieved the same success. If Dragons Lair proved to be a milestone in the history of
videogames, it is because its debut not only served as a window to the future of interactive entertainment, but also represented the industrys last great hurrah before it came to
crashing down in 1984.3
Sports games, such as Goal to Go (Stern/Seeburg, 1983), which were composed of real
sports sequences, were made at the same time as Dragons Lair.4 In the same vein as Astron
Belt, 1980s arcade laserdisc games using video footage also had short lifespans, due to the
unreliability of the technology. Shooting games akin to M.A.C.H. 3 (Mylstar/Gottlieb,
1983) and Us vs. Them (Mylstar/Gottlieb, 1984), and racing games like Laser Grand Prix
(Taito, 1983) and GP World (Sega, 1984) gave more continuous control to the gamer.
The company American Laser Games revived the use of live action in the arcade at the
beginning of the 1990s with its nine laserdisc games. A flyer underlines what distinguished
its first-person shooters from the other ones made at the time: The player is part of a
true-to-life movie . . .combining laser technology with player interaction! Formerly
designed to train police officers, the games offered the player realism never seen in the
amusement game industry.5 In games such as Mad Dog McCree (1990), Who Shot Johnny
Rock? (1991), Space Pirates (1992), Crime Patrol (1993), and Fast Draw Showdown (1994),
which was the first laserdisc game to film its imagery in portrait mode instead of
the usual landscape mode, the gamer had first and foremost to draw his light gun before
his rivals did. The plot lines of the gamesrescuing the mayor and his daughter from the
lowdown dirty sidewinder Mad Dog McCree, trying to discover who shot Johnny, searching for energy crystals to save the galaxy, joining the force to fight crime, or competing to
be the fastest gunfighter in townwere of course a pretext to stage many shoot-outs
which took place in different locations. If the gamer stayed alive or did not kill an
innocent bystander, he gathered clues and the story unfolded a bit more. If not, he lost a
life and funny comments were made about his death. This was not very different from
Dragons Lair.
With the advent of CD-based home systems, movie-like gaming experiences arose. The
introduction of the Multimedia PC in 1990 and the release of the peripheral TurbografxCD in 1989, the Philips CD-i system in 1991, the Sega CD add-on in 1992, and the
3DO console in 1993 marked the increased use of live-action video. Compared to
cartridges, the amount of information the CD could hold allowed the storing of movie
sequences (that were even called cinemas at the time). Dragons Lair, its clones, and the
American Laser Games first-person shooters (available with a game gun for the Sega CD
and 3DO or a peacekeeper revolver for the Philips CD-i) thus made their way into the
home. The laserdisc game Us vs. Them (1984) had filmed cut-scenes of frightened citizens
and military command personnel between missions, and many other games had such
cinematics (the real-time strategy game series Command & Conquer from Westwood
Studios, for instance, was known for its live-action cut-scenes). The attraction of cinema
drove all types of games to be associated with the interactive movie genre.
Available only on CD-ROM (since it was too large for floppy disks), The 7th Guest
(Trilobyte/Virgin Games, 1992/19936) was one of the three killer applications that
launched, according to Steven L. Kent, the multimedia revolution (along with Myst
and Doom released in 1993). As a showcase for technology, it was, claimed Kent, a masterpiece. 7 To Microsofts founder Bill Gates, it was the new standard in interactive
entertainment.8 Designers Rob Landeros and Graeme Devine formed their own company, Trilobyte, to create the first interactive drama in a terrifying real virtual environment
complete with live actors, according to the games box. Inspired by the board game Clue
and by David Lynchs television series Twin Peaks (19901991), the game revolves around
an investigation to identify an unknown guest that would join six ghostly visitors invited to
a spooky mansion owned by the evil toy maker Henry Stauf. Through the eyes of Ego, a
disembodied consciousness, the gamer moves in widescreen through the rooms of the
high-resolution prerendered 3-D house to solve puzzles that unfold in part of the story.
Although The 7th Guest is mainly a puzzle-oriented game, it was not meant to be only that.
In the second version of the design document, Landeros and Devine stated: We at
Trilobyte have coined the phrase Hyper Movie to describe the medium in which we
work. The entire product was to be regarded as one big audience-participation cinematic
production.9 Indeed, thanks to innovations in digital compression and full-motion video
playback, the game is peppered with short film clips showing the actors superimposed over
the 3-D image with a transparency and aura effect (due to a technical error that fortunately
contributed to the look of the game). Contrary to their arcade game background
(film footage based laserdisc games which used computer graphics in the foreground),
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it now became the norm to stage the actors in virtual settings. By solving the brainteasers,
exploring the house, and clicking on objects, the gamer of The 7th Guest is rewarded with
sequences which uncover the desires of the ghostly visitors, expose their relationships,
and unravel their roles in Stauf s malevolent machinations. As this plot line is puzzling, it
also contributes to the overall appeal of the game.
The huge success of The 7th Guest saw the release of similar games and of a sequel, The
11th Hour (Trilobyte/Virgin Games, 1995) which was difficult to develop and did not sell
as well. Landeros teamed up with filmmaker David Wheeler, who had directed the film
parts of The 11th Hour, to produce two of the last interactive movies on DVD: Tender
Loving Care (Aftermath Media/DVD International, 1999) and Point Of View (Digital
Circus/DVD International 2001). The first, starring John Hurt, relates the weird links
which form between a husband, his lovely but sick wife, and the sensual but devious
nurse/therapist who comes to live with the couple in order to take care of the wife. The
second tells the story of a young and reclusive artist named Jane who spies on her musician
neighbor. The interactivity works the same in both cases. The movies are divided into
chapters, and each chapter ends with exit poll questions about the action and the secret
thoughts and desires of the player. The answers to those questions influence the way the
following chapter will be selected.
While mature themes and some violence are found in Tender Loving Care (which had
nudity as well) and Point Of View, the scenes were not that problematic at the end of
the 1990s since the games were rated. But this was not the case at the beginning of the
decade. For a start, many of the Sega games were based on live-action sequences. TruVideo
Productions like Fahrenheit (Sega, 1995) and Wirehead (1995) exploited a decision-tree
branching gameplay akin to Dragons Lair by putting the gamer in the shoes of a fireman
rescuing people and of a father with a wireless controller in his brain who has to escape evil
clutches. A company like Digital Pictures developed titles for the Sega CD such as the
create-your-own-music-video series Make My Video: INXS/Kriss Kross/Marky Mark & the
Funky Bunch (1992), the first person shooter Corpse Killer (1992), the rail shooter Sewer
Shark (1994), the fighting game Supreme Warrior (1994) and the basketball game Slam
City with Scottie Pippen (1995). Digital Pictures made Night Trap in 1992, one of the first
live-action video games released on the Sega CD. Tom Zito, founder of the company, was
thinking about merging movies and video games in the mid-1980s. He believed, Kent
reports, that controlling real people instead of cartoons would give games impact. 10
Although such an idea remains questionable, his game was indeed to become famous for
the controversy it sparked. Inspired by the idea of an interactive movie based on the film
A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), Night Trap, shot on location in 1986 and starring the
television celebrity Dana Plato, was not a typical video game. Playing an agent of the
S.C.A.T. (Sega Control Attack Team), the gamer has to protect a group of five girls at a
weekend house party from the vampires. By closely monitoring, through hidden cameras,
eight rooms displayed at the bottom of the film screen, the gamer needs to capture the
hooded intruders with traps concealed in the house and accessed with a code that could
be changed anytime during the game. If the gamer clicks on an operable trap at the right
moment, he captures an intruder. If he does not, the intruder leaves the room or a victim
is attacked with a weird drilling device or hangs on a meat hook. Although the action is far
from gory, the girls do not run naked everywhere in the house, and the goal is to save, not
to kill, the young ladies, Night Trap was, with the fighting game Mortal Kombat (Midway/
Acclaim, 1993), at the origin of a Congressional investigation about violence in video
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Philip Marlowe-type detective portrayed in live-action video. With this interactive 3-D
experience that [set] a new standard for realism (according to the box), creator Chris
Jones, who also plays Tex Murphy, reversed the idea behind the film The Purple Rose of
Cairo (1985), so that the spectator is participating in the virtual world13 (an idea, predictably enough, shared by the other designers of interactive movies). This world, far from
being realistic in regard to movie standards, is a 2042 futuristic San Francisco where the
hardboiled private investigator has to accomplish nothing less than to save the world in
seven days. A paradigm of the genre, the navigation in the 3-D computer graphic environment is made through a first-person perspective (to save production cost). Film clips come
into view upon clicking on objects and by interacting with people through dialog boxes.
The Pandora Directive (1996) and Tex Murphy: Overseer (1998, released on CD and
DVD), with widescreen imagery, ended the series. Various adventure mysteries
and detective movie games have been developed, such as The Dame Was Loaded (Beam
Software/Philips Interactive Media, 1995), the singular Psychic Detective (Colossal
Pictures/Electronic Arts, 1995), In the First Degree (Brderbund/Brderbund, 1995),
Ripper (Take Two Interactive/Take Two Interactive, 1996), Spycraft (Activision/Activision,
1996), Black Dahlia (Interplay/Take Two interactive, 1997) (with a record eight CDs),
Dark Side of the Moon (SouthPeak Interactive/SouthPeak Interactive, 1998) and The
X-Files Game (Hyberbole Studios/Fox Interactive, 1998). As for the latter company,
Hyperbole Studios made two early examples of VirtualCinema movies: Quantum Gate
in 1993 and The Vortex: Quantum Gate II in 1994.
The attraction of live-action video inspired celebrated game designers such as Chris
Roberts, Roberta Williams, and Jane Jensen to move in this direction. Chris Robertss
Wing Commander series was successful right from the start in 1990, depicting a galactic
war between a Confederation of human systems and the Empire of Kilrathi, a race of
warlike, feline extraterrestrials. However, Wing Commander III: Heart of the Tiger (Origin
Systems/Origin Systems, 1994) became more than just a space combat simulation.
Roberts made one of his dreams come true: he shot a (interactive) movie. (He later also
directed the film adaptation of his series in 1999.) While all the games with live-action
video were expensive, Wing Commander III was marketed as a multimillion dollar production ($3.5 million) and, above all, as professionally scripted and filmed in Hollywood
(according to the box). With a cast led by Mark Hamill (the Luke Skywalker of Star Wars),
Malcolm McDowell, and John Rhys-Davies, the game lived up to expectations. In order
to succeed in the combat sequences, the main goal of Colonel Christopher Blair (Hamill)
is to keep up the morale of his troops. Through conversations, he has to choose between
two options regarding a character or an event. The decision the gamer takes will have an
impact on what will happen next; a wingman always fights better with his morale high.
The interactive video sequences therefore serve to add depth to the characters. They also
help to further the story, a story told in the same way in Wing Commander IV: The Price
of Freedom (1995, which had an impressive budget of $12 million) and Wing Commander:
Prophecy (1997).
Carrying on the Sierra On-Line tradition of point-and-click adventure, Roberta
Williams and Jane Jensen created two classics of the interactive movie genre.
Co-founder of the company and designer of the famous Kings Quest series, Williams
wanted to try something new. She decided to make a horror game and thought it was
necessary to use real actors to truly scare people.14 The third-person perspective Phantasmagoria (Sierra On-Line/Sierra On-Line, 1995) takes place in a digitally rendered manor
and town (whereas Phantasmagoria II: A Puzzle of Flesh, not designed by Williams, would
be shot in real sets). Adrienne, the main character, has to discover the mystery of the
manor and to fight an evil spirit she ill-advisedly released and who comes to possess her
husband. The game contains a rape and several violent death scenes. Controversial
enough, it was banned by the Australian government. Nonetheless, it was considered at
the time a masterpiece and was part of the Hot Ten List (along with The 11th Hour)
in the September 1995 Electronic Gaming Monthly. Jane Jensens The Beast Within:
A Gabriel Knight Mystery (Sierra On-Line/Sierra On-Line, 1995) was also well received.
Alternating between Gabriel Knight and his assistant Grace Nakimura, the goal is to solve
the mysterious existence of a werewolf. Praised as a great adventure, it was also considered
to be one of the few successful examples of live-action video used over photographed backdrops. What is more, Jensens series is in itself very representative of the evolution of genre.
It goes from 2-D with Gabriel Knight: Sins of the Fathers (1993) to full-motion video with
The Beast Within: A Gabriel Knight Mystery and to 3-D with Gabriel Knight 3: Blood of the
Sacred, Blood of the Damned (1999).
Upon the release of Dragons Lair in 1983, associate editor Telka S. Perry underlined in
a epigraph of her article Video Games: The Next Wave, that although interactive disk
technology lent reality to arcade games (and home video games, we should add), purists
still believed the ultimate video game evolution lied in real-time computer-generated
graphics.15 This actually turned out to be true. As real-time 3-D engines grew in image
processing power during the mid-1990s and delivered a much more truly interactive experience, the production cost and the lack of malleability of the filmic image, coupled with
limited gameplay, became less appealing for both designers and gamers. Just like the early
cinema of attraction, the making of interactive movies would give way to other practices.
The interlude of the interactive cinema experiment in the 1980s and 1990s would have
shown that, indeed, video games are not the movies.
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Innovative Interfaces
Just as movies tried to win audiences back into theaters after the appearance of television,
arcade video game producers searched for ways to provide experiences that most home consoles of the time could not. Arcade games that four players could play simultaneously had
been around since the release of PONG Doubles in 1972, and were made throughout the
1970s and 1980s, but during the 1990s the number of three- and four-player games
increased dramatically. There were even some six-player games, like Segas Hard Dunk
(1994), Atari Games T-Mek (1994), Konamis X-MEN (1992), and Namcos Galaxian 3
(1990) and Attack of the Zolgear (1994); and racing games like Namcos Final Lap 2
(1991), Segas Daytona USA (1994) and Manx TT Superbike Twin (1995) which could
accommodate up to eight players when the cabinets were networked together; and one
game, Daytona USA 2: Power Edition (1999), could network up to 40 players.
Although specialized interfaces had been around since the earliest days, for example, the
steering wheel and foot pedals used in Kee Gamess Formula K, or the two mounted guns
used in Segas Balloon Gun, arcade video games of the 1990s abounded in specialized interface devices. The most common ones were cockpit games, with sit-in car seats and steering
wheels found in a wide variety of driving or racing games, such as Konamis Over Drive
(1990), Segas Rad Rally (1991) and Sega Super GT (1997), and Namcos Drivers Eyes
(1990) which had a panoramic image spread over three video monitors extending into
the players peripheral vision. Namcos Lucky & Wild (1993), a two-player cooperative
game, combined interfaces and had a steering wheel, foot pedal, and two mounted guns.
Other vehicle interfaces could be found, including motorcycle handlebars in Atari
Games Vapor TRX (1998) and Road Burners (1999), Namcos Suzuka 8 Hours (1992),
Segas Super Hang-On (1992), Motor Raid (1997), and Harley Davidson & L. A. Riders
(1998). Taitos Landing Gear (1995) was an airplane simulator with a throttle lever and
joystick interface, and Segas Airline Pilots (1999) was a commercial Boeing 777 aircraft
simulator made with the help of pilots and engineers from Japan Airlines.3 Players drove
an excavator in Taitos Power Shovel Simulator (1999), a motorboat in Stricors Powerboat
Racing (1998) (which also used three adjacent screens for a widescreen effect), a train in
Taitos Densha De Go! 2 (1999), a pedaling bicycle in Namcos Prop Cycle (1996), a hang
glider in Konamis Hang Pilot (1997), a water scooter in Namcos Aqua Jet (1996) and
Segas Wave Runner (1996), and even rode on a saddle in Namcos Final Furlong (1997).
Instead of sitting, some interfaces were designed for players to stand on and steer with
foot movement. Segas Top Skater (1997) featured a skateboard interface, while Namcos
Alpine Surfer (1996) featured a snowboard. Namco also produced two skiing games,
Alpine Racer (1995) and Alpine Racer 2 (1997), which had skis to stand on and ski poles
for the player to hold. Segas Ski Champ (1998) also had a similar interface.
Other sports games also had specialized interfaces. Gaelcos Football Power (1999) had a
soccer ball that the player kicked to move the ball about the field, while Global VRs Kick
It! (1997) had a tethered soccer ball that the player kicked into a miniature goal area
while an on-screen goalie attempted to stop it. Namcos Family Bowl (1998) used a small
bowling ball which the player rolled down a small bowling alley where sensors then used
the balls position to determine which on-screen pins were knocked down. Another
bowling game, Sterns Super Strike (1990), used a cue ball and a table-top alley. Grands
Slick Shot (1990) used a cue ball and a full-sized pool cue on a miniature pool table and
infrared sensors to detect the balls movement. Taitos Sonic Blast Man (1990) was a
boxing game with real boxing gloves, a punch target, and on-screen opponents who
reacted to the punches (players were only allowed three punches per game). Jalecos Arm
Champ (1988) and Arm Champ II (1992) had a robotic arm that players arm-wrestled.
There were even a number of fishing games, including Namcos Angler King (1990), and
Segas Sport Fishing (1994), Sport Fishing 2 (1995), Get Bass (1998), and Sega Marine
Fishing (1999), each of which featured a fishing pole interface.
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New interfaces occasionally spawn new genres of games, and the 1990s saw the rise of
rhythm and dance games, in which players had to coordinate their movements to music.
Konami produced so many of these games that it had a separate division, Benami Games,
to produce them (Benami is a combination of Beatmania and Konami).4 Deveckas
Drumscape (1990) and Konamis DrumMania series (five games over the period 1999 to
2001) all had a set of miniature drumheads that the player played on with tethered drumsticks. Konamis Beatmania series (34 games over the period 1998 to 2007) had games
featuring a five- or seven-key piano and a DJ turntable interface which the player used
interactively in time with the music playing. Namcos Guitar Jam (1999), SCEIs UmJammer Lammy (1999), and Konamis GuitarFreaks series (14 games over the period 1998 to
2006) were two-player games with two full-sized guitars that were used as an interface to
play along with the music, although players pressed buttons on the guitars instead of
strumming strings. Some DrumMania and GuitarFreaks games could even be networked
together so that two guitarists and one drummer could play a song together.
Other interfaces required physical movement that involved the players whole body.
The most famous of these, Konamis Dance Dance Revolution (1998) had players follow a
series of on-screen dance steps, dancing on a pressure-sensitive dance floor interface. The
game began a popular series of games (16 versions over the period of 1998 to 2006) and
it was even used in a physical education class in California.5 These games eventually became
available for home console systems, and in 2003, three of the top seven best-selling
PlayStation 2 games were variations of Dance Dance Revolution.6 Konami also produced
several Dance Maniax games in 2000 and 2001, in which infrared motion sensors detected
the movements of players arms and legs. A few other companies produced motion-oriented
games. Andamiro, a Korean company, released Pump It Up (1999), which had a dance floor
interface, and was sued by Konami for patent infringement. Namcos 1998 game Jumping
Groove had a much smaller interface, with one position for each foot, requiring a player
to hop on one or the other in sequence. Namco also released Balance Try the same year,
which had a rocking bar that the player tried to remain standing on while it moved.
Other unique games of the time include SNK/Sauruss The Irritating Maze (1997),
which had air jets that blasted the player suddenly when mistakes were made (the game
even had an advisory warning that people with epilepsy and pregnant women should not
play the game); Virtualitys Dactyl Nightmare (1992) featured a three-dimensional world
seen through head-mounted displays, where players could see and shoot at each others
avatars, as well as get carried off by the pterodactyl flying around in the games simple
world; VR8s Virtual Combat (1993) was a one-player game, and its head-mounted display
hung from its game cabinet for the player to wear; and finally, there was even a game which
used a computer keyboard as its input device: in Segas The Typing of the Dead (1999),
players typed words quickly and accurately to kill the zombie coming at them.
While the 1990s saw some innovative hardware in arcade video games, it was changes in
software and in particular game graphics, where home console systems were catching up
and raising players expectations, which would have to be met if the arcade was to continue.
relatively bland due to the lack of textures and smaller details. Atari would occasionally try
3-D graphics again, for example, in 1989s Hard Drivin and S.T.U.N. Runner. But not
until sufficient computing power was available could three-dimensional objects and
environments be generated that were detailed enough to compete graphically with the best
sprite-based graphics of the day. This was not only a matter of programming but of
hardware issues as well; Namcos Cyber Sled (1993), which generated filled-polygon graphics, required cooling fans to keep it from overheating.7 And many games simply did not
seem to require the extra dimensionality of 3-D graphics, such as vertically scrolling
shooting games with top-down views, which continued to be typically sprite-based even
into the late 1990s.
Another way that three-dimensional graphics were created was through the use of video
clips, consisting of either live action or hand-drawn animation. Laserdisc games began in
the 1980s, and continued into the 1990s, with games like Lelands Dragons Lair II: Time
Warp (1991) which had been completed in 1984 but was not released due to the crash
(see Chapter 18, The Video Game Industry Crash), American Laser Games Mad Dog
McCree (1990) and Mad Dog II: The Lost Gold (1991) which both included two optical
guns for firing at on-screen targets, and Segas Holosseum (1992) and Invaders 2000
(1992), which both used a parabolic mirror to give a more dimensional look to each games
imagery. With their optical guns and mirrors, these games also provided an experience hard
to duplicate in the home, but once home computers and home console systems began
using CD-ROMs and incorporating full-motion video, many laserdisc games would be
able to be adapted into home games (there was one home laserdisc game system released
in 1984, Rick Dyers Halcyon, but the system was expensive and was not widespread).
Like video imagery, there were other forms of graphics that looked three dimensional
but did not involve any actual 3-D computation. Ataris Xybots, for example, had a
three-dimensional perspective looking down a hallway, but not one which the player could
move about freely. Some games like Taitos Light Bringer (1993), Setas Twin Eagle II
(1994), and Atluss Princess Clara Daisakusen (1996), used an isometric perspective that
alleviated the flatness of the plan without requiring any 3-D computation. Other games
like Irems Dream Soccer 94 (1994) and SNKs Super Sidekicks 3The Next Glory
(1995) used an oblique perspective, which, while appearing flatter than the isometric
perspective, still managed to give a more dimensional feel to sprite-based games. Some
sprite-based games, like Konami GT (1985) used scaling sprites to create an illusion of
3-D movement.
A few games appeared in the early 1990s that did use true three-dimensional graphics.
In 1992, Virtuality released Dactyl Nightmare (described above), and Catalina Games
released Cool Pool, a pool game which had a three-dimensional pool table that could be
rotated and seen from different angles, allowing the player to set up shots.
By 1993, when Myst and Doom were released, home computer games began catching up
to arcade game graphics. Mysts graphics were prerendered stills but looked beautiful,
while Dooms were less detailed but interactive and generated in real time. That same year,
more games with true 3-D graphics began appearing in the arcade, including Segas two
fighting games Dark Edge and Virtua Fighter, Namcos Cyber Sled, VR8 Inc.s Virtual
Combat, Alternate Worlds Technologys Wolfenstein VR, Konamis Polygonet Commanders,
and Atari Gamess Hard Drivins Airborne. A new company, Virtual World, also produced
two eight-player games, Battletech (1993) and Red Planet (1993), though they were
limited to the Virtual World sites and not found in arcades.
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During the next two years, 1994 and 1995, more 3-D games were released, including
Namcos Soul Edge (1995) and the first two games of its Tekken series, Segas Virtua Striker
(1994), Semicoms Hyper Pac-Man (1994), Stratas Drivers Edge (1994), Namcos Ridge
Racer 2 (1994), and Taitos Real Puncher (1994). During most of the 1990s, 3-D graphics
mainly appeared in fighting and racing games. Fighting games typically had two characters
attacking each other with a variety of moves, so the 3-D computation was usually limited
just to the two characters (although some later games, like Tekken 3 (1997) did have threedimensional backgrounds). In racing games, the race course was a 3-D landscape that the
player drove through with a first-person perspective, so possible points of view were
limited by the roadway itself.
In 1995, home games made another leap into 3-D graphics, with the release of two
32-bit home console systems, the Sega Saturn and Sony PlayStation (both had appeared
first in Japan at the end of 1994, but were released in North America in 1995), and a
64-bit system, the Nintendo 64, was released in 1996. The new generation of home
console systems could do three-dimensional computation, more specialized controllers
were available, and home games in many ways had finally caught up to arcade games.
In the coming years as even more powerful home consoles appeared, the arcade would
find itself in decline.
cockpits, each center also has a lounge and snack bar where players can relax, watch
replays of the game, and receive sheets with scores and accounts of game events. Other
merchandise like jackets and plastic figures are also available.
In 1997 several well-known media companies began opening chains of location-based
entertainment centers, including Disney, Sony, Viacom, and Sega, whose GameWorks
was a joint venture with DreamWorks and Universal Studios. Nolan Bushnell, the
founder of Atari, opened the uWink Media Bistro, a restaurant with video games at every
table. In some ways, however, some of the new game centers have distanced themselves
from the image that arcades once had. For example, despite trying to be a place where
people could meet and socialize, GameWorks initially attracted more young male video
gamers than they expected and decided to change their emphasis to games like bowling
and skee-ball instead, looking for a different image and demographics. According to
Maureen Tkacik writing for The Wall Street Journal,
Instead of singles in their 20s running up big bar and food tabs, GameWorks was attracting a
mostly male, mostly underage crowd that was deeply obsessed with video games and not much else.
Same-store sales, or sales at locations open at least a year, began to plummet, the expansion stopped
and earlier this year DreamWorks sold out as a partner.
Now, the company, jointly opened by Sega and Vivendi, is in the midst of a turnaround effort
led by Chairman and Chief Executive Ron Benison.. . .Benison has settled on. . .diversions like
bowling, skee-ball, bingo and billiards.9
In Japan as well, the 1990s saw arcades being transformed into amyuuzumento sentaa
(amusement centers) that were more family oriented and untainted by the seedy image
that arcades sometimes had.10
On the other end of the spectrum, there are still places where games are the central
focus. At game centers like Cyberglobe and Cyberglobe 2, both in the Bay Area surrounding San Fransisco, California, players sit at tables lined with networked computers which
offer groups a chance to compete together in games like Counter-Strike (1999) or compete
on home game systems like the Xbox. By 2003, the number of such game centers was
growing rapidly. According to Mark Nielsen of iGames (http://igames.org/), an organization helping game centers work together, What were seeing now is the very beginning of
a trend that is just beginning to explode. There are easily 1,000 legitimate centers in the
United States today. I expect this number to continue to grow for years and years.11
The future of game centers will depend on the sense of community they can generate,
to give players a place to go and a reason to play outside of their homes, where both
networked games and some of the most advanced video game technology now resides,
sometimes along with the old arcade video games themselves.
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collective knowledge, they began the Killer List of Videogames, and later in 2002,
the International Arcade Museum, of which the KLOV became a part. Today,
www.klov.com stands as arguably the greatest online resource for arcade video game information, with information and images from thousands of games. Many other websites,
such as www.gamespot.com, www.basementarcade.com, and www.gamespy.com, are also
sources of video game news, reviews, and other game information for collectors.
During the 1990s, museums also began looking at arcade video games as historical artifacts. From June 1989 to May 1990, the American Museum of the Moving Image
(AMMI) in Astoria, New York, ran the exhibition Hot Circuits: A Video Arcade, which
included selected arcade video games from Computer Space (1971) onwards.12 The 1990s
saw a number of other museum exhibitions of video games, including a traveling
collection, Keith Feinsteins Videotopia, which also maintains a presence on the Internet
(www.videotopia.com). Magazines have catered to collectors as well; in 1997 GameRoom
Magazine, which covered the collecting of jukeboxes and arcade machines, widened its
scope to include arcade video games, and in 2001 they published The Arcade Video Game
Price Guide, one of the first guides of its kind.13
Even some of the arcade games released in the 1990s were themselves retro games. Along
with 3-D updates of older games, like Namcos Xevious 3D/G (1996) and Taitos G-Darius
(1997), machines were released containing the old games themselves, like Namco Classic
Collection Volume 1 (1995) and Volume 2 (1996), Braze Technologies Double Donkey
Kong (1999), and Two-Bit Scores Pac-Man Super ABC (1999), each of which had multiple
games in their original versions.14 Versions of home games also appeared in collections for
home computers, and downloads of some of them appeared on the Internet for emulators
like MAME, which tried to digitally recreate the games on personal computers.
Though the arcades have all but vanished, the games themselves have not. They are now
firmly a part of late twentieth century culture and nostalgia, and their legacy continues to
influence the video game industry which they began and introduced to the public, paving
the way for all the other branches of the industry to come.
CHAPTER
24
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Between 1976 and 1978 Mattel released several handheld games, many of them based
on sports, such as Baseball and Basketball. In 1978 Coleco followed Mattels lead and
released its own series of handheld sports games under the name Head-To-Head. Unlike
the Mattel games, Colecos Head-To-Head series could be played by two people, in addition
to one against the computer. The units themselves looked like two of the Mattel handhelds
fused together with one common screen in the center. Players sat across from one another.
In 1974 Atari released an arcade game called Touch Me. The machine consisted of large
buttons which had lights that randomly flashed. The player had to press the buttons in the
same order that the machine flashed them to stay in the game. And when a person lost, the
machine would sound off an annoying rasping noise. The game was a flop. However,
when it was on display at the Music Operators of America (MOA) show in November
1976, Ralph Baer, the inventor of home video games, noticed it. Although he liked the
game itself, the package did not impress him
A few months later Baer decided to build a handheld game based on the childrens game
Simon Says. Using Touch Me as a model, he and his partner Howard Morrison, discarded
the things they did not like about the game such as its annoying sounds, which they
replaced with four pleasant-sounding bugle tones. The finished product was sold to
Milton Bradley who named the unit Simon and released it in time for the 1978 holiday
season. It also became the top-selling electronic game of all time.1
Coincidentally, Atari decided to release a handheld version of Touch Me. The handheld
Touch Me, which resembled a yellow calculator, was released in 1978 prior to Simon but it
failed to attract an audience. After Simons release Touch Me joined a long list of electronic
games that were referred as Simon clones.
Programmable Handhelds
In 1979, Milton Bradley followed Simon with another handheld unit which it called
Microvision. Designed by Jay Smith of Smith Engineering, the Microvision had a twoinch square LCD screen and a dial controller. The graphics were small and blocky but
they allowed more movement than the light emitting screens that were found on the
previous handheld.
The Microvision system was programmable in the sense that is used interchangeable
game cartridges. Milton Bradley released a series of cartridges that were challenging,
despite the small screen. Unlike the programmable consoles that were on the market,
the Microvision did not have its own CPU, the central processor that processed all data.
Instead, each of the Microvision cartridges had their own 4-bit microprocessors that
allowed the system to be easily upgradeable as new cartridges came with more powerful
CPUs.
Game Boy featured a monochrome LCD screen and interchangeable game cartridges.
The Game Boy was smaller than the Microvision, roughly the size of a Sony Walkman,
which made it easier to fit into pockets and make it more portable. Contributing to the
success of the Game Boy was the fact that Nintendo adapted many of its hit games from
the NES to the Game Boy. One game in particular was so hot that people bought Game
Boys just to have it.
Tetris had already been a success on every console and computer that it could be played
on. Nintendo realized that with its game complexity and simple graphics it would be
a natural for the Game Boy. They even packaged Tetris with the Game Boy and this marketing strategy sold millions. The Game Boy was successful right from the beginning and
the popularity still continues although the Game Boy itself has changed over the years.
In 1996 Nintendo released the first major change to the Game Boy with the Game Boy
Pocket. This unit was smaller than the original Game Boy although it featured a larger
screen.
In Japan the following year, Nintendo released a Game Boy that contained a backlight.
The Game Boy Light was scheduled to be released outside of Japan in 1998 but Nintendos
development suddenly went in a different direction. Instead of releasing a Game Boy
Light, Nintendo released something people had been waiting for, the Nintendo Game
Boy Color, which featured a color screen.
The Game Boy Color was backwards compatible. This meant that it could play all the
games that had been introduced for the prior Game Boys. However, these games would
not play in true color on the Game Boy Color. Instead, the Game Boy Color would substitute each monochrome shade into a color. However, Nintendo introduced new games
that would play in color on the Game Boy Color and in monochrome on the earlier
units. The games came in different colored cartridges so people could tell them apart.
The original monochrome games came in gray cartridges and the color games came in
black cartridges. Before long, though, companies began producing color games that
could only be played on the Game Boy Color and could not be played on the earlier units.
These games were housed in clear cartridges.
The year 2001 brought the Game Boy Advance, a 32-bit system that had Super NES
quality graphics and which was completely compatible with all of the prior Game Boy
cartridges. The cartridges themselves were half the size of the original Game Boy cartridges
and would not fit any system except the Advance. Unlike the previous vertical units that
had the screen at the top and the controls at the bottom, the Advance was a horizontally
oriented system. The screen was in the center with controls on both sides of it.
Nintendo returned to vertically oriented handhelds with the Game Boy Advance SP
in 2003. This system had a clamshell design that allowed the screen to fold over the
controls to close it and keep dust out. It also featured a backlit screen and was completely
compatible with all previous Game Boy games.
In 2004 Nintendo introduced a new handheld which they simply called the DS, which
unofficially stood for dual screen. The DS had two screens, which were not backlit, one on
the top and one on the bottom, and the two closed together like the Advance SP. The top
screen represented a standard game while the bottom allowed the use of a stylus. Although
the DS was never officially part of the Game Boy line, it did accept all of the Game Boy
Advance cartridges, along with its own games that were housed on flash memory cards.
Nintendo released a new Game Boy in 2005. The Game Boy Micro was a tiny, horizontally oriented unit with a large screen in the center. This was the first Game Boy that was
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not 100 percent compatible with previous models. Like the DS, it would only accept
Game Boy Advance cartridges.
Nintendos 2006 entry in the handheld market was the DS Light. The system is a
redesigned DS with a backlight.
Other Handhelds
Although Nintendo dominated the programmable handheld market for over 15 years,
other companies have continually tried to compete. Most have failed for one reason or
another.
Atari released a handheld unit in 1989 at approximately the same time as the original
Game Boy. The Lynx was a 16-bit color system, originally designed by Epyx, a leading
gaming software company at the time. Unfortunately, Atari priced the unit at $189,
whereas the Game Boy only cost $109. Unlike the Game Boy, the Lynx also contained
custom chips. Nintendo was easily able to supply enough Game Boys during Christmas
while Atari was not able to keep up with the demand.
Atari redesigned the Lynx and in 1990 released the Lynx II, a smaller version of the
original color handheld. Atari was able to drop the price of the new unit to $99, which
improved sales, although by that time the Game Boy dominated the market.
In May 1991, Sega joined Atari in the color handheld market by releasing the Game
Gear. Despite costing more than the Lynx, being larger in size, and having a lower battery
life, the Game Gear outsold the Lynx. The Game Gear was also compatible with Segas
Master System, which helped sales. By 1994, Atari focused its attention on the Jaguar,
its final console, and the Lynx faded into obscurity.
In 1995 Sega decided to release the Nomad, a handheld version of its popular Genesis
system. This portable system accepted all Genesis games and marked the first time that
a console was released as a handheld system. But the unit drained batteries rapidly, and
although an AC adaptor was available, the use of an adaptor meant the loss of portability,
making it simply a more expensive version of the Sega Genesis.
Additional Handhelds
In 1992 a Hong Kong based company called Watara released a handheld unit called the
Supervision. Its monochrome LCD screen, the largest on any handheld system available,
was built into a pivoting base which allowed players to tilt the screen if there was too much
glare. The buttons on the unit were larger than those on the Game Boy and spaced a little
farther apart.
The Supervision initially sold for $50 and included one game with additional cartridges
selling for between $8 and $18. The games themselves were simpler than those available
for the Game Boy. The system itself had limited distribution and was not known by the
general public. It disappeared from the few stores that sold it in 1992.
Tiger Electronics released its first entry into the programmable handheld market in 1997.
While the $69.99 game.com had a monochrome LCD screen like the Game Boy, it also
employed a few built-in extras such as a solitaire game, a calculator, address and phone
number database, and a calendar. One unusual feature of the game.com was the inclusion
of a stylus and touch-screen technology, seven years before Nintendo decided to include this
in the DS. While the stylus could be used to select menu choices, its main purpose was to
compose messages. This was extremely important because the game.com could connect to
the Internet and users could sign up for an online text-based e-mail service. But the system
was not able to store data so users could not save or print their messages.
Thanks to a combination of poor distribution, a small game catalog, and limited
marketing, the game.com could not compete against the Game Boy. Tiger redesigned
the system and released the smaller game.com Pocket Pro in 1998 with a retail price of
$50. However, by then it was too little too late and the game.com faded into oblivion
in 2000.
In 1998, SNK, the company behind the NeoGeo console, decided to release a monochrome handheld system, and curiously the company chose the name of its old console
for it. The NeoGeo Pocket lasted approximately a year when it was replaced by the NeoGeo
Pocket Color. The older system was able to play most of the color games made for the newer
system although they naturally did not appear in color on the monochrome sets.
In 2000, SNK was purchased by a Japanese company called Aruze. At the time, North
American and European sales of the handheld system were dropping and the remaining
stock was returned to Asia for repackaging. Surprisingly, this stock returned to the United
States in 2003 where the system was bundled with six cartridges. With a lack of promotion and a large catalog of games, these repackaged systems did not sell very well.
Japanese toy company Bandai, which had tried to break into the video game business
several times, finally got its chance in 1999 when it released the Wonderswan. The system
was released only in Japan. Some critics felt that it had a good chance of competing against
Nintendos formidable system because it had been developed by Koto, a company
founded by Gunpei Yokoi, the man who originally designed the Game Boy.
Like the NeoGeo that came out before it, the Wonderswan initially was monochrome
but it was replaced by the Wonderswan Color a year later. Although at first the Wonderswan held its own against the Game Boy Color, Nintendos system eventually pulled ahead
and knocked it into anonymity.
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But the PDA was not meant to be merely a PlayStation peripheral. Sony planned to
release simple games that would play only on the PDA. Software would be available on
standard PlayStation discs that could be loaded into the PDA via the game console. Sony
planned to have 12 titles available upon the PDAs release and at least one third party
company, Square, also planned to support the PDA.
Sony changed the name of the PDA to PocketStation and released the unit only in
Japan on January 23, 1999. The tiny handheld system sold out immediately and Sony
soon claimed that because the demand for the PocketStation was so high in Japan, it
would have to postpone the U.S. and European launch so it could meet the demand
adequately.
When the PlayStation 2 became official, Sony announced that it was going to revamp
the PocketStation so it could be used with the new console. This decision effectively
cancelled all plans for the PocketStation to be released outside of Japan. Sony planned to
upgrade the PDA by adding more memory and increasing the battery power.
Unfortunately for people who bought the PocketStation, Sony never supported it.
Instead, the company abandoned the playable memory card, concentrating entirely on
the PS2.
To the Future
Where will the future of portable gaming lead? It is hard to say. Some companies such as
Sony and Microsoft believe that the future of portability lies in shrinking the consoles to
portable size. Nintendo seems to be following its path of simplicity. And other companies
believe that the future of portable games are in cell phones and PDAs. Whichever idea is
correct in the end, it is safe to assume that portable games will be around for a long time
to come.
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CHAPTER
25
SHAREWARE GAMES:
BETWEEN HOBBYIST AND PROFESSIONAL
Brett Camper
With the arrival in the early 1980s of personal computersthe IBM PC, Apple II, Atari
400/800, Commodore 64, and othershome computer games became a bourgeoning
commercial industry. It was an acutely entrepreneurial period, and many hobbyist
programmers were curious about selling their games, or showcasing them in an effort to
land a full-time job in the new industry. Several groundbreaking games of the period that
we know as commercial titles actually began as amateur efforts, including: Rogue, the
archetypical dungeon crawler that helped pioneer the statistical role-playing genre and
use of randomly generated environments; Lode Runner, the fast-paced single-screen goldcollecting game in which digging holes is the players only means of avoiding capture;
and Zork, a canonical text adventure set as a sprawling fantasy-comedy. But at the same
time that such movement from amateur to professional developer was common, an
alternate, third category that blurred these lines was also developing.
Shareware is a distribution method that attempts to preserve some of the communal
aspects that characterized game development on university mainframes, while harnessing
the monetary benefits of commercial software. A shareware program is often released
in two variants: the free version, which is available without payment and encourages
its own copying and redistribution by users (thus a kind of word of mouth or viral
marketing); and the registered (or paid) version, which usually improves upon the free
with additional features or documentation. Sharewares free distributions often exhort the
user to register for the full version by sending payment directly to the author. In the
pre-World Wide Web 1980s and early 1990s, most shareware (both games and more
general applications) could be registered for anywhere between $10 and $40, a fee
commonly delivered as a check or even cash via regular postal mail. Diskettes, a manual,
or a registration code for the full program could then be expected in return.
Sharewares messages can be ambivalent, a mixture of salesmanship promising
more advanced capabilities, an appeal to the users desire to contribute to a community
of grassroots software development, and outright guilt-tripping pleas for compensation.
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The related term freeware usually indicates that the full version of the program
is available without a registration fee, and as such payment, while often requested
for goodwill, is even more discretionary. Though shareware and freeware are often
discussed together, freeware retains a greater association with hobbyists, while shareware
is considered entrepreneurialin the terms of the late 1990s Internet boom, shareware
is analogous to dot-com startups, with freeware closer to user-run community websites.
The shareware concept is generally attributed to a trio of developers, each of whom created important early business programs: Jim Knopf s database software PC-File (1982);
Andrew Fluegelmans PC-Talk (1982), a networking program for using dial-up modems;
and Bob Wallaces PC-Write (1983), a word processor. Despite its office-software roots,
however, PC game programmers quickly took up the form and began releasing shareware
and freeware in the mid-1980s.
Figure 25.1 Deceptively simple. Abstract, text-based, but frighteningly intelligent H-shaped
adversaries in Beast (1984).
in the horizontal scrolling format reveal the landscape at a fixed, steady pace from left to
right (or in the unusual case of Namcos Sky Kid, from right to left), Sopwith allows (and
often requires) the player to roam the map at will, doubling back until all targets have been
destroyed.
Historically, one of the most interesting aspects of Sopwith is the tenuous position it
occupied between hobbyist freeware and commercial business software. When he wrote
the game, Clark was a programmer at BMB Compuscience, a Canadian database and
networking company. He included a multiplayer mode in order to demonstrate BMBs
just-developed PC networking technology, Imaginet. But while for-profit, BMB was not
a game company, and Sopwith was given away for free to promote Imaginet at tradeshows.
Twenty years later the game has maintained a devoted followingClark released a definitive authors edition in 2000while needless to say, the proprietary Imaginet is an
obscurity known only from the history of the game. Sopwith is a lesson in the difficulty
of technological prediction, and the influence of programmers personal interests on the
products of their employers.
Probably one of the best loved PC shareware games is the turn-based tank fighter
Scorched Earth (19911995) by Wendell Hicken. At first glance a simplistic hit-or-be-hit
series of cannon volleys, Scorched Earths increasingly exotic ammo (homing missiles,
vaporizers, dirt bombs, and other concoctions), randomly generated landscapes and
weather conditions, and social play style create a deep replayability. Particularly well
known is its hot seat multiplayer mode, in which players alternate turns in front of a
single computer. The precision physics ultimately have more in common with video game
adaptations of sports such as pool or golf than with most war games per se. Like many
popular shareware and freeware titles, Scorched Earth succeeds by limiting its ambitions,
catering to the particular (and often restrictive) capabilities of the early PC, opting for a
stripped down graphical style: a single-screen, side-view mountain range done up in a
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Figure 25.2 Sopwith (19841986). This game appears simple, but it is a surprisingly sophisticated flying game.
Figure 25.3 Tiny turn-based tanks with a big bang. A war game that doesnt take itself too seriously, Scorched Earths bright colors and precise missile aim are reminiscent of billiards or miniature golf.
handful of bright, saturated colors. Scorched Earths instantly addictive appeal is infamous,
and its strong influence is evident in the commercial Worms franchise, a success across
several game platforms.
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and postal exchange. The two most prominent of these full-service shareware publishers
were Apogee Software and Epic MegaGames. Initially each company simply extended the
reach of its founders own games: Scott Miller of Apogees Kingdom of Kroz (1987), and
Tim Sweeney of Epics ZZT (1991). Both games offered a mix of adventure and puzzle play
in a light fantasy theme, and both evolved the ASCII text graphics mode of Rogue and Beast
to new levels of complexity with expansive, colorful maps interconnected across screens.
Kroz eventually developed into an eight-game series, while ZZTs level editor allowed users
to extend the game with their own worlds, carrying its appeal to the current day.
With these early successesZZT is said to have garnered over 30,000 registrations for
Sweeney1Apogee and Epic began ramping up their publishing operations, providing a
regimented distribution framework far more organized than solo developers previously
had. Apogee released side-scrolling platform games like its in-house creation Duke Nukem
(1991), and Commander Keen (1990) from id Software, an up-and-coming shareware
developer founded by four friends from Texas and a client of Apogees distribution services
that would go on to create the blockbusters Doom and Quake. Epic countered with the Jill
of the Jungle series in 1992. But while popular on the PC by shareware standards, these
action games lacked in innovation, and none could hold a technological candle to Super
Mario Bros. 3 on the NES, or Super Mario World (1991) on the SNES, the pinnacle of
platformers by which all comers were judged. The IBM PC, intended more for business
applications than games, simply did not have the dedicated graphics hardware found on
game consoles from Nintendo and Sega.
One game published by Apogee in May 1992 changed all that, however: Wolfenstein
3D, id Softwares World War II-themed, Nazi-hunting, verging-on-camp breakthrough
single-handedly popularized modern three-dimensional gaming and established the
first-person shooter (FPS) genre that has been a staple in the 15 years since. While
Wolfenstein 3D and its successor Doom are without a doubt the most widely known and
successful games ever to use the shareware model, they were not the only advances to show
that PCs could compete with and occasionally rival the flash of the console systems. 1994
in particular was a bumper year for Apogee and Epic, bringing a stream of releases with
top-notch coding, graphics, and gameplay: Arjan Brussee, a skilled Dutch graphics
programmer, finally made PC side-scrollers respectable with Jazz Jackrabbit from Epic;
One Must Fall: 2097 (also Epic), was a highly capable 2-D fighter, offering some tweaks
to the genre by employing robots as characters; and the vertical shoot-em-up genre, long
the province of the arcade and consoles, was tackled by Apogees Raptor: Call of the
Shadows, and Brussees next effort Tyrian, from Epic (1995).
Tellingly, these games were almost exclusively published, but not developed, by Epic
and Apogee. That such middlemen companies could not only support themselves but
indeed thrive through the shareware method signaled a continuing loss of meaningful
distinction between shareware and the mainstream commercial games industry. One final
example in this transition was Descent (1995), a unique 3-D action game that had players
piloting a small craft through futuristic mining tunnels in outer space. The engine
expanded upon the 3-D capabilities of predecessors in the first-person shooter genre by
introducing a full six degrees of freedom, facilitated by the zero-gravity space theme
allowing the player to seamlessly look and move in all directions rather than remain
confined to the ground. Descent was as technically sophisticated as any commercial PC
game of the time, and while developed by the small company Parallax, it was published
as shareware by Interplay, a traditional, fully commercial house that did not arise from
Figure 25.4 One Must Fall 2097 (1994). This was one of the few successful action fighting
games on the PC.
the same independent development community as did Epic and Apogee. The latter publishers themselves drifted from their shareware associations and became fully integrated
into the larger industry, where they remain prominent today: Apogee changed its brand
name to 3D Realms in 1996 and subsequently developed the successful Max Payne games
(2001), while Epic is responsible for the Unreal series (1998) and technology engine that
underlies many of todays most popular 3-D games. As home Internet access rapidly
increased in the mid-1990s, commercial game companies began offering extensive
demos of upcoming or newly released games, a free source of entertainment that drew
attention and viability away from the remaining shareware developers who had not
already gone to larger distribution houses. By the final years of the decade, the shareware
model had fallen from favor.
The shareware era of the 1980s and 1990s was neither the beginning nor the end of
games produced and distributed by individuals. As far back as the 1960s, programmers
on university campuses across the country were trading and tweaking their own games,
and freeware games (even if the term has lost much of its popularity) continue on many
platforms today, with Web-based games the most notable. Yet for many curious users,
shareware and freeware were the first chance to find and play video gamescommercial
or otherwiseon the new personal computers. Shareware flourished not only on IBM
PC compatibles, but also on practically all home computer platforms of the day, including
the Commodore 64, Atari 400/800 and ST, Spectrum ZX, and others. These games made
many contributions to the evolution of gameplay and genre conventions, while the do-ityourself spirit and economic experiments of what Jim Knopf (one of the original
shareware founders) called user-supported software2 help to provide us with a richer
social context for understanding video gamings establishment as a media industry, one
of the largest and most important of our time.
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PART IV
CHAPTER
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Play Station which would have a cartridge slot for SNES cartridges and play games
designed for the SNES CD. However, the deal also gave Sony complete control of all
the titles that would be developed for the CDs. When Nintendo president Hiroshi
Yamauchi learned this he immediately ceased all partnerships with Sony and signed
Philips to create the CD format.
Philipss approach was to make the SNES CD format compatible with its own CD-i
format, which it planned to release as a standalone multimedia unit in 1991. Philips
also obtained the right to use Nintendo characters such as Zelda and Mario in CD-i applications.
In the end, Nintendos marriage with Philips dissolved, along with its plans to release a
CD player for the SNES. In hindsight this may not have necessarily been a bad thing
considering what happened to Sega.
Segas CD player, an add-on for the Genesis, was released in Japan in late 1991 and in
the United States nearly a year later under the name Sega CD. Unfortunately it was not
the hit that the Sega executives expected it to be. This may have been due to the games
that Sega released for the system. Rather than using the expanded storage to use for more
sophisticated games, Sega used it mostly for full-motion video. At the time FMV was a
novelty for games, but it really did not add anything to the play and consumers simply
were not willing to spend money on games that simply were not fun.
Despite the apparent failure of CDs, nobody was giving up on them. In 1991, Trip
Hawkins, the founder of software giant Electronic Arts, started a new company called
3DO. Hawkinss aim was to create a universal console using the CD as the medium to
deliver games. Rather than calling it a video game console, Hawkins sold the idea as a
multimedia device similar to Philipss CD-i and Commodore CDTV systems, both of
which were introduced in 1991. A multimedia device is simply a computer without a
keyboard or a mouse which played interactive software (not necessarily games) that were
supplied on CDs. The units were touted as educational devices since much of the software
was of the encyclopedic variety.
The CDTV and CD-i systems were not commercial successes, mainly because the
public was not exactly sure what they were. Were they computers? Were they game
consoles? The distinction was not clear, and the systems were not heavily promoted or
explained to the public.
Commodore tried to better define the line between video game console and multimedia
console when it released the Amiga CD32 in September 1993. The company specifically
touted the system as a CD-based, 32-bit game machine. Priced at $400, the system came
onto the market with a lot of readily available software since it was compatible with the
nearly defunct CDTV system.
Although the CD32 was fairly successful in Europe, it could not make an impact in the
North American market. And its success in Europe was short lived as well. Commodore
could not meet the demand for new units because of component supply problems.
When Commodore International filed for bankruptcy in April 1994, the CD32 was
discontinued.
The 3DO was released in October 1993, one month following the CD32. The system,
which was manufactured by several companies including Panasonic and Sanyo, enjoyed a
major publicity campaign. Kiosks set up in shopping malls allowed people to experience
the system hands-on. Unfortunately this was not enough to make 3DO as common a
word as audio and video (Hawkinss original idea was that his console was the third
logical component after aud-DO and vi-DO, hence, 3DO). Although there were
many educational titles available for the 3DO, there also were many games which gave
consumers the impression that the 3DO was just another gaming console. And its $700
retail price did not exactly make it affordable for most households.
If the 3DO was a multimedia console that pretended to be a video game, then the Atari
Jaguar was just the opposite. Ataris final console was released in late 1993 and cost $250.
Although Atari touted the system as a 64-bit machine, purists claimed that this was
inaccurate, much in the same way that the Turbografx-16 was not a true 16-bit machine.
Regardless, the system was more powerful than the other gaming consoles on the market
at the time and it sold pretty well initially. But developers found the system hard to
program, and despite Ataris claim that over 20 third-party developers had signed on,
software was never abundant for the console. When the newer 32-bit consoles arrived
from Sony and Sega, they pretty much sealed Ataris fate.
Sega Systems
The new 32-bit consoles would not be available until late 1994 in Japan. In the interim,
Sega released a curious device called the 32X, an add-on adaptor that turned the Genesis
into a 32-bit gaming console.
Segas purpose for the 32X was to get a jump over Nintendo into the 32-bit market.
The unit plugged into the cartridge slot of the Genesis and could accept any standard
Genesis game where it would act merely as a pass-through. However, it could also accept
special 32-bit cartridges that took advantage of the 32-bit processor. In addition, the Sega
32X could be used in conjunction with the Sega CD, and a new line of 32X-CD games
were released.
The 32X never caught on with the public. Its $150 price tag, and the fact that Sega had
a true 32-bit console coming out within the year, resulted in the units failure.
Exactly when Segas 32-bit console, the Saturn, was going to be released was a matter of
speculation. The system had been in development for over two years to make sure that it
met the exact needs of both the Japanese and American markets. Sega rushed out the final
specifications in order to get the system on the market before Sony, who was also going to
release a console that year. The design itself, with eight processors, including two CPUs,
made it very difficult for third party companies to make the best use out of all its power.
In addition, the system used off the shelf components rather than custom chips, which
meant that a lot of the power had to be handled through programming, instead of letting
the system do much of the work. Another road block for third party design was the lack of
useful development tools. Programmers had to use difficult assembly language to obtain
decent performance and in most cases this difficulty only led them to use only one of
the dual CPUs.
Like the Sega systems before it, the Saturn featured a cartridge slot; but software was
only being offered on CDs. The slot was for additional future add-on peripherals.
The release of the Saturn was set for fourth quarter 1994; the actual release date
depended on Sony. Following the 1991 Consumer Electronics Show surprise in which
Nintendo announced it was dropping Sony in favor of Philips, Sony first considered dropping all of its plans for its Play Station (the name was originally two words instead of one)
console which would play CD games as well as SNES cartridges, but decided to continue
with the development that had already started. When Nintendo learned that Sony was still
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planning a console that would accept SNES cartridges, it filed a lawsuit against Sony claiming that Nintendo owned the Play Station name. As 1992 came to a close, Sony and
Nintendo settled their differences stemming from the agreement for Sony to make a CD
player for the SNES, as well as its own Play Station, which would be compatible with the
CD player and SNES cartridges. By this time, Nintendo permitted Sony to go ahead with
its SNES-compatible Play Station as long as Nintendo controlled the rights to all of the
CD games that were designed for it.
Sony PlayStation
At this point Sony questioned the future of the SNES and realized the system
was beginning to show its age. Although Nintendo had not announced any new systems,
it was apparent that the SNES was old technology. Sony decided to go ahead with a standalone console but one that would not be compatible with the SNES. The new 32-bit
system was to be called the PlayStation.
In April 1994, Sony officially announced that the PlayStation would be released
in Japan by years end and in North America and Europe in the following September.
The delay outside of Japan was to give developers in the foreign countries enough time
to create extraordinary games. Sony also demonstrated the capabilities of the PlayStation.
The custom chips within the PlayStation featured an R3000A 32-Bit RISC CPU that was
supported by three high-performance subsystems. This let the PlayStation create sophisticated 3-D geometric graphics that would rival workstations costing tens of thousands of
dollars. The system could also play full-motion video. And while the PlayStation was
completely CD-driven, gamers could plug in, for the first time ever, external memory
cards that would allow them to save game data.
Sega had 170,000 Saturns available for sale in Japan on November 22, 1994.1 Among
the games that were available for the Saturn at its launch was Virtua Fighter, the worlds
first 3-D-based fighting game. Sonys Japanese launch of the PlayStation followed 11 days
later. Sony only had 100,000 units available at the onset so sales of the PlayStation were
limited to one per customer. By years end all of the original Saturns sold out while
a few PlayStations remained on store shelves. Critics felt that the PlayStation was the
superior machine but it did not yet have any popular titles like Virtua Fighter.
The American releases of the two consoles followed in 1995. Both were shown at
the CES in January and release dates were announced. Saturday, September 2, was set
for the Saturn and in a publicity move, Sega called it Saturnday. Sony announced
that the American PlayStation would arrive 20 days later on September 22. The $299
price for the PlayStation was announced several months later at the very first Electronic
Entertainment Exhibition (E3), which was held in May. Sega did not believe that
Sony could deliver a console at the caliber that Sony claimed for that price. And Sega
had its own bombshell of an announcement at E3. It was there that Sega told the
E3 crowd that the Saturns promised September 2 launch date had simply been a
decoy to throw Sony off. To everyones surprise 30,000 Saturns were released that
very day in four retail chains: Toys R Us, Electronics Boutique, Babbages, and
Software Etc. Each system carried a $399 retail price and was packed with Virtua
Fighter.
Unfortunately, this plan backfired on Sega. Third party companies were caught by
surprise so the only games available at launch were those released by Sega. Retailers who
were not included in the launch, like Wal-Mart, were upset with Sega for not including
them. Executives at KB Toys were so upset that they refused to carry the Saturn or its
successor, the Dreamcast, in their stores. Shelf space that would have been used for the
Saturn was instead allocated to the PlayStation.
Sony released the American PlayStation on September 9. By that time, nearly 100,000
consoles had already been sold through pre-orders, a new record for any console. By the
end of 1995, Sega dropped the price of the Saturn to $299. But by then the PlayStation
had a leading edge which it refused to relinquish.
Nintendo 64
Adding to Segas woes was Nintendos 1996 release of a 64-bit console, simply called the
Nintendo 64 (N64). The system was launched in Japan on June 23 and was followed in
North America in September 1997.
Going against the trend, Nintendo opted to continue using cartridges rather than
CDs. The company received flack for this because not only were cartridges more
expensive to produce (and therefore to sell), but the lead time to manufacture them
was much longer than with optical media. And while left unstated, critics knew Nintendo
wanted to retain its stringent control of everything associated with the N64 from licensing
to manufacturing. Nintendo stood by its decision, claiming access time was quicker with a
cartridge. In an effort to please its customers, Nintendo announced that it would release a
magnetic disc drive, called the 64DD, in 1997. In addition to using the 64DD to save
games, games would be sold in the disc format beginning with an N64 version of
The Legend of Zelda. Nintendo also planned to release a memory expansion pack which
would add an additional four megabytes of main memory to the console.
When the first 300,000 N64s were launched in Japan along with three games,
80 percent of them already had been pre-sold, breaking the pre-order record set by
Sony. Few retailers received systems that they could sell to people who had not preordered it. All of the launch consoles sold out on the first day and Nintendo shipped
an additional 200,000 systems three days later which also sold out in one day. June
ended with the release of another 200,000 units and Nintendo released one million
more during the summer. The company then concentrated on its American launch.
The biggest surprise occurred a month before the September date when Nintendo
announced that the American system would retail for $200. This last-minute announcement had been designed to prevent Sony and Sega from planning competitive price
cuts.
The N64 sold 500,000 pre-orders in North America despite the fact that only two titles
were available (Pilot Wings and Super Mario 64). This was the same amount that Sony had
sold in three months and which Sega had sold in an entire year. Because the console sold
well, Nintendo decided to double the amount of available consoles, taking the additional
supply from units allocated for Japan and Europe. Despite this success, critics still wondered if the cartridge-based system could really compete against CD-based systems in
the long run. Nintendo was certain it could as long as their cartridge-based games were
high quality. Super Mario 64 apparently was. The Video Software Dealers Association
reported that Super Mario 64 generated $52,000 in rental fees during its first week of
release. On the average, one copy of Super Mario 64 was being rented every minute for
an entire week straight!
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Sega Dreamcast
With the success of the N64, Sega of Americas president, Bernie Stolar, saw that the
Saturn was languishing in third place. In early 1997, Sega of Japan agreed with Stolar that
the company needed a new console and, for the first time, the company went outside its
own development team and hired a consultant from IBM who spearheaded a development team set up at Sega of Americas headquarters. The existing development group in
Japan was not happy about this and they independently worked on their own system.
A competition between the two groups arose, with the Japanese group settling on a
Hitachi SH4 processor manufactured by NEC, and the U.S. group going with an IBM/
Motorola PowerPC 603e processor. Unfortunately, in April 1997 when 3dfx attempted
to go public, in its initial public stock offering it mentioned that it was developing Segas
next console. At the time, Sega did not want this information disclosed and in July Sega
chose to go with the system developed by the Japanese team. The new system, named
Dreamcast, was released on November 27, 1998, in Japan and on September 9, 1999,
in North America. The Dreamcast was an immediate hit among hard-core gamers and
was the first console to embrace online gaming. The system was sold with a built-in 56k
dial-up modem (a first), and a broadband Ethernet modem was available optionally.
The system also came with a disc that included Web browser software which allowed
dial-up Internet access. Sega started SegaNet, an online service that allowed gamers to play
against others via the Internet. Among the first online titles available were ChuChu Rocket,
NFL 2K1, and Phantasy Star Online.
Unlike previous consoles which used CDs, games for the Dreamcast came on discs that
Sega called Gigadiscs (GD). The GD-ROMS were proprietary formats that allowed for
increased storage capacity. While the GDs were not compatible with any other system,
the Dreamcast could also play standard audio CDs.
The Dreamcast also was closely related to personal computers, and even used
the Microsoft Windows CE operating system. This was touted as a benefit to PC game
developers since they could then convert their existing PC games to the Dreamcast
with relative ease. While most developers found the Dreamcasts native operating system
superior to the Windows one, it gave Microsoft much needed insight to the world of
designing video game hardware.
Sega released several unique accessories for the Dreamcast. Among them was the virtual
memory unit (VMU) which acted as a memory card and had an LCD screen. Some titles,
such as Sonic Adventure, had the ability to load mini-games into the VMU. The screen
also could be used to view the data stored on the VMU.
A keyboard was released to make Web browsing easier. This was the first time a firstparty keyboard was available for a console. A fishing rod controller was available for fishing
games. Again, while this type of controller also was available for other consoles, the one for
the Dreamcast was released by Sega itself. A unique controller not available for any other
system was a special maraca that Sega released for its Samba de Amigo music game.
Initially, sales for the Dreamcast were respectful and Segas console moved into second
place, ahead of the N64. However, sales began to stall in March 2000 when Sony
announced it was releasing the PlayStation 2 (PS2) later that year. When people learned
what Sony planned to offer, and that the new console would be backwards compatible
with the original PlayStation, many casual gamers decided to wait and see before committing themselves to a new console.
New PlayStations
Hype surrounded the PS2 long before its actual Japanese release on March 4, 2000.
Unlike the Dreamcast which used the proprietary GDG format, PlayStation 2 games were
going to be released on DVD, a format that was introduced in late 1995 but still had
not received worldwide acceptance. The benefit of the DVD format was that it could
store six times as much data as a CD. Because it was utilizing DVDs, the PS2 would have
the capability to play back DVD movies, something that no other console at the time
could do. The system was attractive to movie buffs because with a $300 retail price, it cost
much less than standalone DVD players at the time. Current PlayStation owners
were excited that the PlayStation 2 would be completely compatible with Sonys original
system.
Within a matter of days after the Japanese release, Sony broke new records by selling
over one million units. The initial supply of consoles was sold with defective memory
cards. Since the drivers that ran the DVD software resided on the memory card, users
found that their Japanese systems could play DVDs from any region of the world. Sony
fixed this bug in time for the American launch on October 26, 2000, by hard-coding
the DVD drivers directly into the consoles themselves.
Because of the huge demand, stores sold out quickly and Sony was unable to resupply
the consoles. People who were lucky enough to obtain a PS2 during the launch turned
around and sold their systems on eBay and other online sites for as high as $1,000 each.
Robberies were reported as people stood in line waiting for systems. Never before had so
many instances of violence been reported during a launch of a system. Still, the launch
was considered a success by Sony.
Sony did not discontinue the original PlayStation upon the release of the PS2. Instead,
the company redesigned the system so it was almost as small as a portable CD player and
lowered the price to under $100. The unit was renamed the PSOne. By offering an
optional screen for the system, Sony marketed the PSOne as a portable unit that could
be played in the car. After its release on July 7, 2000, the system went on to outsell all
other competing consoles, including the PS2.
Microsoft Xbox
After Microsoft played a part in the development of Segas Dreamcast, the company
had aspirations of releasing its own game console. That goal was reached in March
2000. Less than three weeks after the PS2 was launched in Japan, Bill Gates officially
announced to the crowd assembled at the Game Developers Conference that Microsoft
was indeed developing a game console.
Ironically, that announcement indirectly led to the death of the Dreamcast. With sales
of the Dreamcast lagging substantially behind the PS2 around the world, Sega felt that
the introduction of another console would only hurt sales of the Dreamcast even further.
Sega stopped production of the Dreamcast in March 2001. The company stayed in the
video game business as a software developer for competing systems.
Microsofts system, called the Xbox, became a reality when it was launched in November 2001 in North America. The first American console in nearly a decade contained an
Intel 733 MHz Pentium III CPU, an Nvidia NV2a 250 MHz graphics processor,
64 MB of unified RAM, broadband Internet support, and for the first time, an 8 GB hard
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drive. Although the $299 system utilized a Windows 2000 operating system, it was not
merely a PC without a keyboard.
Like the PS2, the Xbox could play DVDs. However, while the PS2 could play DVDs
off the shelf using the game controller for the DVD functions, the Xbox could only be
used as a DVD player if an optional $30 remote control was purchased. This was done
so Microsoft could avoid paying DVD licensing fees if it had been sold as a DVD player.
Nintendo GameCube
Nintendo launched the GameCube, its first non-cartridge system in North America
just three days after the Xbox was released, and only two months following its Japanese
release. Unlike its competition, Nintendo chose to use a proprietary storage medium,
an optical-disc that was three-fourths the size of a standard DVD. Because of this, the
$200 GameCube was incapable of playing DVDs (and prevented Nintendo from paying
DVD licensing fees).
The GameCube was not as powerful as its two competitors, but it was not meant to be.
Nintendo was banking that its stable of familiar characters such as Mario, Zelda, and
Pokemon, would keep the system afloat. Nintendo also designed the system to be compatible with its portable Game Boy. A link cable was released and certain games could be
played using both the Game Boy and the GameCube. Acting as controllers, up to four
Game Boys could be connected to one GameCube. Nintendo also released a Game
Boy adaptor which allowed gamers to play their Game Boy games on their TV sets.
The GameCube also could connect directly to up to seven other GameCubes for LAN
(local area network) play, although individual TVs were needed for each console.
System Competition
In November 2002, Microsoft introduced Xbox Live, a subscription-based service that
allowed players to compete against one another over the Internet. Although the PS2 was
outselling the Xbox, Sony executives realized that online gaming was a sector that they
could no longer ignore. Games that incorporated an online component began to be
released. However, unlike Microsofts Xbox Live where Microsoft provided the network
server for online gaming, it was the responsibility of Sonys third-party vendors to provide
servers for their respective online games. However, since this was mainly transparent to the
gamers, it did not affect Sonys goal to make the PS2 the de facto console for online gaming.
PS2 gamers did not have to pay for a subscription service like Xbox Live to play online
games. They did have to purchase an optional Network Adaptor. Sony also released a
40 GB hard drive that could be used to download content such as extra levels, maps,
weapons, and so forth. The hard drive was also sold with the game Final Fantasy XI
already installed on it. As gamers ventured further into the virtual world, the system
constantly downloaded additions to the playing environment that were in turn saved on
the hard drive.
Nintendo also provided online gaming when it released optional online adapters at the
end of 2002. But Nintendo did not aggressively promote the online capabilities of the
GameCube, and very few games supported it.
In the end, Sonys PS2, with over 120 million units sold worldwide, was the uncontested leader in the console wars. Microsoft sold 24 million2 Xboxes and while that was
only a fraction of what Sony sold, it was still a momentous number considering it was
Microsofts first console. Nintendo came in third with 21 million units sold, leading to
speculation that it was going to abandon the hardware market just as Sega had done.
Nintendo merely denied this rumor as it worked on its next system which would replace
the GameCube.
XaviXPORT
In 2003, Sony released a new, unique accessory for the PS2. The Eye Toy was a camera
that plugged into the PS2 via a USB connection. Initially, the camera was sold with
software called Eye Toy: Play which consisted of a series of mini-games that used the players
on-screen image input live through the Eye Toy camera. The player then had to maneuver
his body so his on-screen image could perform different tasks such as popping balloons.
The games themselves were not very interesting but the idea of being in the game was
unique.
Games involving bodily movements were not new. In Dance Dance Revolution, players
danced to music and had to respond to on-screen arrows using their feet. The Dance
Pad people danced on was merely a large controller which responded to players feet in
the same way that traditional controllers responded to fingers. The Eye Toy marked the
first time in which a home system actually responded to a players movement in a nontraditional manner.
In 2004, a Japanese company called SSD Company Limited took this idea one step
further and released a unique gaming system called the XaviXPORT. The XaviXPORT
was not a standard gaming console and was not meant to compete against the systems
already available. Only a handful of cartridges were available for the system and they all
shared a similar theme: sports.
The XaviXPORT employed wireless controllers and the unique aspect of the console
was that the controllers were sold with each of the game titles and actually looked like
equipment for the games. For instance, the controllers packaged with Xavix Golf looked
like a putter and a driver. The controller that accompanied Xavix Bowling was a bowling
ball. Using the special controllers, users could simulate the movements of the sport being
played. In Xavix Baseball, a player could watch the on-screen pitcher toss the ball and then
swing the bat controller at the appropriate time.
Only six games were released for the system, but it was enough to show that playing
video games did not mean merely sitting on a couch and pushing buttons. And while
the system was not a commercial success, it gave the public a glimpse of what the future
of video games held.
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Many people who bought the Xbox 360 with preconceived ideas about it were quickly
disappointed. While the system was able to produce high-definition graphics, they could
only be displayed on high-definition television sets. For those who did not own an
HDTV, the graphics displayed were similar to the original Xbox.
Another problem was that the Xbox 360 was not really backwards compatible with
games from the original Xbox. In order to play Xbox games on the Xbox 360, emulation
software first had to be loaded onto a CD from Xbox Live. Then the software had to be
installed from the CD onto the Xbox 360s hard drive. Yet those who purchased the
Xbox 360 core system did not get hard drives. And even with the emulation software,
there were too many technical differences between the two systems to render 100 percent
compatibility. Only approximately 30 percent of the entire Xbox library can be played on
the Xbox 360. Although Microsoft regularly updates the emulation software so that more
games can be played, the company has announced several times that it is doubtful that all
Xbox games will ever be compatible.
Sony PlayStation 3
The PlayStation 3 (PS3), released in Japan on November 11, 2006, and a week later in
North America, did not suffer from the incompatibility problems that haunted the
Xbox 360. Sony has assured the public that if a PS2 game adhered to Sonys Technical
Requirements Checklist, it would be playable on the PS3. Approximately 3 percent of
the 1,500 PS2 games are incompatible with the new system, and Sony is working on
patches for this.
Still, the launch of the PS2 echoed that of the Xbox 360 a year earlier and the PS2 in
2000. People lined up for hours outside stores before the official launch, only to be turned
away due to a shortage of consoles. Many who were fortunate to obtain systems quickly
turned around and sold them on eBay, where prices as high as $2,300 were recorded.
The pricing structure of the PS3 was also similar to the Xbox 360. A premium system
featuring a 60 GB hard drive sold for $599. A system with a 20 GB hard drive sold for
$499. Another similarity between the two systems was that they both played video games
with high-definition video, for those who had an HDTV set. People who hooked the PS3
up to standard televisions would not see any difference between the new console and its
predecessor.
Despite Microsofts one-year head start, Sony still figured the PS3 would eventually
outsell its competition. But as of early 2007, that lead was not apparent. For one thing,
in the months following the launch, the system was in short supply. Sony announced that
it would have 400,000 units available worldwide before the end of 2006. And even when
it was available, its high price had limited appeal to those who did not own HDTVs.
Surprisingly, the PS3s main competition did not come from the Xbox 360. Instead it
came from Nintendos newest console, one that could not compete with the PS3 or the
Xbox 360 in pure processing power. But it did offer something innovative that even
appealed to non-gamers.
Nintendo Wii
During the development of a new console Nintendo was going to call Revolution,
Nintendos goal was not to compete against Sony and Microsoft, but to attract as many
gamers as possible. The company knew that they had to come out with something really
revolutionary to do so. While the final console was not as revolutionary as most people
thought, it did gain the attention of most. By the time the system was launched on
November 19, 2006, in North America and two weeks later in Japan, the name of the console had been changed to Wii, a word that sounded like the English word we, meaning
that the system was for everybody.
What Nintendo delivered was a system that at first glance acted amazingly like the
XaviXPORT. Packed with a title called Wii Sports, the system allowed gamers to play
sports such as virtual baseball and golf while using a wireless controller that acted as
the baseball bat or golf club. While the controller did not actually look like the sports
equipment, Nintendo kept the controller amazingly simple. Unlike the current trend in
controllers in which seven buttons were the norm, Nintendos Wii Remote only had two
buttons.
But as simple as the Wii Remote was, it led to trouble from the first day of launch.
The Wii Remote came with a wrist strap that attached to the remote and looped
around the players wrist. While involved with the sports games, many players got caught
up in the action and let go of the controller. The wrist strap came apart and sent
the remote flying, sometimes straight into TV sets. Nintendo quickly rectified the
problem by making the wrist band more secure and offering them free of charge to all
Wii owners.
The Wii made great use of wireless technology, including using a wireless connection to
hook up to the Internet. The system allowed players to obtain news and five day weather
forecasts. Players could also use the Internet to access the Virtual Console, an online
service that allowed players to download earlier Nintendo games which played on all previous consoles from the NES to the N64. Games from the Genesis and Turbografx-16
could also be downloaded. In addition, the Wii was completely compatible with the
GameCube, although it used standard 5-inch discs.
System Wars
The North American launches of the PS3 and Wii were only a few days apart. Both
systems were in short supply for the 2006 holiday season. Nintendo announced that four
million units would be available with the majority of them allocated to the United States.
Sonys response to the shortage was that only 400,000 units were available on the entire
planet. Still, after only one full month of availability, the Wii seemed to be the favorite
among the three systems. Whether it was idle curiosity that led to interest in the system,
or the sheer innovativeness of the physical interaction, or even its lower price, the Wii
appeared to be the system of choice.
Of course it may be too soon to determine a clear winner in the console wars.
If Nintendo fails to deliver more innovative titles that take advantage of the Wii Remote,
then its popularity could fall quickly. If the number of HDTVs in homes continue to rise,
the popularity of the PS3 could increase.
One thing that is certain is that the popularity of any system is fleeting. In a few years
new systems will replace the Xbox 360, PS3, and Wii. Or a new company may jump into
the fray as Microsoft did in 2001, leading a current company to abandon its console
market as Sega did the same year. The industry players will constantly revolve, but the
game players will always be there.
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MUD1 is a fantasy-based role-playing game where might and magic entice players to
cooperate and battle towards the goal of immortality. In order to play MUD1, players
would log into a remote server and connect to a bulletin board system that hosted the
game. Once inside the game, players were confronted with text-based descriptions of the
players location, character description, and other relevant information. In order for
players to navigate and interact within the game space and with other players, they would
type and enter commands that would then be processed within the game to initiate play.
What was revolutionary in comparison to the PLATO-based games was that the game
world was persistent and character specific information, such as the player-accumulated
experience, levels, and in-game items, was stored within the system. MUD1 is the longest
running MUD and is still playable today through a web browser.4 As MUD1 grew in
popularity, expanding beyond the UK, other MUDs began to appear.
When the games shifted from BBS-supported systems to ones using modem connections, players were able to connect to locally supported games. By 1983, MUDs began
to commercialize with the release of the fantasy role-playing game, Alan Klietzs Sceptre
of Goth. Designed around a traditional Dungeons & Dragons role-playing system, Sceptre
of Goth bore typical fantasy role-playing elements including magic-users and character
classes such as clerics and rangers, along with the accumulation of experience points and
levels for up to 16 simultaneous players who connected to the game via a modem. Sceptre
of Goth followed the same command-driven text-based gameplay of earlier MUDs, as
players navigated through various types of puzzles, group combat adventures, and
merchant interactions.
The game was released as franchises in several locations, operated and owned by
individuals who would run the system independently. Each franchise owner was given a
relatively simple world editor in order to create in-game events, handle world resets,
and alter attributes of any in-game object, often acting as the games dungeon master
(DM). As individual DMs had the ability to manipulate gameplay elements and alter
content, Sceptre of Goth offered a unique dynamic game play experience, influencing
other games such as Mark Petersons Swords of Chaos (1984) and Brett Vickerss Quest of
Mordor (1993). Other commercial MUDs that began to appear around this time
included titles such as Dragons Gate (1984), Mirrorworld (1985), AberMUD (1988), and
TinyMUD (1989). TinyMUD has since become a most influential game since it combines
gameplay with world creation for the players, influencing the game Avalon (1989),
among others, which was the first MUD to be released live on the Internet in 1994
via its own Windows telnet client; it is still available today under the title Avalon, the
Legend Lives.5
Often considered the first modern graphical MMORPG, Neverwinter Nights (1991)
was released by Quantum Computer Services (later to become AOL) and was codeveloped with the companies SSI and TSR as the first Advanced Dungeons & Dragons
(AD&D) online game. The game server hosted a persistent world and at its peak supported up to 500 players at one time. Neverwinter Nights was unique in that it combined
real-time first-person graphical gameplay with an interactive chat engine and a turn-based
combat system. It was also the first online role-playing game to introduce organized
player-versus-player (PvP) gameplay and player clans.
Two years later, The Shadow of Yserbius was released in 1993 on the Sierra Network.
Another classical fantasy role-playing game, The Shadow of Yserbius offered players the
opportunity to create their characters by selecting their race, class, and combat skills as
well as their guild alliance, which influenced their gameplay once inside the game world.
Combat was turn based and adventures were played in groups of four. Travelling through
dungeons, confronting pixelated monsters, and amassing treasures, skill points, and other
attributes, players could increase their characters abilities and power, while immersing
themselves in challenging puzzle-solving and social interaction.
Inspired by Sceptre of Goth, the game Meridian 59 was released in 1995 by 3DO as the
first commercial online game. It was also the first online role-playing game to be developed on a fully 3-D engine offering the player a 3-D playing perspective. Presenting
players with meaningful player-versus-player combat as well as guild-versus-guild
action, players must protect not only their in-game property, but their guild mates as well.
Gameplay was unique in that it was not based on the traditional fantasy role-playing game
framework of character progression through the accumulation of levels and classes.
Rather, players developed different skills and attributes independently of each other based
on different types of play such as combat and exploration. In order to increase a spells
strength the player had to increase its use, and in order to augment combat skills the player
had to enter battle more often. Despite being closed down in 2000, Meridian 59 has since
reopened and maintains an active and loyal fan base.
Origin Systems released Ultima Online in 1997 and within weeks it had a registered
player base of almost 46,000 players.7 With so many players, the games system often
had difficulty supporting simultaneous play, often causing the game to crash, forcing
everyone out of the game. Regardless of this initial bug (among others), UO was a
revolutionary game experience for many. Players were now able to build persistent houses
on land they had to purchase, requiring players to commit more time and energy to
gameplay, which for some created the feeling of an immersive game world. The game
also boasted an intricate skill system that followed Meridian 59s example, moving away
from a strict character-class level system. PvP was also a significant part of gameplay,
and unlike past online games, could occur in all areas of the game, removing any safe zone
from PvP.
Shifting away from more traditional turn-based combat systems, UO had a dynamic
reactive combat system allowing the players to experience combat in real time. The
graphics were a significant upgrade from previous titles as well, while maintaining an
isometric three-quarter-view perspective consistent with other online games at the time.
This player perspective enabled players to see the action all around them, which in a PvP
environment became an added benefit. Ultima Online was under recent redevelopment
by Electronic Arts, resulting in the summer 2007 release of the overhauled Ultima Online:
Kingdom Reborn.
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With the rapid increase in technological development, widespread Internet access, and a
growing interest in online role-playing games, EverQuest (EQ) was released in March 1999
by Verant Interactive with subscription numbers rising steadily until 2001 and then
settling to approximately 450,000 subscribers by 2004. Following a Tolkien-esque
aesthetic and traditional fantasy role-playing game progression model, players created their
characters before entering the game by selecting their gender, race, class, and deity, and
distributed skill points across several different attributes. Character customization continued throughout gameplay, as players increased in levels, attaining new armor and raising
skill sets. Once in the game-world, players were able to choose their player perspective from
first-person, third-person from behind, or the conventional isometric three-quarter view
from earlier games. Graphics aimed to push the limits of technology, and the user interface
was designed to be simple and effective. Encouraging a more cooperative play style than
past titles, some in-game events required up to 80 players to coordinate their efforts in
order to win an epic battle. Player-versus-player gameplay was a minimal part of the game,
contained in special arena combat areas and specially dedicated PvP servers. With new
content introduced over the span of 13 expansions,including one in early 2007, EverQuest
maintains a large dedicated player base in an increasingly expanding market.
As the market broadened with an increasing number of competitive releases such
as Anarchy Online (2001), Dark Age of Camelot (2001), Shadowbane (2003), Star Wars
Galaxies (2003), Horizons (2003), City of Heroes (2004), and Lineage II (2004), the game
that would demarcate the complete commercial success of the genre was Blizzards World
of Warcraft (WoW), released in fall 2004. Based on the popular real-time-strategy (RTS)
computer game of Warcraft, WoW had players lined up and waiting before the game was
even released. Gameplay shifted from the socially dependent multiplayer style of
earlier games such as Ultima Online, EverQuest, and Dark Age of Camelot to a more independent, solo style, allowing players to level their characters in shorter amounts of time
with less help from other players.
World of Warcrafts graphics were crisp and colorful, and player movement was smooth
and agile. Gameplay was designed around a questing system to alleviate the repetitiveness
of level progression found in other online role-playing game titles. Unlike the mass
numbers required for epic battles in EverQuest, World of Warcrafts epic battles were based
on smaller numbers (around 20 to 40 players). World of Warcraft is also credited with introducing instances, which were essentially individualized, duplicate dungeons for small
groups. This lowered the competition level for quest monsters, in-game items, and experience points, allowing all players to experience the same content regardless of server population. By spring 2006, World of Warcraft boasted international subscription numbers as
high as 6.5 million, and by August 2007 the number had grown to 9 million subscribers.8
Over the years, other titles have been released with significant success and influence over
the development of online role-playing games, specifically The Realm Online (1996),
which is often credited as being the longest continuously running MMORPG. As Western
culture becomes increasingly digital, and the MMORPG market continues to expand into
popular culture, we are seeing an increase in online games aiming at particular demographics, such as pre-teens and teens, with titles such as Toontown Online (2003) and Rose
Online (2005) as well as an increased interest in adult-oriented virtual social worlds like
Second Life (2003).9 As online role-playing games continue to develop at an increasing
rate, each genre and demographic contribute to a global billion-dollar industry that currently shows little sign of slowing down.
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similar deal with Philips with one notable difference: Nintendo would hold the licensing
rights to all CD-ROM games produced for the SNES.
Sony decided to keep working on their project and make their entry in the video game
market. Since Nintendo still used their sound chip in the Super NES and had broken their
contract by allying themselves with Philips, Sony managed to negotiate the right to keep
the port for SNES cartridges on their console, although Nintendo would keep most of
the profits from the games licensed. Sony unveiled its Play Station at the 1991 Tokyo
International Electronics Show, with a scheduled release date in the summer of 1992
six months before the launch of the SNES CD-ROM add-on. Then Nintendo broke off
their agreement, Sony created the Sony Imagesoft subsidiary to develop and publish
games for the Sega CD and the SNES, and Nintendo slowly postponed and eventually
cancelled their CD-ROM add-on after observing the blunders of Sega and Philipss
CD-based game consoles.
In 1993 Nintendo struck a deal with Silicon Graphics to develop a 64-bit console based
on 3-D graphics, essentially leapfrogging the 32-bit CD-ROM hardware generation.
As the industry was reaching the end of its current life cycle that had started with the
release of the Sega Genesis, Sony decided to wait for the next cycle to make their entry
in the market. The Play Station was completely redesigned and the SNES cartridge port
removed, and Sonys PlayStation (now one word) was released to consumers on
December 3, 1994, in Japan, and in September and November 1995 to the rest of the
world. The Sega Saturn, released in November 1994 in Japan, outsold the PlayStation
for the first six months. Sega attempted to gain a head start over it with a surprise U.S.
launch in May 1995, but lack of third-party support and software production delays
resulted in a drought of games that nullified this edge in timing. By contrast, the PlayStations excellent selection of launch titles and large stable of third-party developers
provided ample opportunities of showcasing the systems strengths. It also retailed for
$299 in the United States, $100 less than the Saturn. By the time Nintendo released their
next console in June 1996 in Japan, the PlayStation already had attracted many gamers
and game makers alike.
The PlayStation conquered the world of gaming and ended Nintendos decade of dominance over the home video game consoles market. By December 1999, Sony had sold 70
million units, compared to a meager 28.7 million Nintendo 64s.1 Nintendo survived
thanks to its amassed wealth from the past and its Game Boys monopoly over the handheld market, which accounted for 31 percent of the total market share for video games
(handhelds and consoles included). The winner of the 32-bit and 64-bit home consoles
era is clear: at the dawn of the next hardware generation in 2000, the Sony PlayStation
held 34 percent of the market, almost twice as much as the Nintendo 64s 17.5 percent.2
According to Sonys March 2006 figures, the company shipped 102.49 million PlayStation units. The console was the first to break the 100-million mark in the home video
game market, a feat that is, as of March 2007, only equaled by the PlayStation 2. These
figures are due in part to Sonys release in 2000 of a smaller, redesigned version called
the PSOne, much as Nintendos earlier New NES. Contrary to Nintendos failure, however, the PSOne successfully kept consumer interest in the aging PlayStation: it was a great
success and outsold even Sonys own new PlayStation 2 for the first six months following
its release. With the original hardware and the PSOne combined, Sony produced PlayStation units for 11 years, an unusually long time for a home video game console. Production officially ended on March 23, 2006.
Licensing Terms
The system gained favor among game developers over the Nintendo 64 and Sega
Saturn for a number of reasons. First, most of them were burned out by Nintendos strict
licensing policies and found Sonys terms extremely attractive: according to Steve Kent,
Sonys licensing structure was built around a $10-per-game arrangement that included
manufacturing disks, manuals, and packaging.3 Second, they saw in CD-ROMs the
double advantage of low production costs and increased storage capacity that multiplied
their creative possibilities. According to Kent,
Compared to the cost of pressing CDs, manufacturing cartridges for Project Reality [development
codename for the upcoming Nintendo 64 console] would be prohibitively expensive. At the time,
it cost more than $20 to manufacture an 8-megabyte cartridge, compared to less than $2 to press
a 640-megabyte CD. And the additional storage space on CDs could be used for video clips,
animations, audio files, music, and larger games.4
Finally, programming for the PlayStation was much easier than for the Sega Saturn, the
architecture of which was based around two processors. This proved to be a challenge for
most programmers, and those who worked on Saturn projects ultimately seldom used the
consoles power to its fullest. This was especially true on the U.S. production side, as Segas
four-month advance launch took developers by surprise and did not give them time to
appropriately familiarize themselves with the system.
Games Library
According to Sonys official March 2006 figures, the PlayStation is host to 7,888 titles
which shipped a cumulative total of 961 million units to consumers worldwide. Like the
NES and Super NES before it, the PlayStations success is attributable to its vast library
of high-profile games. Sonys system featured most of the biggest franchises and series of
its time (with the exception of Nintendos first-party Zelda and Mario titles), including
Grand Theft Auto, Madden NFL Football, Tony Hawks Pro Skater, Need for Speed, Tomb
Raider, and Mortal Kombat. While these games were also available for other systems
(the Sega Saturn, Dreamcast, and Nintendo 64 in particular), Sony could rely on a large
number of exclusive titles which went on to become video game classics, including the
Gran Turismo series, whose first namesake entry became the PlayStations best-selling
game with over 10 million copies worldwide. Other exclusive series include Legacy of
Kain, Syphon Filter, Twisted Metal, Tekken, and WWF SmackDown. Crash Bandicoot,
developed by Naughty Dog, was published by Sony Computer Entertainment America
and its character was used in Sonys marketing as a mascot to combat Segas trademark
hedgehog Sonic and Nintendos Mario. PaRappa the Rapper, a game in which the player
had to press certain buttons at the right time to make its title character rap along to music,
helped popularize the genre known today as rhythm games. The Resident Evil and Silent
Hill series were born on Sonys console and spawned numerous sequels, eventually across
many gaming platforms, along with movie adaptations.
Many franchises that originated elsewhere were either moved to or resurrected on the
PlayStation. The most notable example of this is Squaresofts iconic Final Fantasy series.
The companys exclusive relationship with Nintendo was threatened both by the latters
content policies and decision to continue with cartridges in the CD-ROM era; Square
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wanted to develop more mature themes and on a higher-capacity storage media, which
were both possible by going with the Sony PlayStation. When Square released Final
Fantasy VII in the United States in 1997, the game became a huge mainstream gaming
success and redefined the role-playing game genre, which up until then had been only a
niche market outside Japan. Square thrived on the PlayStation platform with its eighth
and ninth Final Fantasy installments, Chrono Cross (the successor to the highly praised
Chrono Trigger that appeared on Nintendos Super NES), and a spin-off game that would
later become a series, Final Fantasy Tactics. Konami resurrected its Metal Gear franchise
with the release of Metal Gear Solid exclusively on the PlayStation in 1998. It was the
first release in the series since 1990, and it established the roots of the stealth-based
action game genre with its 3-D graphics and intricate storyline. Konami also brought its
long-standing Castlevania series to the PlayStation with Symphony of the Night, a 2-D
platform game that showed such games were still viable in the 3-D era and redefined
the nature of the series by emphasizing open-ended exploration, character development,
and item collection rather than the usual level-based progression. Capcom also
joined the fray by releasing Mega Man 8, Mega Man X4, and Mega Man X5 on the
PlayStation.
Without a doubt, the migration of well-known franchises to the PlayStation seduced
many gamers to adopt Sonys console. Another incentive was Sonys establishment in
1997 of a greatest hits selection in the United States, which regrouped all titles
that had sold a high number of copies and been on sale for more than a year.5 Popular
games were repackaged with a different label and sold at a discounted price ($24.99 was
suggested, but many retailers offered them for $19.99). This provided gamers with a
selection of successful games at a more budget-conscious price and soon became an
industry standard with Nintendo and Microsoft reproducing the concept with their
Players Choice and Platinum Hits titles.
Technical Specifications
The Sony PlayStation is a 32-bit console, designed to compete against Segas 32-bit
Saturn (released a week and a half earlier in Japan) and the 64-bit Nintendo 64 (that
would enter the market a year and a half later). It is generally considered less powerful than
the Sega Saturn, but as it was a lot easier to program, the actual quality of most games on
the PlayStation is usually higher than on the Saturn. Similarly, while the Nintendo 64 had
more raw processing power, the higher precision allowed by 64-bit processing was seldom
required in 3-D games, and ultimately did not compensate for the lack of storage space on
the N64 cartridges when compared to the PlayStations CD-ROMs. As such, while the
theoretical power of Sonys console was lower than its competitors, it did not readily
appear as an inferior console.
The PlayStation marks the beginning of modchips in video game console history.
By soldering a modification chip into the system, gamers could bypass or alter Sonys
program code for verifying disc authenticity or regional lockout. This allowed them to
burn a CD-R copy of a game and play it on their console or to play games belonging to
a different commercial zone. Because of modchips, the piracy of PlayStation games
was widespread: people could rent games at their local video club and burn a copy for
themselves and their friends, and with the growing usage of the Internet, games could be
downloaded from dedicated websites or peer-to-peer networks by millions of users.
The PlayStation contains five separate components: a CPU, a graphics processing unit
(GPU), a sound processing unit (SPU), some onboard memory, and a CD-ROM drive.
The CPU is a 32-bit chip manufactured by LSI Logic and runs at 33.8688 MHz. It allows
30 million instructions per second (MIPS), has a bus speed of 132 megabits per second,
an instruction cache of 4 KB, and a data cache of 1 KB. It also houses the geometry transformation engine (GTE) and the data decompression engine (DDE). The former serves as
extra processing power for the calculation of 3-D graphics: it can handle 66 MIPS and
render 360,000 flat, or 180,000 light-sourced or texture-mapped, polygons per second.
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(Sony originally claimed the PlayStation could display 1.5 million polygons per second,
but this estimate was given without taking into account artificial intelligence processing
and other operations that commonly limit the amount of resources that can be allocated
to graphics in video games.) The DDEs function is to decompress images and video files.
It has been used extensively in games like Final Fantasy VII to playback high-quality,
prerendered, cut-scenes.
The GPU is responsible for drawing the 2-D graphics on-screen (this includes the
calculated 3-D polygons). The SPU features 24 channels at a sampling rate of 44,100 Hz
(standard audio CD quality). The PlayStations onboard memory consists of 2 MB of
RAM with an extra MB dedicated to video processing and 512 KB for sound. The operating system is allocated 512 KB of ROM.
The CD-ROM is a double-speed drive with a maximum data transfer rate of 300 KB
per second. It is compatible with both the CD-DA (for playback of audio CDs) and the
XA Mode 2 (for increased CD storage capacity) standards. The first production run of
PlayStation units sported an interior design that caused the laser unit to slightly go
off-balance after extended usage, preventing the correct reading of CD-ROMs. This was
due to the laser unit being made of plastic and being too close to the power supply;
overheating slightly distorted the plastic alloy and altered the beams angle. Sony corrected
this problem in subsequent manufacturing runs.6
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fighting skills and now acts as her personal valet. Though it is not mentioned, we are
encouraged to assume that the monk also taught her numerous ancient languages, how
to read ancient maps, and the value of ancient tomb treasures. Lara is also assisted by three
techno-nerds (reminiscent of the computer geeks/conspiracy theorists that help Agent
Mulder of The X-Files) that design and build her weapons and worship her from afar.
By the time the film was made, Lara had one techno-geek on her staff, and everything
worth learning was taught to her by her late father.
Laras history continues to change. In 2006, the game Tomb Raider: Legend appeared,
along with a whole new backstory for Lara that conflicted with her earlier one. Her legend
continues to grow.
Goddess
Like all deities, Lara has her priestesses, her look-alikes that represent her in meatspace (that is, in the real world). Eidos employs models to play the real Lara at
trade shows and store openings (over half a dozen, including model Rhona Mitra; Nell
McAndrew who went on to grace the cover of U.S. Playboy; Lara Weller, erstwhile
swimwear model; and British actress Karima Adebibe). When a new actor in Hollywood
is turned into a movie star, the process is partly due to the publicity machine of the studio,
which constructs a certain image for the actor; partly due to the choices the actor makes,
either by choosing certain kinds of roles or by playing their star persona in public, or
both; and by what the stars movie fans want to see (Marilyn Monroes gay fans see a
different Marilyn than do the straight men who desire to possess her). Lara Croft
represents a step forward in star making in that she is not a construct built up around a
real person but a star construct built up over a digital character who lets different people,
from Rhona Mitra to Angelina Jolie, inhabit her.
But it does make a difference: we do not adore Lara Croft in the same way that we adore
our favorite movie star on the big screen. In other words, because we partly control Lara,
we relate to her in a different way than we do our favorite movie stars.
In many games, such as The Sims, although players influence the Sim environment, they
do not have that much control over the Sim characters, who often shake their head no if
their programming impels them in a direction other than where you want them to go. In
other words, their behavior is unreliable. Gameplay with digital characters offers a similar
feel of unreliability. In the case of a single-user game such as Tomb Raider, the avatar
Lara Croftcomes to us already formed, with her appearance and personality in place;
a whole cult of stardom has developed around this persona. But each new player of Tomb
Raider has to learn to make Lara movehow to walk, jump, swim, avoid deadly obstacles.
With each failure, Lara dies, and the player must begin again, with the hope that this time
he and Lara will get a little further ahead in the game. In other words, with an avatar,
both forms of spectator identification are working at once: the player identifies with the
avatarin this case Lara Croftbut also has to be constantly aware of the computer
interface, of the gaze or way of gazing that is built into the program. In this sense,
computer games represent a solution to some of the stresses and quandaries raised by
the classical cinematic apparatus. At the same time it creates new problems: the interface
and gameplay take commitment and time to be learned. Perhaps it is just this that has
led to Lara Crofts stardom. Our pleasure comes not just from identifying with her but
also from the fact that it is we who give her the breath of life, like Rabbi Loew gave it to
the Golem and God gave it to Adam.
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30
GENRE PROFILE:
FIRST-PERSON SHOOTING GAMES
Bob Rehak
Doom, Quake, Unreal, Half-Life, Medal of Honor, Halo: among the most popular video
games ever released, these are all examples of the first-person shooter or FPS. Combining
graphic sophistication and violent content for a powerful immersive effect, the FPS also
has been a lightning rod for controversy about the moral and psychological impact of
video games, triggering debates about whether such games function as training simulators
for aggressive and even homicidal behavior, and if so, how they should be regulated. The
roots of the FPS extend back to the mid-1970s, when creators in several different corners
of the game industry began developing computer graphics up to the task of immersing
players in three-dimensional (3-D) space. Throughout the 1980s, these experiments
continued, placing players in ever more detailed and explorable worlds. Along with the
evolution of the Internet, the FPS exploded in the early 1990s as the killer app of
networked personal computers, enabling players to fight each other in arena-style deathmatches and spawning new forms of team-based gameplay such as Capture the Flag.
Nowadays, high-end shooters, with their steep processing and memory demands, drive
users to upgrade their computers and buy new gaming consoles. Each generation of shooters has pushed the limits of computer hardware and clever programming to become one of
the most widely recognized and globally lucrative families of interactive electronic play.
First-person shooters are played from a subjective perspectiveas though the player is
embodied in three-dimensional space, directly perceiving a game world that recedes realistically into the distance. Action unfolds in a more-or-less continuous tracking shot,
mimicking the point-of-view cameras of Hollywood but extending that concept to its
logical extreme: rather than gazing on the players stand-in from the outside, the camera
becomes the avatar and vice versa. With its emphasis on presence, the FPS is highly immersive and sensorially immediate, and, at its most successful, almost overwhelmingly
visceral. Perhaps more than any other game genre, FPSs address the player at the level of
the body. In this sense they are like the body genres of cinemamelodrama, horror,
pornography, gross-out comedyand have drawn condemnation in equal measure to
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those stigmatized cultural forms. But the controversial status of the FPS involves more
than immersive graphics. Just as essential is the third term in its nameshooter. In its
purest form, the FPS is relentlessly aggressive, its action driven by shooting and being shot
at. As the primary means of interacting with opponents, ranged weapons provide the
genre with its defining iconography: a gun barrel (as of a shotgun, plasma rifle, or rocket
launcher) jutting from the bottom of the frame and pointing toward a real or implied
crosshairs at the center of the screen. This gun, along with the hand holding it, bridges
the space of the player and the space of the game, combining with 3-D graphics to create
the shooters key illusion: you are here.
The experience of playing an FPS is that of exploring an endlessly unfolding environment (sometimes a claustrophobic maze, sometimes vast open areas) through the eyes of
another, often enjoying scenery rendered in relatively lush detail. In its visualization of a
detailed world, centered on a player who acts as an embodied agent, the shooter literalizes
a fundamental conceit of computer gamingone present even in games that consist solely
of text, such as the seminal Adventure. Written by William Crowther in 1973 and
subsequently modified by Don Woods at the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
(SAIL), Adventure allowed players to explore a large space composed of outdoor and
indoor spaces, houses and underground caves populated by creatures, objects, and puzzles.
In a process that might best be described as second person, players type commands and
receive descriptions in order to navigate and interact with the world. The games opening
block of text, for example, reads: You are standing at the end of a road before a small
brick building. Around you is a forest. A small stream flows out of the building and down
a gully.
The you in Adventure is functionally equivalent to the I of the avatar, in that it
designates both the human player and his or her emissary within the game world. More
importantly, it emphasizes the importance of embodiment in video games address to their
players, inviting human beings to imagine themselves as fully present and participatory
inhabitants of a world contained within the machine. Graphics of the mid-1970s were
incapable of representing players visually as anything more than crude blocks of color.
The abstract domain of the all-text Adventure, paradoxically, embodied players in high
mental resolution by drawing on their novelistic training: seeing a personal pronoun on
the page (or the screen), readers equate the literary character with their own.
in blocky resolution and limited color palettes, certain game forms, such as racing games
and flight simulators, placed viewers behind windshields and viewports, gazing out at train
tracks that converged on vanishing points, eye-level horizons, and objects that appeared
small far away but grew larger as they approached. An early experiment in 3-D gaming
was the tank combat simulator Panther, developed in 1975 at Northwestern University
for a multi-user computer system known as PLATO. Many attributes of Panther showed
up five years later in the first commercially successful implementation of 3-D gaming,
Ataris Battlezone (1980). Battlezone placed players behind the controls of a tank on an arid
landscape, firing away at enemy vehicles. When an enemy missile hit, jagged cracks
appeared across the field of view, and many gamers of that generation can recall the reflexive spasm that would jerk them back from the cabinets periscope and twin joysticks.
Rather than laboriously painting in game space with blocky pixels, Battlezones vector
graphics merely drew lines connecting vertices, resulting in wireframe worlds and models
that moved with the fluidity of pure mathematics. But Battlezones graphics were convincing only in their smoothness and dimensionality. The obstacles on the battlefield were
primitive pyramids, blocks, and cylinders. All consisted of transparent wireframes; there
were no textures, only a skeletal dance of vectors. Another 3-D game released soon after,
Ataris Tempest, devoted its much more colorful wireframes to a simulation of combat in
terms of abstract art: boomerangs, lightning bolts, and whirling spirals. Tempest was
definitely perspectivalplayers peered into receding tunnels, a well up the walls of which
climbed enemy shapes as superzaps rained down upon them.
Throughout the 1980s, arcade video games continued to extend the boundaries of
subjective-viewpoint graphics. Ataris Pole Position was a fast-moving, visually rich racing
game, butlike earlier racing games such as Vectorbeams Speed Freak, or for that matter,
Tempest with its angular C-shaped figurethese games lacked a visible, organic avatar
with which players could identify better than with a machine or vehicle. Another arcade
game, Nintendos Punch-Out!!, was more effective in this regard, simulating a boxing
match in which players peered through a wireframe body into the eyes of their pugilistic
opponent. But it was in the home, on personal computers, that the groundwork for the
FPS was laid in the form of maze games. A series of releases from Med Systems for the
Apple II and TRS-80 featured simple 3-D renderings of mazes loaded with secret doors,
puzzles, treasures, and perils. These included Rats Revenge (1980), Deathmaze 5000
(1980), Labyrinth (1980), Asylum (1981), and Asylum II (1982). In 1984, a version of
Asylum II came out for the Atari 800 and Commodore 64. Many of these titles were coded
by William F. Denman, Jr., making him something of a pioneer in first-person gaming. In
1986, Lucasfilm Games released Rescue on Fractalus!, which represented a high-water mark
in the fluid animation of 3-D space of the time. Another 3-D game for home computers
that enjoyed great popularity was Acornsoft/Firebirds Elite (1984), a spaceflight-andtrading simulation.
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periodin a story as old as the technology itselfmultiple inventors working independently of each other were pursuing the same goal of an immersive 3-D maze exploration
game. Only one company, id Software, would emerge as the breakthrough originator.
But there was competition.
Developed by Looking Glass Technologies and published by Origin Systems in 1992,
Ultima Underworld grew out of Richard Garriotts long-running Ultima series, a franchise
of role-playing games whose first incarnationAkallabeth, released for the Apple II in
1980actually featured rudimentary first-person graphics, providing players with a
window through which they gazed at a simple wireframe maze in 3-D. Twelve years later,
Ultima Underworld texture-mapped colorful patterns of stone and wood onto walls, floors,
and ceilings, a substantial leap forward in the creation of immersive environments. At the
other end of the first-person spectrum, Robyn and Rand Millers Myst plunged players
into an interactive puzzle-mystery set on a mysterious island. Mysts near-photorealistic
rendered artwork unfolded as a series of still frames, accented with subtle animation and
a rich envelope of sound effects; playing it was like clicking through a slide show.
Clearly there was an idea floating around in the first part of that decade, waiting to be
plucked from the ether: a vernacular virtual reality (VR), employing sophisticated
audiovisual aesthetics to embed real human beings in unreal spaces. The advent of
the first-person shooter turned home computers and consoles into pint-sized reality
simulators, delivering on speculative technologies of science fiction that ranged from the
nightmarish nursery in Ray Bradburys short story The Veldt (1951) to the neural
recordings in Brainstorm (1983), cyberspace in William Gibsons Neuromancer (1984),
and the holodeck in various incarnations of Star Trek from Star Trek: The Next Generation
(1987) onward.
But it was the novel Snow Crash, published in 1992, that most directly foreshadowed
the shooters emergence both as practical technology and cultural fantasy. Author Neal
Stephensons Metaverse, a networked virtual environment populated by computer users
wearing digital bodies called avatars, evoked the FPS as well as later evolutions of graphically intensivethough not necessarily first-personvideo gaming like the massively
multiplayer online role-playing games EverQuest (1999) and World of Warcraft (2004).
The Metaverse portrayed virtual reality as fun, full of action, conflict, contest, and
masquerade. Rejecting the abstract data structures and sterile visualizations that had up
till then characterized VR research in science and business, Snow Crash recast VR as an
essentially playful space, implementable on personal computers and a perfectly worthwhile use of technology.
This combination of pop irreverence and flamboyant invention was precisely the spark
missing from Ultima Underworld, with its Dungeons & Dragons nerdiness, and Myst, with
its chill and cryptic air of the museum. In order to win a wide audience, desktop VR had
to be not just technically proficient but a bit vulgar: fast-moving, carnivalesque, accessible.
id Softwares profane products were all three. A small software company based in Texas, id
Software brought together two talented young men who, like John Lennon and Paul
McCartney, achieved in their partnership a magic that neither has quite been able to
reproduce in later solo work. John Carmack was a programming genius with impressive
technical skills; John Romero, a designer and conceptual artist whose tastes tended toward
heavy metal music, twisted humor, explicit gore, and potent firepower. The pair grew up
in the 1980s playing arcade games like Asteroids and Defender, games whose instantly
graspable rule set (shoot anything that moves) formed the kernel of their first forays into
3-D gaming, Hovertank 3D and Catacombs 3D, both released in 1991. These were not just
games but technology teststrial runs for Carmacks specialized code for rapidly and
fluidly rendering 3-D spaces. Both were basically maze-navigation puzzles: rolling down
corridors, players would round a corner to find a monster or evil machine ready to attack.
Even in these proto-shooters, with what now seem like absurdly limited graphics, the
basic appeal of embodied combat simulation shines through. By virtue of its perspective,
even the most rudimentary shooter generates ongoing suspense and surprise from the simple fact that players can see nothing that is not directly in front of them, or at least nearby:
the radius of visible action shrinks literally to ones line of sight. Shooters thus mark a profound change in the relationship among perception, knowledge, and strategy in game
play. While a game like Stern Electronicss Berzerk presents the same basic situation as that
faced in Hovertank 3Dthe player guns his or way through a maze, pursued by a converging swarm of enemiesBerzerks screen is a combination of top-down and side views.
One can take in, at a glance, the entire space of a given screen, including the robots
waiting in other areas of the room which would, to an embodied viewpoint, be blocked
by walls. (Exiting one side of the screen, of course, would bring up a new map, populated
with new opponents.) By contrast, id Softwares early shooters radically reined in player
knowledge, so that nearly every step forward carried with it the thrill of the unexpected.
This certainly was true of ids Wolfenstein 3D, released in 1992an update of Castle
Wolfenstein (1981), an Apple II game by Muse Software in which the player explores a
castle populated with Nazi soldiers, growling attack dogs, and treasure chests full of loot
and ammunition. Again, the 2-D graphics of the original game, in which multiple rooms
were visible to the player, gave way to a ground-level view of receding hallways and shut
doors. No longer was there a split between what the player could see and what the avatar
could (in theory) perceive; the two points of view merged to create a fully inhabited
avatar, and by the same token a more fully immersive game world.
Wolfenstein 3D was popular, but it was ids next game, Doom, that launched the FPS
craze and came to define the genre (for better or worse) in the public mind. Certainly its
storylinea space marine facing down hordes of demonic beasts unleashed on a Martian
base by a transdimensional portalwas not particularly groundbreaking, echoing the
flamboyantly pulpy science-fiction setups of countless games that had come before.
Dooms most profound innovation, apart from its graphics, had to do with its exploitation
of an increasingly interlinked computing environment (modem-to-modem connections,
local area networks or LANs, the emerging architecture of the World Wide Web).
Released online, Doom became an immensely popular shareware download, its handful
of demo levels serving as an invitation to buy the full version of the game.
A second way in which Doom exploited connectivity was in allowing players to meet in
networked deathmatches, firing at and dodging each other rather than computergenerated opponents. The idea of networked environments as playspaces dates back at
least to the multi-user dungeons (MUDs) of the 1970s. Like the early Adventure, the
MUDs were text-based, their interactions involving words rather than graphics, and play
within them was a sophisticated collective spinning of fantasy identities serving as a matrix
for interaction: social interaction as gaming. A more direct ancestor of the networked FPS
was the 3-D game Mazewar and its numerous variants. Developed for the IMSAI PDP
computer in 1974, and realized thereafter on a host of different networked platforms,
Mazewar let players face off against each other (or alternatively against computercontrolled robots) in a wireframe labyrinth. The graphics were in one sense extremely
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simple: players appeared to each other as a single disembodied eyeball. But in another
sense, that of an inhabited environment in which seeing involved being seen and thus
risking enemy fire, Mazewar stands as the most direct prefiguration of the shooters that
would follow 20 years later.
Doom also made history through changes to the underlying architecture of video game
softwarechanges that affected how games would from then on be conceived, designed,
and marketed. The amount of code devoted to rendering a 3-D world, populating it with
objects and characters, and animating it all in response to player actions, was substantial
enough that it split off conceptually from the rest of game content. The game engine, consisting of that world-creating code and its various components (sub-engines for physics,
sound, lighting, artificial intelligence [AI], and so on), became as much a product as the
game itself. Carmacks work at id consisted of crafting ever more sophisticated engines,
while Romero created data to plug into those engines. Hence id was able to license the
Wolfenstein 3D engine to Apogee Software, also known as 3D Realms, to produce Rise of
the Triad in 1994, while Dooms engine went into Raven Softwares Heretic (1994).
The advent of the engine/data architecture, and the potential for world creation that
came with it, also opened up new possibilities for building franchises. Sequels or expansion packs such as Doom II: Hell on Earth (1994) consisted of new data for the existing
engine. Engines contributed to what might be called the levelization of gaming, dividing
large game experiences into discrete chapters, each taking place on a different map, which
in theory could be crafted by multiple designers (one reason for the tonal shifts between
demonic medieval imagery and chromed science-fiction surfaces in ids output). Another
important outgrowth of the shooters architecture was the involvement of playerprogrammers in producing their own levels and modifications (or mods), customizing
the game to their own ends.
updated graphics. For the most part, it has fallen to ids competitors to use the first-person
mode as an interface for more cognitively and emotionally involving game experiences.
The earliest of these was the company Bungie, whose Marathon series for the Macintosh
[Marathon (1994), Marathon 2: Durendal (1995), and Marathon Infinity (1996)] blended
sober science fiction with innovative deathmatch modes. Even darker in its sci-fi stylings
was Looking Glasss System Shock (1994), which, like its sequel, Electronic Artss System
Shock 2 (1999), hybridized RPG and FPS elements with horror. Other generic blendings
included Duke Nukeem 3D (1996) and Shadow Warrior (1997), both from 3D Realms.
The FPS also proved adaptable to media and gaming franchises such as Star Wars (Dark
Forces in 1995, Jedi Knight in 1997, and a host of Jedi Knight expansions and sequels from
1998 to the present) and Star Trek (Elite Force in 2000 and Elite Force 2 in 2003).
If 1992 marked the birth of the FPS, 1998 saw its maturation, with the release of several
watershed games that redefined the shooter experience: Epic Games/GT Interactives
Unreal and Valve Software/Sierra Studioss Half-Life. Both had complex storylines, while
Looking Glass StudiossThief: The Dark Project substituted sneaking for shooting. In each,
objectives could be accomplished through multiple paths, encouraging player agency and
a sense of realism within the game world. Shooters set in World War II proved particularly
popular, with series such as DreamWorks Interactive/Electronic Artss Medal of Honor
(1999) and Digital Illusions CE/Electronic Artss Battlefield 1942 (2002). Finally, a string
of games preserved the spirit of the original id shooters, like Croteams Serious Sam
(2001), People Can Fly/DreamCatcher Interactives Painkiller (2004), and Monolith
Productions/Vivendis F.E.A.R. (First Encounter Assault Recon) (2005).
Recent years have seen the emergence of superstar gamesreleased amid much
fanfare, trumpeted for their technical achievements in graphic and sound, and quickly
becoming the core of devoted gaming communities. The first of these was probably Halo
(2001), a return to prominence by Bungie and the heart of the Xbox console line.
Offering a sci-fi adventure drawn in equal parts from James Camerons Aliens (1986)
and Larry Nivens novel Ringworld (1974), and rumored to be a sequel to Bungies own
Marathon (1994), Halo successfully bridged single- and multiplayer gaming. In 2004,
Valves Half-Life 2 and ids Doom 3 demonstrated contrasting poles of shooter play, with
HL2s bleak and complex play versus Doom 3s extremely simplified creep-and-shoot
gameplay. Both, however, were showcases of graphics, Doom 3 in particular receiving
attention for the engine developed by John Carmackfor the first time rendering all
lighting from within the game, calculating it on the fly rather than relying on pre-set
lightmaps.
But it should also be noted that the same characteristics that make shooters stand out
their graphical sophistication, immersive power, and visceral you are here impactare
what have brought the form in for much criticism over the years. In large part because
of id Softwares early influence on the form, shooters are often associated with the worst
and most culturally corrosive effects of gameplay: desensitization to violence, inability to
tell fantasy from reality, and training and drilling in combat perception and reflexes. Some
critics have gone so far as to call the FPS a murder simulator, and this charge is perhaps
not far off. Certainly it is hard to deny in light of school shootings in which the killers
reportedly were heavy players of first-person shooter video games. But as critics of this
view have pointed out, there are other explanations for the correlation: the social ostracism
experienced by tormented teenagers coincides with a number of suspect subcultural affiliations, including goth, heavy metal, comic books, and horror movies. (There is also the
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RETROGAMES
Bob Rehak
If you have ever found an old computer or gaming console in a closet, plugged it in, and
found to your joy that it still worked, then you are part of the retrogame movement.
If you have ever used an emulator to play a game designed for an older computer, or
stopped at an arcade to partake of the nostalgic pleasure of a cabinet-style game from
the 1970s or 1980s, then you are part of the retrogame movement. If, while standing
in line at an electronics superstore, you were tempted to buy a specially designed
joystick that plugs into your TV set and allows instant access to beloved titles from
yesteryear such as Tetris, Pac-Man, Pole Position, or Galaxian, then you are part of
the retrogame movementa movement that revisits the history and evolution of
classic or old school video and computer games, appreciating the innovations of
the past. Retrogaming can take many forms, as the list above suggests. What unifies
the various activities is their enshrining of old technologies and interactive art forms,
treating classic video games both as past history and as playable present, a kind of
living museum.
Apart from actually finding and buying the old games themselves, there are
three primary ways in which retrogames are played: emulation, commercial products,
and small-platform devices. Emulators are programs that simulate a virtual computer
in an actual computers memory, allowing current technology to mimic the actions of
an older machine. By resurrecting a phantom version of the Z80 or 6502 processor,
emulators such as MAME (multiple arcade machine emulator) can imitate arcade
games like Asteroids, Donkey Kong, and Mortal Kombat on contemporary personal
computers. Because they are usually unauthorized, emulators frequently run afoul of
copyright, forcing this wing of the retrogame movement into a kind of data
underground in which ROM files (snapshots of the original software architecture,
often ripped directly from the chips in old game devices) circulate illicitly online. While
the emulation software itself is legal, the games played on them are not. By contrast,
commercial products enable consumers to legitimately purchase and play prepackaged versions of older games. This can take the form of the chip-containing joystick
mentioned above: a combination computer and controller that usually contains multiple
games to choose from. Collections of old games, such as Capcom Classics Collection,
Sega Classic Collection, and Namco Museum 50th Anniversary, are available for
consoles like the PlayStation 2 and Xbox 360. Finally, small-platform devices such
as cell phones, iPods, and PDAslike the handheld Nintendo DS or PSPare ideal
for retrogames.
Retrogames keep history alive and raise intriguing questions about the evolution of
the video game medium. They spawn subcultures of appreciation for the music and
graphic design of older games. Retrogaming is particularly interesting in light of the
high-tech aura around video games, which have usually been received (regardless of
their year of release) as examples of state of the art, the latest and greatest use of
available technology. Retrogames would seem to puncture that aura, reminding us
that, thanks to Moores Law (which says that the transistor density of integrated circuits
doubles every 24 months), games date quickly and cruellymuch more so than media
such as film, which evolves at a glacial pace by comparison. Yet the appeal of classic
incontrovertible evidence that most people who play violent video games do not commit
such crimes.)
Nevertheless, cultural responses to the FPS are interesting for what they reveal about
our reactions to our own recreational technologies, a way of measuring our suspicions
about simulation and immersionthe dark side to the hyperbolic and exhilarating fantasies of the virtual. This quintessentially state of the art genre, then, actually builds on
several trends that have characterized video games from the very start. The medium has
always relied on a certain first-personness to involve players in dynamic environments
whose moment-to-moment action depends on input from keyboard, mouse, or controller.
Taken with other aspects of digital entertainmentbranching narratives, iterative or
looping formal structures, and the adaptive behaviors known as artificial intelligence,
video games inherent responsiveness and distinctly personal address anchor a host of
criteriaimmersion, interactivity, presence, and flowby which we sort new media
from ancestors like print, film, and television.
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Figure 31.1 Falling downstairs. The protagonist suffers a hard fall in Porrasturvat (Stair
Dismount) (2002).
push the most polygons, and have the highest resolution. Naturally, indie development
teams comprised of one, two, or a handful of designer-programmers lack the access
and resources to compete with this commercial standard and the hundred-plus person
production pipelines that maintain it. But by working to their technological and personal
limitations, designers have explored new aesthetic territory for games, continuing a tradition of independent media in music, film, underground comics, and other fields. Take the
physics-action game N (2004), best described as marrying a wiry rag doll ninja character
with single-screen, puzzle-heavy levels reminiscent of the gold-collecting classic Lode
Runner. Action is concentrated in the player, with a physics model that gives a high degree
of control and an otherwise quiet environment. Unlike the few stock animations assigned
to most game characters, in N one feels that the same scenario could not possibly occur
twice in the same manner. The character feels alive, despite its monochromatic stick figure
depiction. Raigan Burns and Mare Sheppard, the games developers, cite an explicit desire
for a minimalist gaming style as motivation, both paring and vivifying visuals and gameplay. Such an approach is borne equally from technical constraints, gaming nostalgia,
and independent artistic vision.
Another pair in this minimalist vain includes Spout (2003) and TUMIKI Fighters
(2004), both by independent Japanese developers. In Spout, the player pilots a vehicle a
mere one pixel in size through sparse black, white, and gray caves. TUMIKI Fighters
continues Kenta Chos colorful rejuvenation of the classic scrolling shooter genre with
an elegant, additive gameplay mechanic in which players catch the falling pieces of
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Figure 31.2 Building up a makeshift ship in TUMIKI Fighters (2004). In TUMIKI Fighters, the
players ship is an ever-growing amalgamation built from the salvaged remnants of defeated enemy
crafts.
debilitated enemies, haphazardly accumulating extensions that eventually fill near half the
screen, done up in pastels. The game shares this incremental effect with the offbeat commercial breakout title Katamari Damacy (2004), where players roll an ever-expanding
adhesive ball of objects around the game world, steadily taking all in its path. The two
games were released within weeks of one another, but while the marketplace sees Katamari
as an oddball, the independent experiments described in this chapter show us the family of
exploratory gameplay from which both arose.
Thus independent games often innovate by revisiting earlier genres, styles, and technologies no longer considered part of the mainstream. For instance, indie physics games
heavily favor 2-D graphical representation, eschewing the 3-D state of the art. The horizontal shooter (TUMIKI Fighters) and fighting game (Alien Hominid) genres belong in the
heyday of the 16-bit console era, on the Sega Genesis or Super NES, and are anomalies in
todays market. Yet despite these apparent retro tendencies, indie games are often as
equally facilitated by advances in technology as those in the commercial sectorindie
designers have simply opted to harness different technical opportunities, focusing on those
that tweak and evolve gameplay (for example through computational physics models)
rather than only graphics. In an industry on a relentless, hardware-defined march forward, where entire platforms are abandoned in a short matter of years, independent
games take both the historical and the true aesthetic look sideways and ahead. Only the
briefest reflection on our cultural understanding of film history is needed by way
of comparison: imagine if we viewed black and white movies as obsolete or inferior,
rather than an artistic choice, with objective visual effects but also subjective historical
evocation.
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Figure 31.3 Scenes from experimental games. Make way for the egg in ClacQ (left); rock-paperscissors RPG battle in Tragical Historie of Rodion and Rosalind (right).
the garage rock and hot-rodding movements of the 1950s and 1960s, and the creation
of the original Apple computer in the mid-1970s via the Homebrew Computer Club
(the terminological origin of todays homebrewers).
Though they generally have less experimental gameplay, scores of highly original and
polished homebrew games (and other kinds of programs) have come out of the GBA
scene, with hundreds released online in total. Spanning all major genres, standouts include
the puzzle game ClacQ, in which players build elaborate bridges to ensure safe passage for
a rolling egg; The Tragical Historie of Rodion and Rosalind, an over-the-top medieval
side-scrolling adventure-RPG in 16-bit Super NES style; and Llamabooost, a top-down
action shooter in the Robotron tradition. Homebrewers interest in highly precise technical
challenges also has led to the popularity of programming pixel-perfect remakes of classic
8-bit computer games, such as the slow-paced, physics-based Thrust and action-scroller
Nebulus.
As with many of the PC-based indie physics games, there is that special retro appeal: the
GBAs 2D-based graphics give it an older visual and gameplay style reminiscent of the
Metroid and Zelda adventures homebrew developers grew up with. Not to mention
the cultural resonance of Nintendo, a brand identity so successful that in the 1980s it
was once (and for many non-gamers still is) synonymous with the medium of video
games. Homebrew GBA developers are left in the paradoxical position of transgressing
against the closed nature of Nintendos corporate and technological system in order to
feel that they legitimately participate within it. This amounts not to a traditional brand
loyalty, nor to anti-corporate brand hijacking or Adbusters-style culture jamming,
but rather a lateral repurposing of the systems commercial intent.
While homebrew developers may exploit weaknesses in Nintendos technical and legal
regime of control, they remain parasitic to it. Yet by insistingthrough technical force
of willon access to hardware for independent, noncommercial developers, the tactics
of the homebrew scene have yielded a protest that is, perhaps surprisingly, anything but
apolitical. In our digital society, in which intellectual property debates such as those over
DRM (digital rights management) for online music have become a crucial battleground,
homebrewers comprise a peaceful, non-pirate, non-infringing movement to equalize
media production that is indeed at the heart of American political debate.
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There were, of course, commercial games too, many of which were well-known games
from the arcade scene, rewritten for the ZX Spectrum and launched under a new title to
avoid paying tribute to the owners of the intellectual property. Other games had original
content. There were games of all genres, from the common action-oriented arcade games
to adventure and strategy games like Firebird Softwares Elite (1985), Imagine Softwares
Target Renegade (1988), Ocean Softwares The Great Escape (1986) and Where Time Stood
Still (1988), Electric Dreams Softwares R-Type (1988), Hewson Consultantss Zynaps
(1987) and Exolon (1988), Bug-Byte Softwares Manic Miner (1983), Microspheres Back
to Skool (1985), Ultimate Play the Games Atic Atac (1983), Durell Softwares Saboteur
(1986), and The Edge Softwares Fairlight: A Prelude (1985). Many games were cracked,
illegally copied, and distributed freely among gamers from the gaming community, undermining the commercial benefit of game titles.
During the 1980s, Sinclair computers had an important market share. Because of this
success Sir Clive Sinclair himself was knighted in 1983. However, in 1985 he decided to
make a battery-powered electrical vehicle called C5 and in 1992 the Zike, which was an
electrical bicycle. Both attempts at transport innovation were commercial failures and in
the end the company suffered from the lack of success.
Presumably as some sort of tribute, in 1990 Soviet Russia released a computer called
Hobbit with 64 kilobytes of RAM, based on the ZX Spectrum hardware. The Hobbit
was briefly marketed in the UK for ZX Spectrum fans willing to lay their hands on a better
computer compatible with familiar architecture.
and places them in charge of a game setting containing autonomous mortals to guard and
influence.) In 1995, Electronic Arts (EA) acquired Bullfrog Productions. Two years later
Molyneux left EA and founded Lionhead Studios together with Jackson. Lionhead
Studios has become famous for three game series: the god game Black & White (2001),
the role-playing game Fable (2004), and the simulation game The Movies (2005).
The two biggest British video game distribution companies, SCi (founded in 1988) and
Eidos (founded in 1990), merged into one in 2005 when SCi acquired Eidos. In the 1990s,
however, this scenario seemed very unlikely. Between 1993 and 1999, Eidos was the fastestgrowing company in the world with its share price rising over 400 times,1 and with the
distribution of game series started by games like Core Designs Tomb Raider, IO Interactives Hitman (2000), Pyro Studioss Commandos (1998), Ion Storms Deus Ex (2000),
Silicon Knightss Legacy of Kain (1996), Kronoss Fear Effect (2000), and Looking
Glass Studioss Thief (1998). The Danish game developers from IO Interactive created
Hitman, and the Spanish game developers from Pyro Studios made Commandos, showing
the influence Eidos had on European game development.
Tomb Raider alone points to the fact that this game company was highly influential on
popular culture. The game character Lara Croft designed by Toby Gard, based on a female
version of Indiana Jones, has on several occasions been discussed as a postmodern feminist
icon. It may be noted that indeed Livingstone has contributed to the latest version of
Lara Croft in Tomb Raider: Anniversary (2007). Tomb Raider: Anniversary was codeveloped by Crystal Dynamics and Buzz Monkey Software for Sonys PlayStation Portable, PlayStation 2, Nintendos Wii, and Windows. Eidos announced June 1, 2007, as
the European release date for the PS2 and Windows versions, with the North American
release to follow on June 5, 2007. Additionally the subscription PC gaming service GameTap has announced that the game will be available on their service on the same day the
game is released at retail. The game will also be available on Steam. The PSP version will
be released soon thereafter, with the Wii version to be released at a later date. An Xbox
360 version was officially announced on June 18, 2007. In 2006, SCi/Eidos Interactive
was the sixteenth largest video game publisher in the world.
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[Passengers on the Wind is based on a French comic series from the 1980s by Francois
Bourgeon, and the game follows the series very closely. Likewise, North & South is an
offshoot of the Belgian cartoon Les Tuniques Bleues (by Dupuis) which is based on the
American Civil War.]
Ten years after the founding of the company, Infogrames went public on the French
stock exchange with great success. Six years later, in 1999, Infogrames purchased GT
Interactive, renaming the company to Infogrames, Inc., and in 2001 they acquired Hasbro
Interactive, including MicroProse, Atari, and Game.com. Following this line of events,
they rebranded their own game company, renaming it Atari. In this new millennium
many Dungeons & Dragons licensed computer games have been launched as Atari titles,
such as Temple of Elemental Evil (2003), Baldurs Gate: Dark Alliance (2004), and Neverwinter Nights 2 (2006). This is due to the fact that Hasbro owns Dungeons & Dragons,
which was purchased in 1999 when Hasbro acquired Wizards of the Coast, who previously had acquired TSR, Inc. (the inventors of Dungeons & Dragons) back in 1997.
However, in September 2006, Atari announced that its stock faced delisting from
NASDAQ since its price had fallen under $1.00. A few days later, David Pierce was
appointed the new CEO of Atari, replacing Bruno Bonnell. Pierce had worked previously
as an executive at Universal Pictures, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Sony Pictures Entertainment, Sony Music Entertainment, and Sony Wonder. In April 2007, Bonnell left the
company that he had founded more than 20 years earlier.
Ubisoft was founded in 1986 by five brothers of the Guillemot family, and Yves
Guillemot remains the chairman and CEO. Their first game was Zombie (1986) and it
was followed by great titles such as Rayman (1995) and POD (1997), Tom Clancys Ghost
Recon (2001), Myst: Trilogy (2002), Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (2003), Beyond
Good and Evil (2003), Far Cry (2004), and Brothers in Arms (2005).
Ubisoft started out in France as a distribution company for games made by MicroProse
and EA, and soon they were engaged in distributing games to the UK and Germany as
well. In 1996, the company was publicly traded, which led to a failed attempt at a hostile
takeover in 2004 when EA acquired close to 20 percent of the stock. Today, the company
has offices around the globe.
Vivendi has an odd history. An Imperial decree by Napoleon III led to the formation of
a company named Compagnie Generale des Eaux (CGE) in December 1853. This might
have remained only a company to this day had it not been for Guy Dejouany, who was
appointed CEO in 1976. During the 1980s he began investing in waste management,
energy, transport services, and construction and property, diversifying the interests of the
old company. In 1983 they participated in the foundation of Canal+, which was the first
Pay-Television channel in France, and this naturally led to investments in communication
media during the 1990s.
The company changed its name to Vivendi in 1998, and in 2000 they split into Vivendi
Universal (later renamed Vivendi) and Vivendi Environnement (later renamed Veolia
Environnement). Vivendi Games (formerly known as Vivendi Universal Games) owns
the rights to such franchises as Warcraft (1994), Diablo (1996), StarCraft (1998), and
World of Warcraft (2004) from Blizzard Entertainment as well as others like Leisure Suit
Larry (1987), Crash Bandicoot (1996), Spyro (1998), Ground Control (2000), and Empire
Earth (2001).
The games developed and/or distributed by these companies are not really any different
from games from other parts of the world. There seems to be no distinct French hallmark
or style for video games, as there is in other arts, for example, in French cinema. However,
a game like Fahrenheit (2005) (known as Indigo Prophecy in the United States and Canada)
published by Atari and developed by the French game studio Quantic Dream shows that
there may indeed be a move towards style-conscious games with complicated story
construction. Quantic Dream and their game designer David Cage are also credited for
the critically acclaimed Omikron: The Nomad Soul (1999) published by Eidos.
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game about managing a Formula 1 team, which could have been done anywhere in the
world. The same goes for the popular shooting game Far Cry.
Scandinavian game design has worked wonders in recent years. For example, the game
Hitman: Codename 47 (2000), developed by the Danish game company IO Interactive, is
a high-concept 3-D first-person stealth game in which the player simply plays a hitman
with the codename 47 on several missions, discovering his hidden past. Other Danishproduced games worth mentioning are Total Overdose (2005) by Deadline Games, and
the interactive television game Hugo the TV Troll (1990) by ITE. Hugo the TV Troll was
based on an interactive television game OsWald (1988) and has aired in more than
40 countries worldwide. In Sweden we find games such as Europa Universalis (2000) by
Paradox and Battlefield 1942 (2002) by DICE. Finland is known for the innovative shooting game Max Payne (2001) by Remedy Entertainment, which introduced the concept of
slowing down movement in video game action scenes, similar to the bullet-time scenes
from the film The Matrix (1999). Funcom is an interesting Norwegian game development
company. They not only made the video game The Longest Journey (1999) but also the
popular MMORPG Anarchy Online (2001), a science fiction game set on the world of
Rubi-Ka and its extra-dimensional twin, the Shadowlands. And their long-awaited fantasy
game Age of Conan: Hyborian Adventures MMORPG opened its beta-testing in April 2007
and is due to be released later this year. Another intriguing MMORPG known as EVE
Online (2003) was designed by the Icelandic game company CCP. It is a science fiction
game set in a futuristic galaxy that deals with intergalactic trading and warfare.
Mediterranean video game development has been increasing over the last few years and
includes efforts like the previously mentioned Commando series from the Spanish
company Pyro Studios. In the 1980s, Dinamic Software (later Dinamic Multimedia)
made games for ZX Spectrum, Amstrad, and Commodore 64 home computers, most
notably, Don Quijote (1987) and After the War (1989). Today they are famous for
the PC Futbol series of games made from 1992 to 2006. Other Spanish video game
companies include Effecto Caos (later renamed Xpiral), who designed the innovative
game Vital Light (1994) for Amiga, and Pendulo Studios who created the adventure game
Runaway: A Road Adventure (2001). Italian game development company WaywardXS
Entertainment is known for sport games, and another company, Milestone, has made
several racing games.
Much is going on in game development all over Europe, although many games
only exist in non-English European languages and have not been translated for a wider
audience. However, the European game industry focuses primarily on game software
development, and many new game concepts have originated from the European video
game industry.
games into the following age categories: 310, 1114, 1517 and 18+. A red X would
mark which age group a title was not appropriate for, while a check mark in the categories
above would indicate the suitable ages. The age categories were later changed to 3+, 11+,
14+, or 18+ as the suitable ages. In April 2003 this system was replaced by the Pan
European Game Information system, also known as the PEGI-system. Today, ELSPA is
concerned with promoting the game industry through government lobbying both at a
national level and at an international level, commissioning market research and gathering
information, sales charts for video games sold in the UK, and protecting the industry
through anti-piracy activities spearheaded by their anti-piracy unit.
As mentioned, PEGI (nicknamed Piggy) is a European video game content rating
system. It was established in 2003 to help European parents make informed decisions
when buying video games. The PEGI age bands are 3+, 7+, 12+, 16+, and 18+. As a supplement to this, there are seven different game descriptors presented as icons that can be
attached next to the appropriate age marking: bad language, discrimination, drugs, fear,
gambling, sex, and violence. The system has been accepted in more than 20 European
countries. Contrary to what some believe, the PEGI-system does not relate to the difficulty level of the game but only how appropriate the content of the game is considered
to be for a certain age group. The system is also not associated with the European Union;
for example, Germany is not part of the system because their censorship is stricter than the
standards of other European nations. The German system, known as the Unabhangige
Selbstkontrolle (Independent Self-Control), does not allow red blood or public displays
of Nazism and the swastika. As a consequence, anti-Nazi games like id Softwares
Wolfenstein 3D or Pyro Studioss Commandos: Behind Enemy Lines (1998), involving
Allied soldiers on missions to kill Nazi soldiers, have been banned. Unlike the PEGIsystem, which is voluntary, the German USK-system has become obligatory.
Other European countries have a different way of dealing with video game censorship.
Poland will supposedly leave the PEGI-system, because the Catholic Conservative
government wants stricter laws. The Greek parliament passed the Greek law number 3037,
banning electronic games in general, in July 2002. Even though the law was meant to ban
gambling, it did indeed target all video games as well. In December 2003 the law was
restricted to only affect Internet cafe s in accordance with an official letter from the
European Union, explaining that the law might have been in conflict with European
legislation; in which case, the European Court of Justice could, in fact, take action against
Greece. This controversy was followed closely by the video game industry not only in
Greece and the rest of Europe, but also in the United States, fearing that this ban of
electronic games would lead to some sort of precedent.
The European Union has been supportive of the video game industry, financing innovative multimedia projects and video game entrepreneurship. In the 1980s the European
national broadcast media faced strong competition because the development of a
European industry would be compromised by competition from cheap, non-European
television programs, which are perfectly adapted to the programming of new, private
broadcasters. And domestic film production was also experiencing a downturn. All this
led to the establishment of the European MEDIA programme, which has been operating
to encourage the development of the European audiovisual industry since January 1991.
MEDIA is a support programme of the European Union meant to strengthen the competitiveness of the European film, TV, and new media industries and to increase the
international circulation of European audiovisual products. There have been four
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CHAPTER
33
Arcade Video Games: From Simple 2-D Games to 3-D Online Games
In Asia, in the late 1970s and early 1980s, most young people in Hong Kong, Taiwan,
and Singapore first came to know video games by playing such simple, early games
as PONG, Pac-Man, Galaxian, Breakout, Asteroids, or Space Invaders, on coin-operated
arcade machines introduced by American video game companies such as Atari and
Midway, although the software was often designed by Japanese companies like Namco
and Taito.
During the 1980s and 1990s, video game arcades mushroomed and reached the peak of
their popularity. Going to game arcades became one of the most popular forms of entertainment among young generations in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Singapore. The most
popular genre was that of fighting games. In particular, Street Fighter and The King of
Fighters created a commotion throughout Asia. Long lines for these two games were
common and they influenced the language and behavior of game players and the entertainment industry in Asia. For example, the Street Fighter and The King of Fighters series
of games were extremely popular in Asia in the 1990s and were adapted into movies,
comics, dramas, and pop songs in Hong Kong and Taiwan, influencing the behaviors
and vocabulary of Asian youths.4 In Singapore, due to the popularity of Street Fighter II,
the games hero, Ryu, became an object of worship and imitation. Kids in Singapore
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learned to leap and punch the way Ryu does. Ha do ken, a phrase uttered by Ryu when
he delivers a fireball, was picked up by children to mean punching.5
The number of video game arcades in Asia has been decreasing since the 2000s mainly
due to the strong competition from online game centers. During the last decade, the
mushrooming of small-size online game centers where customers buy time to play computer games with others interactively at affordable prices has forced many video game centers to shut down. Online technologies have had an impact on arcade games, many of
which can now be played online. As a result, Asian players can challenge their Japanese
counterparts in cyberspace. For example, Hong Kong players do well in car race and
mahjong games among online arcade game players in Asia.
In Mainland China and Taiwan, game centers have a very bad public image and are
subject to regular security checks and official crackdowns. In the last decade, most of the
game centers in Taipei were forced to shut down. Since the centers have an image
problem, many people shy away from them and parents discourage their children from
frequenting them. In Hong Kong in the past, the majority of game centers were small (less
than 50 coin-operated machines) centers that were usually smoky, dirty and dim. Associated with drug trafficking and gang activities, they became a target of regular raids by the
police and criticism by teachers, social critics, and parents. In the past few years, many
small game centers closed down and the remaining centers are relatively large and clean.
Game centers in Singapore have a much better image. They are clean, bright, smokeless, spacious, lively, and are accepted by the public as entertainment centers for families
and friends. The majority of game arcades are located in shopping malls which can
provide the huge space required by the government. Many young people go there to play,
and players are usually in their late teens and early twenties. Parents also take their kids to
play non-video amusement games, such as mini bowling and basketball. Many big game
centers also have photo-sticker machines (purikura in Japanese) made by video game
makers such as SNK, Sega, and Namco. Because of these characteristics, video game
centers in Singapore are also called amusement arcades.
If Sony has an upper hand in the home video game market and Nintendo controls the
handheld video game market, then Sega is a major player in the arcade video game market
in Asia. Sega provides a large number of machines and their software. Other major manufacturers of arcade video game machines and software are SNK, Namco, and Capcom.
Sega game software for coin-operated machines is the most expensive. Big game arcades
can afford these, whereas medium-sized game centers have fewer Sega games. SNK poses
a great challenge to Sega by offering software at very competitive prices. Popular
game genres include combat games (such as the Street Fighter, The King of Fighters and
the Gundam series), car games (such as the Daytona and the Initial D series), shooting
games (such as Virtua Cop and Time Crisis), sports games (such as the Winning Eleven
and the Virtua Striker series) and dancing games (like Dance Dance Revolution).
Hong Kong and Taiwan import Japanese original versions of the games, whereas
Singapore prefers to wait for the English versions because players in Hong Kong and
Taiwan understand Chinese characters used in Japanese, whereas many Singaporeans feel
more comfortable with English. In Singapore, the percentage of English versions of games
is the highest in Asia. There are some games in Japanese and a few in Mandarin, but they
are less popular.
Differences in arcade game centers can also be seen from the perspective of players who
play Japanese games in their own ways. In Hong Kong, some skillful players invite
challengers for their favorite games. Sometimes, the losers lose not only face but also
some money. Gambling is indeed quite common among game players in Hong Kong.
In addition, Hong Kong players have many unwritten but common rules among themselves. For instance, putting a token on the top of the machine is a symbol of booking
for the next game. In certain games such as Street Fighter, Hong Kong players also have
rules to make the game more fair or exciting. For example, in a three-round combat game,
the winner of the first round must give in the second round, so that both players can play
the third round. This rule makes both players (usually strangers) play longer and avoid
conflicts or losing face. These practices are not commonly found among players at game
centers in other parts of Asia.
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Famicom in Asia) which featured better graphics, sound, and software than the Sega
Genesis. SNES conquered the lions share of the video game market in Asia in just a few
months. SNES included many superb and now-classic games designed by Nintendo or
released exclusively for SNES, such as Final Fantasy (versions 4, 5, and 6), Dragon Quest
(versions 4 and 5), and Super Mario World. As the most successful product that Nintendo
ever made, the SNES dominated the market for about five years, until it gave way to the
new 32-bit game consoles, the Sony PlayStation and the Sega Saturn, released in 1996.
Ironically, beyond its superb technology and excellent games, the availability of pirated
hardware (such as Super UFO and Doctor, made in Hong Kong and Taiwan) and
software also boosted its sales. Doctor had a TV commercial in Hong Kong and its
makers were later sued by Nintendo for copyright infringement.
Introduced to Asia in 1996, the Sony PlayStation and the Sega Saturn used CDs instead
of cartridges, providing a completely different level of graphics and sound effects.
The PlayStation quickly caught up and became the biggest winner in the history of the
video game industry in Asia, with all the top software companies developing games
for it, including the Tekken series, Ridge Racer series, Parasite Eve, and Time Crisis. The
PlayStation was the number one game console in Asia in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
Why was the Sony PlayStation so successful in Asia? Ironically enough, the most decisive
factor was the availability of cheap, pirated CD software made in Taiwan, Hong Kong,
Malaysia, and Thailand. In Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Singapore, almost all PlayStation
consoles could be modified to use pirated CD software by inserting a special chip.
A pirated CD could be 20 to 30 times cheaper than the original. The PlayStation also
had more games than its competitors, and hundreds of them had pirated versions.
The other reason was that Sony put more emphasis on the Asian market than Sega.
Sony set up regional offices in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Singapore to promote and
monitor PlayStation sales, and they provided repair services for PlayStation consoles. They
even made Sony PlayStation consoles specifically for Asian nations and games for English
and Chinese speaking nations. For instance, their Asian machine used 200220 voltage
instead of 100110 voltage and came with an English manual. Game instructions were
also in English instead of Japanese. Sony selected software for promotion in Taiwan, Hong
Kong, Singapore, and Malaysia.8 (Sony is famous for applying a business strategy called
global localization (coined by Roland Robertson to refer to global companies that are
sensitive to local preference) to relatively immature markets. Sony applies this strategy in
Singapore and Southeast Asia in promoting video games.) Sony understands the cultural
differences in Asia and makes localizing marketing strategies accordingly. For example,
in line with the family values promoted by the Singapore government, the Sony PlayStation Office in Singapore introduces games which can be played by the entire family
to promote family values. On Fathers Day 1999, Sony organized a video game tournament made up of father-son teams. In addition, Sony produced Chinese games for the
Chinese-speaking communities. For example, The Condor Hero (2000), a PS Chinese
game adopted from a famous martial arts novel by Jinyong, was well-received in Taiwan
and Hong Kong.9
The Sega Saturn was the distant second. Despite its initial success, it fell behind the
Sony PlayStation. One reason was that there was less pirated CD software for the Sega
Saturn; it was also higher in price. Unlike Sony, Sega did not have a good marketing
network and its products could only be found in video game shops. Sega made a short
comeback by launching its 32-bit game console, the Sega Dreamcast, in Hong Kong,
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students. In the 1990s and 2000s, handheld electronic games have become more popular,
the games more sophisticated, and the players more diversified.
Before the 1990s, the handheld electronic game market was wide open to minor toy
and electronic companies. Small factories in Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, and
South Korea made a lot of handheld electronic games. They were cheap enough for
children to buy, and the games were very simple, so they had little appeal for adults.
Each unit was programmed to play one game, and even kids could master the game in a
few days and they quickly became bored. Casio also incorporated car race and shooting
games into some of its digital watches. The computer puzzle game Tetris created the first
handheld electronic game fever in Asia in the late 1980s. Some calculators could also play
Tetris. Nintendo was perhaps the only major Japanese manufacturer that made an impact
on handheld electronic games in the 1980s. Its first generation non-cartridge electronic
game device, Game and Watch, was quite popular in Asia.
Big names in the industry, such as Sega, Sony, and Bandai, finally entered this lucrative
market in the 1990s, and handheld electronic games became a popular toy and a form of
entertainment for both children and adults. Nintendos Game Boy and Segas Game Gear
were the first generation of cartridge-based handheld game consoles, and Nintendos
Game Boy became the most successful handheld console ever made in the history of video
games. Nintendo launched its Game Boy in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Singapore in 1989
and it was a tremendous business success. It could play popular Nintendo games, such as
Tetris, Arkanoid, Mario Bros., and Donkey Kong, and it dominated the handheld game console market in Asia from 1989 to 2005. A large number of unlicensed Game Boy accessories, such as a speaker, magnifier, and joystick, were made in Hong Kong and widely
circulated in Asia. Sega was a latecomer which introduced its Game Gear in Asia only in
1991, posing a challenge to Game Boy in the early 1990s. Unlike the monochrome Game
Boy, Game Gear had a color LCD screen. Game Gear had very few pirated cartridges,
which made it less popular in Asia.
Part of the success of Game Boy was related to the availability of cheap pirated
cartridges. Most of these pirated cartridges were made in Taiwan. Each carried 10 to 30
games, but only cost the price of an original cartridge. Pokemon, a Game Boy game,
became a smash hit in Japan in 1997. Its spin-off software, Pikachu, was made into a game
for the Nintendo 64 in 1998 and a popular handheld electronic game, Pocket Pikachu.
However, Pokemon did not create a craze among Game Boy fans in Singapore, Hong
Kong, or Taiwan. Game shops in Asia usually recommended Taiwan-made 30-in-1
pirated cartridges rather than original software like Pokemon for getting a higher profit.
In October 1998, Nintendo launched the fourth generation Game Boy, Game Boy Color,
that had an attractive body design and could play some sophisticated games on its color
LCD screen. It was a hot product in Japan, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. A strange phenomenon was that many Game Boy Color players in Asia did not buy software designed for
Game Boy Color and instead played with their old pirated cartridges initially made for
older versions of Game Boy. In 2003, Nintendo introduced its last and most powerful
Game Boy model, Game Boy Advance, that dominated the market for about two years,
until the next-generation handheld consoles, the dual-screen Nintendo DS, which was
cartridge-based, and Sonys PlayStation Portable (launched in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and
Singapore on May 12, 2005), which was Universal Media Disc (UMD) based and entered
the Asian market in 2005. Since then, the NDS and the PSP have been competing head to
head. It seems that the NDS has an upper hand by a small margin and its Nintendogs
(a dog simulation game similar to a virtual pet) for the NDS was a very hot handheld
game in late 2005 in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Singapore. The PSP also has a strong
following, in particular among young people who see it as a multifunctional and trendy
electronic device instead of just another handheld game console.
Aside from the cartridge-based handheld game console market, the old-style noncartridge handheld electronic games also have their market in Asia. The Tamagotchi is
an electronic virtual pet housed in an egg-shaped and egg-sized console. Invented in
1996 by Bandai, the Tamagotchi created a great commotion among high school girls
in Japan and soon became a national and then international craze. It later created a fever
in many cities such as New York and Hong Kong, as well as in Taiwan and Singapore in
early 1997.11 For example, in Singapore, when Takashimaya Department Store declared
its plan to sell this electronic pet on April 8, 1997, hundreds of people lined up outside
and bought up the entire stock of 1,000 units in less than two hours. Toys R Us encountered a similar reaction. All Tamagotchis sold during this time were Japanese versions
imported from Japan. Buyers even had to read the Japanese manual to learn how to take
care of it.12 More than a dozen imitations, including cat, dog, monster, frog, and dinosaur
ones made in Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Mainland China flooded the Asian market.
A Hong Kong-made imitation, Tamahonam, a game in which players train a gangster by
teaching him to drink, smoke, and fight, created controversy and was banned in Singapore
because it contained excessive violence.
The Tamagotchi soon became a national craze in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, and
Thailand, which lasted for about six months. Both students and adults were crazy about it,
some playing it day and night. Bandai launched a number of Tamagotchi products in
Asia, such as key chains, lunchboxes, stationary, books, T-shirts, and even socks. The
Tamagotchi was adapted into a Nintendo Game Boy game and Sony PlayStation software.
The mass media featured stories about it, and some schools, offices, and factories banned
it.13 People set up cyber-graveyards for their deceased electronic pets. Even the Singapore
government made use of this fad, introducing in 1997 the Tamagotchi War Hero,
educational software using a virtual animal to teach Singapore history at school. Unlike
its long popularity in Japan, the Tamagotchi was game over after a few months in Asia.
When people were tired of the Tamagotchi, a new sensational product, Digimon
(digital monster), was developed by the Tamagotchi team at Bandai in 1997. The player
cultivates the virtual pet into a monster which can fight with another monster when two
consoles are linked. Unlike the Tamagotchi, Digimon was mainly popular among small
children, particularly primary school pupils in Asia. Introduced to Asia in early 1998,
Digimon became the most popular electronic toy among children in Hong Kong, Taiwan,
and Singapore for about 4 or 5 years and more than 10 generations of Digimon were
introduced during this period.
Compared with the Tamagotchi, Digimon was relatively expensive because many of
them were parallel imports. Parallel imports are genuine (non-counterfeit) consoles or
games placed on the market in one country, which are subsequently imported into a
second country without the permission of the owner of the intellectual property rights
the products have in the second country. In Asia, before the importation of licensed
editions, consumers relied on parallel imports that were usually more expensive than the
licensed editions.
The size of all Digimon units were small (4 cm by 6 cm) and portable. During its
heyday in the late 1990s and early 2000s, it was a must for kids in major Asian cities.
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Digimon was banned by some schools because it made noises and promoted a fighting
spirit. For example, one school in Singapore suggested the following tips for parents
to help cope with this problem: (1) Only allow the children to play with it after they
finish their homework. (2) Only allow the children to play for up to two hours a day.
(3) Encourage children to do other more meaningful things, such as reading and chess.
(4) Do not overreact. This is after all a fad and it will die down soon.14 It was common
for Digimon players to gather at public places like subway stations, playgrounds, shopping
malls, and game centers to have their Digimon fight against each other. Jumping on the
bandwagon, some organizations including community centers, churches, and voluntary
organizations included Digimon in their activities.
Non-cartridge-based handheld electronic games have become less popular these days,
because many Asian youths use their mobile phones for games and music. The new
generations of Tamagotchi and Digimon launched in the mid-2000s have failed to make
an impact in Asia. Non-cartridge-based handheld games are losing ground to their
cartridge-based counterparts and other electronic devices that can play games.
For instance, after playing J-Leagues and Nobunagas games, they might look for information about J-League and the life of Oda Nobunaga. Taiwanese and Hong Kong game
players are also interested in knowing some Japanese. Almost all game magazines have a
corner to teach readers game terminology in the Japanese language. Southeast Asian
players care less about Japanese history, culture, and language related to the games they
play. To them, the video game is a source of entertainment without a national boundary,
and they do not necessarily see it as a springboard to learn about Japan.
In Hong Kong and Taiwan, video games are a must in childrens TV programs and
youth magazines. For instance, the Asian channel in Hong Kong broadcasts news about
video games and organizes competitions in its childrens programs on a regular basis.
In contrast, in Singapore, none of its local magazines or newspapers has a game corner.
In Hong Kong, popular weeklies such as East Touch and Easyfinder and leading newspapers such as Apply Daily and Oriental Daily have a video game corner. In Hong Kong,
the mass media and press report stories about game shows and game competitions,
whereas the mass media and press in Southeast Asia are less interested in reporting
game-related activities. For instance, although video games are popular among children,
they are not included in childrens TV programs. Although quite a number of game shows
and tournaments have been organized in Singapore, Bangkok, and Kuala Lumpur by
Japanese companies or local organizations, the mass media show little interest in these
events. If they report them, they usually focus on cosplay (costume-play, dressing up as
comic or game characters) rather than the games.
Many Japanese hardware and software companies have set up offices in Hong Kong,
Taiwan, and the United States, but very few of them have offices in Southeast Asia. (Sony,
Bandai, Konami, and SNK all have set up offices in Singapore, but it seems that only the
Sony office is active. The Bandai office covers mainly Digimon and merchandise,
and Konami and SNK offices are small liaison offices.) Konami has a branch in Taiwan
to create Chinese game software, and a number of Taiwanese companies have acquired
licenses from Japanese software makers to make Chinese versions of Japanese video games.
Taiwanese and Hong Kong software companies also have begun to write and sell games for
Japanese makers. Japanese game developers also recruit talents from South Korea, Taiwan,
Hong Kong, and Mainland China. For example, The Condor Hero was developed by a
team which consisted of Japanese, Mainland Chinese, Hongkongers, and Taiwanese who
worked for Sony in Tokyo. This kind of collaboration is missing in Southeast Asia. For
example, although Singapore has many software companies, most of them focus on online
games in English and have little interaction with the Japanese.
With the regional difference in Asian game culture in the backdrop, we can examine
some similarities in Asian game culture as compared with their Japanese counterpart.
First, piracy is prevalent and has played an important role in jumpstarting Japanese video
games in Asia. Piracy has been a major form of game consumption in Asia. From the early
1980s to the present, unlicensed software has dominated the Asian market. These
unlicensed games include pirated games, unlicensed new games (such as Street Fighter II
and The Fourth Generation), and unlicensed Chinese versions of Japanese games (such as
Shining Force). Asia is a big manufacturer and importer of pirated games.15
All nations have some regulations against pirated software, but whether they are forceful
in exercising them or not is another matter. There is little pirated software in Japan,
because Japanese consumers are willing to pay for the original game software, which is
much cheaper than in Taiwan, Hong Kong, or Singapore. Also, the secondhand market
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for original software is very large, and the Japanese government is very forceful in
suppressing piracy.
Taiwan, China, and Malaysia are major manufacturing and distribution centers of
pirated games, whereas Hong Kong and Singapore are major importers of pirated games.
In Malaysia, Mainland China, and Thailand, many players buy and many game shops sell
pirated software exclusively. As a matter of fact, it is much easier to buy pirated than
original software. Many game titles are only available in pirated software. Game shops also
suggest their customers buy pirated software in order to acquire a higher profit margin.
Piracy popularizes video games in the short term but hurts the video game industry and
culture in the long term. The Microsoft Xbox does not have offices or release games in
Mainland China because of the piracy problem there. For the same reason, Japanese game
developers show little interest in developing Chinese games.
Governments in Asia have tried to crack down on pirated software but to no avail.
Game shops have smart ways to beat the system. Inspectors can hardly find any pirated
game software in their shops, because they are stored in hidden compartments or in
locations outside the shops. Usually they show game folders to the customers and allow
them to choose, and then get the pirated software for them from other locations. Some
shops sell pirated software only at night or on certain days. Some employ ex-convicts to
operate the shops and to take the legal responsibility when caught. Shops form an intelligence network and inform each other on things such as police raids and suspicious
persons. In 2006, the Hong Kong government made the reworking of the PS2 to read
pirated software and the uploading or downloading of unlicensed game software on the
Internet illegal. Many other places also have made similar measures to enhance copyright
protection.
Second, legal control of and the social prejudice against video games are strong. Most
Asian nations exercise some kind of censorship of video games, directly or indirectly.
However, perhaps with the exception of Mainland China, the censorship of video games
in Asia is not as strict as that of movies, comics, and TV programs. Most Asian governments only screen certain video games when they receive complaints from teachers or
parents. If the games are found problematic, the importer will be punished severely.
Hence, game importers and distributors in Asia usually exercise self-censorship and do
not import games with excessive sex or violence. East Asia is more liberal than Southeast
Asia in this respect. For example, mahjong and card games are popular in Japan, Taiwan,
and Hong Kong, but they are not introduced to Singapore because they contain sexual
materials (for example, when the player wins, a sexy girl on the screen will take off her
clothes piece by piece).
Problematic games such as Mortal Kombat, a game of bloodshed and torture, have been
banned in Hong Kong and Singapore. In Taipei City, the city government once closed all
game centers and later only allowed several big ones to reopen. In China, the official
control of video games has been very tight. All kinds of games, including arcade games,
home computer games, home console games and online games are subject to censorship
and a large number of them have been banned for containing sex, violence, gambling,
or unwanted political messages. The Singapore government has basically banned all games
with sexual content. In Hong Kong, policemen regard game centers as the hotbed for
crime and keep them on surveillance. In South Korea, for political and historical reasons,
Japanese game consoles by Nintendo, Sega, and Sony had been officially banned for more
than two decades, and the ban was only lifted in June of 2000. As a result, Korean players
play mostly home computer games and online games. Most people in Asia, in particular,
educators, social critics, politicians, and parents, hold negative opinions about video
games. The mass media report negative news about game addiction or game-related
crime. For instance, there was a recent TV advertisement by the Hong Kong government
to discourage gambling, using online game addiction as an example.
Finally, Japanese video games have been popular and have had an impact on Asian
cultural industries. Compared with other forms of Japanese popular culture in Asia, the
video game culture is quite unique in many ways.
First, it came to Asia later than Japanese comics, animated series, character goods, TV
dramas, and pop music, but it made a very strong impact. Introduced to Asia in the
mid-1980s, Japanese video games became an instant success, and since then have been
one of the most popular forms of Japanese popular culture. Only comics and animation
can match their popularity. The video game culture has been growing strongly and in
general it has shown no signs of decline. Japanese video games have few competitors of
their kind. In comics, animation, TV dramas, music, food, fashion, and merchandise,
Japanese popular culture is competing with its Western, Asian, and local counterparts.
However, the entire video game market in Asia, until the rise of the Xbox and American
and Korean online games in the past few years, had been largely dominated by the
Japanese.
Second, playing video games is mainly a childrens and young mens culture. For other
forms of Japanese popular culture, the main patrons are teenagers and those in their early
twenties, mostly high school and university students.
Third, video games have caused an entertainment revolution,16 stimulating the
consumption of other forms of Japanese and Asian popular culture in Asia. Popular video
games, such as Mario Bros., Pokemon, Samurai Spirits, Final Fantasy, Street Fighter, and
The King of Fighters, have given rise to comics, films, animation, CDs, VCDs, merchandise, and other spin-offs. Asian films, games, comics, TV dramas, and pop music
have borrowed considerably from Japanese video games. For example, there are at least
65 Hong Kong comics adapted from the Street Fighter and The King of Fighters
series.17
Through a historical overview of the global popularization and local consumption of
Japanese video games in an Asian context, we have seen that East Asia and Southeast Asia
are consumption centers of Japanese games and Japan is leading the market in arcade
games, home consoles, and handheld games. Playing Japanese games has become an
integral part of Asian youth culture and has an impact on Asian entertainment industry.
Japans Achilles heel, however, is the online game, an area in which it is outperformed
by South Korea, the United States, and Taiwan.
This investigation indicates that Asian players are not passive consumers and they are
indeed, in John Fiskes terminology, active readers. 18 They consume and interpret
Japanese video games in their own ways, following their cultural backgrounds. Because
of this, Japanese video games have acquired Asian dimensions and become a kind of
hybrid culture. This hybridity of video games challenges two influential but somewhat
old-fashioned ideas. First, the old notion of seeing Japanese video games as a form of
cultural imperialism19 does not fit in an Asian context, because Asian players have domesticated Japanese video games. Various degrees of localization of Japanese video games still
can be found in Asia due to reasons that are political (censorship which makes the
games relatively clean), economic (it is less expensive to buy pirated software), social
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(background of the players), and cultural (preference for games in English or Chinese).
Finally, the cultural odorless theory20 that sees Japanese video game as largely a technology without a strong ideology and cultural identity is not always true. Japaneseness can be
a major attraction rather than a problem to most Asian players; the more advanced they
are in playing Japanese video games, the more they ask for Japaneseness.
CHAPTER
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studios.1 The oldest video game company in Australia, Beam Software, became Melbourne
House, and having passed through the hands of Atari/Infogrames, the purchase of
Melbourne House by Brisbane-based Krome Studios was announced in November 2006,
making them Australias largest independent game development studio, with over 300
employees. This gives them significant status in the Australian gaming industry, which in
2006 employed approximately 1,600 people.2 Krome Studios, the developers behind the
Ty the Tasmanian Tiger series that sold over two million units worldwide, has renamed
the studio Krome Studios Melbourne. Having recently completed the multi-platform
Legend of Spyro: A New Beginning (2006), the company is now focused on developing its
own intellectual property and completing Hellboy, scheduled for publication by Konami
in 2007.
The games industry in Australia is focused almost exclusively in the cities of Melbourne,
Victoria, and Brisbane, Queensland. Like Krome Studios, Auran is another globally
prominent studio that is also located in Brisbane. Widely known for the development
of the Trainz series of railroad simulators, Aurans innovative business practices have
been extensively discussed elsewhere.3 Currently, they are developing an MMORPG,
Fury: Unleash the Fury, that focuses on player-versus-player style play; they also have in
recent years moved into publishing PC games for the Australian, New Zealand, and
Asian markets. Other companies of note include three Melbourne based businesses:
IR Gurus Interactive, who specialize in local sports games; Tantalus Interactive, who
are developing games for handheld systems; and Torus, who have recently branched
out from their focus on developing titles for the Game Boy Advance, to release the
multi-platform Shrek Smash N Crash Racing (2006). Also prominent, but catering
to a niche market, is the New South Wales-based Strategic Studies Group, who are the
developers of the Decisive Battles of WWII series, turn-based strategy games for
the PC. Microforte, with studios in Sydney and Canberra, has moved away from
game development and is now making development software for Massive Multiplayer Online Role Playing Games (MMORPGs), an endeavor in whichwith BigWorld Technologythey have met a degree of success with Chinese MMORPG
developers.
Despite the industrys evidently healthy state, the Game Developers Association
of Australia acknowledges that several major challenges face it in the coming years; in
particular, maintaining independent Australian studios. There has been an increase in
foreign buyouts of Australian development studios, as the high-waged centers of the
video game industryUSA, Japanship projects offshore to reduce costs. This has been
accompanied by another practice that takes advantage of the Australian industries
reputation for achieving respectable results on tight budgets; the development of games
based on licensed products for overseas publishers.4 While 85 percent of gaming companies in Australia claim to develop their own intellectual property, 90 percent of the industrys output has been based in licensed products.5 Initiatives by the State Government of
Victorias Film Victoria Digital Media Fund have focused on giving developers access to
the high-tech skills and equipment that they need to compete internationally, andas
the Minister for Information and Communication Technology emphasizesdevelop
local IP and initiate their own concepts.6 While several Australian video game companies have developed their own concepts and intellectual property, video games have also
been significantly deployed by an artistic collective to demonstrate a new conceptual
understanding of the political role of video games.
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violence, sex, language, drug use, and nudity. While the R18+, if interpreted liberally, only
goes so far as to refuse classification to pornography (explicit, non-simulated sexual acts)
and to sexual violence, it also includes a caveat on interactive media that make use of
incentives and rewards.12 This feature is enough to allow an automatic refusal if the
rewards include sex, sexual violence, or drug use.
Refusals of classifications for video games, for whatever reason, are the subject of much
controversy among the video game industry and consumers in Australia. High profile
refusals of classificationthat include Rockstar Norths Manhunt (2003), Grand Theft
Auto: San Andreas (2004), and most recently Blitz Gamess Reservoir Dogs (2006)have
led to an outcry among the game-playing public that the R18+ classification be extended
to include video games.13 When laws governing the classification of games were last
reviewed in 2002, South Australia blocked a proposal to allow an R18+ rating
category for games.14
games interactivity, which the board believed, like commercial training simulations, could
be used to train a person in crime.23 They disapproved of Getting Ups portrayal of graffiti
as a legitimate form of art, by using the biographies of real graffiti artists within the game,
which they argue serves to both glamorize and normalize the crime of graffiti.24 The dissenting opinion of the minority poignantly states their reason why the game should retain
the MA15+ classification: The tone of the game is escapist and has been designed as entertainment.25
The Australian games industry is a burgeoning area of local growth. However, a key
problem facing the game development companies in Australia revolves around the issue
of intellectual property. The Victorian government, at least, has acknowledged this problem. However, the attitude of the state government is evidently unsupportive of video
games as anything other than a childish diversion. Once they are deployed artistically to
make a political point, or recontextualize a criminal act as artistic and political, the limits
of the governments perception and appreciation of the medium are exceeded. While
many countries, and smaller local jurisdictions, have had issues with violence and sex in
video games, which stem from a concern that games made for adults might be played by
children, in Australia it appears that video games must also be detached from any suggestion or possibility of artistic or political critique.
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PART V
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the technology and anticipated development effort so as to ensure that this vision can be
realized. Because the very nature of games makes them difficult to understand without
actually having played them, developers might even find themselves verbally pitching
their ideas to prospective sources of funding in the way of its like [that game], except
with. . .. Naturally, the more innovative the game, the harder it is to gain acceptance.
Preproduction
The preproduction stage involves concretizing the game, both in a formal and informal
way. In the formal sense, preproduction (in the sense of producing prototypes and setting
the groundwork for production and implementation) becomes a key stage for ensuring a
smooth process. Informally, the idea is fleshed out by an individual or a group.
There is an argument that preproduction (including prototyping) helps in managing
chaos in the development process, and subsequently, aids in lessening developmental
errors downstream (a point also supported by a number of Game Developer magazine
postmortems). In one essay, authors Mark Cerny and Michael John point out that preproduction is essentially a chaotic creative process that is about creating a canvas on which to
find the core concept or feature that will set the game apart, and therefore, will necessarily
mean throwing out good work.1 They believe that preproduction will save time and
avoid costly mistakes downstream and should be scheduled in as a specific phase, with
prototypes being made. While most developers might agree with the general benefits,
others do not agree with whether preproduction is even a definable stage with clear
cutoffs. For some projects, the stages of preproduction and production tend to blend into
one another, while for others, especially ones comprised of veteran developers making
similar products (such as sequels), the gameplay is already well understood. Hence, this
model is not true for all successful projects. Another myth that Cerny and John seek to
debunk is that of the need to have a 100 page design document up front, despite the fact
that many teams do create detailed design documents up front in their development
processoften for a variety of reasons, which are discussed later.
One of the more common models for preproduction is that of a lead designer/programmer working alone, or small core team led by the lead designer, setting up the vision
and the details underlying it, then focusing on developing a prototype and some displayable assets to secure buy-in from company executives or, if developed independently,
attract funding from publishers or other organizations.
The most important activity of preproduction may be the creation of a prototype or
early version of the game that is playable. This playable sequence is comprised of the code,
initial sequence of art and animation, and simple game rules, to show how a player might
step through a sequence of the game. This allows the game to be partially played and experienced. The core visual style may also be established at this stage. This would be done as
much to convince a publisher as it might be to help the team to realize what the actual
game might look and play like. Since games are interactive products, the actual game
experience might be quite different from what was initially envisioned on paper. In an
advanced preproduction situation, this might yield what the industry calls the first
playable version or the first time all of the major gameplay elements are functional
and playable.2 Preproduction is often punctuated at the end by a proposal, consisting
of the prototype (and possibly also a document up to a dozen or more pages long (including accompanying artwork), which is used to convince publishers to accept the game.
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How prototyping, preproduction, and conceptualization are related can differ across
people and projects. For example, American McGees Alice (2000) had a unique artistic
style, but fairly traditional gameplay, so its preproduction took about three months
largely to get the artwork and theme right. Many other teams also have months-long
preproduction periods. On the other hand, designers involved in new genres may take
even longer. Will Wright spent two or more years researching and reading widely before
conceptualizing some of his ideas like The Sims.3
Production
The third stage of development is that of production, in which the detailed design
is implemented. Production often entails a scaling-up of the development effort.
The development team at this stage may include more programmers and artists, as
well as level designers, writers, audio specialists, and testing personnel, who are all
responsible for implementing the design documents specifications. The full range of
artistic assets is created at this stage, and a full story may be written. Games usually
feature so much dialogue and alternative dialogue (for example, in response to various
player decisions) that the full set of text exceeds that of a novel. The games basic
design may continue to be fine-tuned here, to either a minor or major degree. Some
projects have junked entire games during production simply because they found the
overall game itself to be uninspiring (and thereby making a case for early prototyping).
For games that require levels, level design is initiated. For games with first-person perspectives or action games, this involves creating a series of spaces that are designed to provide a
player with a navigational challenge. For planning games like real-time strategy games,
scenario designs are the equivalent of levels. In many strategy games, there may also
be the balancing of the game design, that is, activities that involve quantifying or assigning
values to tokens and other objects in the game. [In chess for example, the tokens are the
chess pieces. In a video game, tokens could include not only pieces that represent military
units or player-controlled characters (avatars), but also buildings that produce output,
and other kinds of usable objects.] This helps ensure that there will be equality or at
least a balance between opposing players forces. It is generally difficult to predict the
effects of various combinations of tokens on opposing sides without extensively play
testing these various combinations. Coding also continues, with the full set of technical
and graphical aspects (such as artificial intelligence, user interfaces, etc.) being completed
at this stage. Finally, sound effects, music, voice acting, and other content may also be
developed.
The production stage is usually accompanied by more formal testing, and punctuated
by the release of various versions of the game, such as the alpha, beta, and gold master
versions. Some developers consider the alpha version to be the first one with complete
features, and beta to be the point at which a game contains no known bugs.4 The gold
master is the final version that becomes the master for commercial production (i.e., the
copying or printing of discs) of the final game. While testing might continue throughout
the product development life cycle, testing of a beta version might be the most extensive,
as it may be released to a user community to ensure that the product is well fitted to
their expectations. In the production stage, there is also a winding down phase where
software bugs are identified and tracked, and testing is used to further balance or refine
the gameplay.
Post-Production
The fourth stage is the post-production stage that occurs following the commercial
release of the video game. While there is no post-production stage in video games as there
is in film or animation (where the stage typically consists of editing the film to ensure a
compact and releasable product), there is a phase just after the products release when
further bugs discovered after shipping are incorporated into patches, or software code
that will repair the most egregious errors.
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come up with a surfeit of good ideas to begin with. Having said that, a compelling or
insightful idea would be needed in the first place to start off an innovative game.
answered first is, How far do you stray from the original game to make it compelling, yet
still familiar? On top of this, studios have to deal with publishers who usually impose
strict deadlines, such as a release date for the Christmas season.
As the industry and technology matures, game development will no doubt become
even more rational in nature, catering to more businesslike objectives and productivity
issues. This may affect how creativity occurs in game development. The combination of
these rational aspects of development with the ostensibly creative aspects can also cause
tensions in game development similar to those seen in other creative industries such
as film.
Despite the full completion of games, many assets (art, design, and even code) of games
might be thrown out at the very end (that is, wastage can occur even beyond prototypes).
This could be due to any reason, including the teams dissatisfaction with their effort, the
publishers change in product strategy, and so on. Prototype code and art may also have
been hastily assembled during preproduction and could be thrown out in lieu of a more
proper effort. This has occurred in the case of radically innovative games such as PaRappa
the Rapper (1996) (the first play to the music game which was developed for the Sony
PlayStation) as well as in cases of more incremental innovations that were seeking a very
well-honed user experience (such as the first-person shooter Half-Life).8
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CHAPTER
36
Illusion refining, indeed, appears to be a major driving force of video game evolution. The
appeal of evermore realistic depictions of virtual universes in itself justifies the purchase of
expensive new machinery, be it the latest console or dedicated computer parts. Yet, one
must not conceive of this evolution as a linear progression towards perfect verisimilitude.
The relative quality of static and dynamic renders, associated with a wide range of imaging
techniques more or less suited to the capabilities of any given video game system, demonstrate the unsteady evolution of visual representation in the short history of the medium.
Moreover, older techniques are sometimes integrated in the latest 3-D games, and 2-D
gaming still enjoys a very strong following with portable game systems. Despite its short
history, a detailed account of the apparatus behind the illusion would already require
many volumes in itself. In this chapter, we will examine only the fundamentals of the
different imaging techniques along with key examples. However, we hope to go further
than a simple historical account of illusion refining and expose the different ideals that
governed and still govern the evolution of visual design in games.
In video games, visual representation started from scratch again; a few shapes, a few
colors. The first arcade games, Computer Space and PONG, proposed strikingly abstract
universes that could nonetheless be associated with real-world referents (science fiction
and table tennis). The popularity of space settings in early games is not surprising; notwithstanding the programmers interest in science fiction, a black backdrop could depict the
emptiness of space with minimal costs in terms of system resources. During the first decade
of its history, the appeal of video game entertainment is to be found elsewhere than in its
figurative potential. The bitmap display mode, based on the subdivision of the screen in
discrete units (pixels) to which individual values are associated, is bound mainly by two
sets of restrictions: display capabilities (most notably screen resolution and simultaneous
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on-screen colors) and processing capabilities (working memory and central processing unit
frequency). The two are closely tied: the blockiness of early games can be explained by
low screen resolution (the maximum theoretical resolution of the Atari 2600, for example,
is 192 x 160), but also by the inability to manipulate detailed bitmaps (hence the dominance of large, uniformly colored blocks). These restrictions favored frontal or lateral
depictions and different points of view were often merged in a single scene. A few simple
bitmaps, like building bricks, were assembled and tiled to create the playfield (Figure 36.1).
To prolong the art history analogies set forth by Steven Poole, one could observe
that the stacking of space planes and point of view discrepancies found in many preRenaissance paintings are also typical of early games.
Through a steady flow of home consoles, arcade games, and personal computers,
display and processing technologies evolved rapidly. Higher resolution bitmaps could
represent objects from odd angles more easily, thus adding some depth to the game world.
The arcade version of Zaxxon systematizes these efforts by introducing an isometric
perspective, a subtype of axonometric perspective which represents a tridimensional space
with no vanishing points, giving all three dimensions equal importance (Figure 36.2).
Figure 36.1 Two screen images from Adventure for the Atari 2600. The top image is the Gold
Castle exterior, and the image below it is the castles interior, which is entered by passing through
the castle gate when the portcullis is raised.
Figure 36.2 Isometric perspective. Two screen images showing the isometric perspective in the
arcade game Zaxxon (1982).
Game worlds expanded beyond the initial one-screen limit, either by displaying multiple adjacent spaces (Adventure and Pitfall!) or through a technique known as scrolling, first
introduced in Kee Gamess arcade game Super Bug. Flat layers of space appear gradually, in
a continuous motion either controlled by the computer [as in Xevious (1982)] or in
response to user navigation (as in the arcade version of Defender). In Moon Patrol, three
distinct layers of scenery unfold at various speeds, producing a basic illusion of depth.
This technique, known as parallax scrolling, was made more convincing by the multiplication of planes and/or the manipulation of discrete objects (sprites, more on this later)
in a similar fashion, as seen in the arcade version of Choplifter (1985). Through the
horizontal and/or vertical parallax scrolling of many action games, a simulated vanishing
point emerges, and on its virtual horizon, one can already see the emergence of the virtual
camera in the bitmap world.
It is perhaps due to the desire to measure up to the standards of visual realism set by
film and television that the video game has evolved as it has, supposes Mark J.P. Wolf.2
Incidentally, technological evolution quickly stirred up the game developers cinematographic ambitions. The development of the graphic adventure genre, associated early on
with evermore vivid depictions of settings and characters through the integration of elaborate bitmaps, is the first major manifestation of these ambitions. Close-ups of characters
gradually become mandatory during conversation sequences (Figure 36.3), with some
games trying to simulate basic shot-linking structures: medium shot/close-up in King of
Chicago (1987) (Figure 36.4); and shot/counter-shot in Delphine Softwares Croisie`re pour
un Cadavre (1992) for the Amiga. Early on, developers even use digitized photographic
material to produce these detailed bitmaps (as in Access Softwares Mean Streets). However, all this added detail often accounted for particularly static scenes, with most of the
processing resources being dedicated to the data-intensive images. This flaw was even
more striking with digitized photography; photo-novels being a rather scarce cultural
reference amongst gamers, photographic material inevitably points towards the greater
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Figure 36.3 Close-ups. One in Sierra On-Lines Kings Quest V (1990) (top) and another in
Lucasfilms Loom (1990) (bottom).
impressed the gaming community. Prince of Persia (1989) for the Apple II, Mechners
latter and most renowned effort, is associated with the advent of motion capture in video
games but actually borrowed a well-known animation technique: rotoscoping. Each step
of the needed movements is drawn painstakingly from the performance of a model captured on film. The princes impressive action range (walking, running, jumping, climbing,
sword-fighting) is brought to life with unknown fluidity for the time (Figure 36.5).
In 1992, Midways Mortal Kombat attracted a lot of attention in the arcades. Each
fighter of this tournament was created from video sequences shot with real actors, key
frames being integrated into the sprite animation system. The resulting illusion is still
short of cinematographic quality. Laserdisc-based arcade games already integrated filmic
material in the early 1980s (like Ataris Firefox), but the gameplay was limited and relatively few games were produced. The ultimate attempt to integrate cinema in video games
occurs concurrently with the Motion Picture Coding Experts Groups (MPEG) efforts to
develop a motion picture compression standard for CD-ROM technology. However, the
quality of digitized video sequences (full-motion video) varies greatly from game to game
and often pales in comparison to the MPEG-1 standard of 1989. Access Softwares
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Figure 36.5 Decomposed running animation. An example from J. Merchners Prince of Persia
(screenshots from the Amiga version).
Martian Memorandum (1991) introduced FMV to depict some of the characters interrogated throughout the adventure. These sequences are short, restricted to a small window,
low resolution, and suffer from erratic frame rates. The advent of CD-ROM technology
as a storage medium allowed for better quality FMV along with a more consistent integration throughout the games. The long-running Tex Murphy series perfectly illustrates the
evolution of FMV integration (Figure 36.6).
Video games, it is now clear, remediate cinema in a variety of ways: through the integration of conventions and language, animation techniques, up to complete digitization. The
concept of remediation, central to Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusins genealogy of
Figure 36.6 Full-motion video evolves. Evolution of FMV integration in Access Softwares Tex
Murphy series: digitized photographs in Mean Streets (1989) (upper left), windowed live-action
sequences in Martian Memorandum (1991) (upper right), live-action characters integrated into
the scenes in Under a Killing Moon (1994) (lower left), and full-screen sequences in Tex Murphy:
Overseer (1998) (lower right).
new media,3 is often interpreted in a progressive manner: newer media remediates the
defects of their predecessors. The case of video games is clearly more complex; for all
the interactivity offered by the medium, games cannot claim superiority in terms of strict
visual realism. One could conceive of remediation in this context not as the reform of
older media, but as an assertion of a representational ideal. But what exactly constitutes
this ideal? Beyond the lack of detail and/or fluidity, the most obvious shortcoming of visual representation in video games is repetition: tiled bitmaps, reused animations create an
undesirable impression of homogeneity. In addition to visual realism, cinema also embodies the ideal of representational variability. The cinematographic quality of Croisie`re
pour un Cadavre relies first and foremost on the ability of its game engine (aptly named
Cinematique) to present a variety of points of view. Furthermore, the appeal of FMV
lies in the possibility to make any given part of the image evolve into something completely different. How is it, then, that when gaming systems finally acquired the technical
means to convincingly remediate cinema, interest towards FMV dissipated so abruptly?
For all its representational qualities, live-action video cannot easily adapt to user input.
The so-called interactive movie fell short of living up to its ambitions, production and
storage issues hindering the integration of significant variations on the local scale of the
event and the global scale of the narrative. But this explanation is insufficient; the thenpopular graphic adventure game genre, which served as a mold for interactive movies to
a great extent, also proposed highly scripted interactivity. Ironically, part of the explanation is to be found in exactly the same games that relied heavily on live-action sequences.
Virtual, computer-generated locations were more suited to the relatively low-budget productions than, say, built sets or expensive on-site shooting. The very principle of the
computer-generated imagery seen in those games announced a future where the medium
could merge the cinematographic ideal with its own interactive ambitions, affording a
representational variability that could constantly be affected by the user.
Beyond Cinema
The principle behind computer-generated imagery is very simple: dedicated computer
tools simulate a three-dimensional world where objects and eventually whole scenes are
modeled from the combination/manipulation of geometric primitives (cubes, spheres,
etc.). Textures (2-D images) are applied to the modeled surfaces, and specific algorithms
handle phenomenon like lighting, shadowing, transparency, reflection, liquid and volatile
matter, etc. The self-proclaimed ideal of CGI artists is photorealism. To this day,
computer-generated images often look too perfect. Getting rid of this hyperrealist impression proves to be difficult; the addition of filth and the simulation of oxidation cannot
completely erase the virtual surfaces homogeneity. A greater challenge than photorealism
resides in the animation of virtual scenes, which requires intensive fine-tuning in order to
achieve realistic movement or kino-realism. Virtual skeletons are incorporated into
objects, with each joint possessing its own set of attributes. For complex movements
such as those of humanoids, animators often rely on the technique of motion capture: a
performer executes the needed movements wearing a special suit equipped with a set of
captors at key joints. Finally, a point of view on the scene must be selected. The virtual
camera materializes at last, endogenously, at the very heart of computer imaging.
With the proper resources, CGI has reached near-cinematographic visual realism. It is
integrated seamlessly into live-action films, to a great extent in some projects (like George
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Lucass Star Wars prequel trilogy, 19992005); and a full-length feature aiming for perfect
verisimilitude has already been produced, Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (2001) directed
by Hironobu Sakaguchi and Moto Sakakibara. Video games, too, integrated CGI in a variety of ways. In 1993, Trilobytes The 7th Guest and Cyans Myst proposed virtual worlds
that could be explored through computer-generated imagery, the former with fullmotion video. Most of the assets for Rares Donkey Kong Country (1994) for the SNES,
from backgrounds to animated sprites, were prerendered on powerful Silicon Graphics
workstations. Thanks to its novelty in the media landscape, CGI became even more of
an attraction than the contemporary digitization of live-action sequences. Computerrendered cinematics were integrated into any genre, but soon became associated with
Japanese role-playing games through the success of Squares Final Fantasy VII (1997) for
the PlayStation. In these examples, CGI does not redefine the fundamentals of visual
design in video games; it simply replaces drawn or digitized material. Therefore, how can
we associate this imaging technique with the pursuit of a greater ideal?
Philippe Queau eloquently defines the core principle of CGI: Digital image synthesis
techniques break off with photons. They are completely seized by language. Through
these techniques, we do not seek the reproduction of reality, but the very conditions
of its production.4 3-D models are mathematically formulated and thus easily manipulated by the computer; a digitally rendered image is but one of many possible actualizations that can be reformulated endlessly. But in order to claim any kind of superiority in
the realm of video games, this manipulation has to occur in real time. Even though 3-D
gaming became the norm during the 1990s, techniques allowing the reformulation of
virtual objects in a 3-D space were developed relatively early in the mediums life. In the
arcade parlors at the turn of the 1980s, raster displays cohabited with another technology:
vector display. Instead of drawing every pixel of the screen 30 times or so every second,
the electron beam in vector displays traces the needed lines directly, the rest of the
screen remaining black. In comparison to raster displays, lines could be rendered in
much higher resolution and manipulated much more fluidly. 2-D games with sharp
images and fluid movement were produced (most notably Ataris Asteroids), but most
interestingly, vector graphics quickly became associated with the creation of wireframe
3-D worlds.
In 1980, Ataris Battlezone arcade game proposed the first three-dimensional game
universe in a video game. The worlds objects were made of basic geometric solids (cubes
and pyramids), their surfaces completely transparent due to the limitations of vector
graphics. As they piloted their tanks, players could explore the universe in any direction;
the planar surfaces of the objects (or polygons) were reformulated according to their
virtual first-person point of view (Figure 36.7).
Earlier games oriented their gameplay on the depth axis, most notably Ataris Night
Driver in the arcade. But on the pitch-black road, as on the more colorful rides offered
by later games such as Konamis Gyruss (1983) and Segas Space Harrier, objects coming
towards the players are in fact 2-D sprites scaled by the game engine. Even if they offered
a convincing illusion of depth, these game engines simply transferred the action on a different axis; in terms of point of view redundancy, they are not more capable than sidescrolling games. Wireframe 3-D gathered interest and was used for Ataris adaptation of
the first two games based on Star Wars movies (1983 and 1985, respectively). But in order
to represent solid 3-D worlds, polygons had to be filled, something vector displays could
not easily achieve. Ataris I, Robot is the first foray into such a world (Figure 36.8).
Figure 36.7 Ataris arcade game Battlezone (1980). The first arcade game world to make use of
true 3-D computation.
Interestingly, the games controls allowed players to control the position of the camera with
two dedicated buttons.
After the commercial failure of I, Robot, polygon-based 3-D became associated with the
vehicular simulation genre through games such as Spheres Falcon (1987), Lerner
Researchs Chuck Yeager Advanced Flight Trainer (1987) and Microsoft Flight Simulator
(version 3.0, 1988). Some action/adventure games were produced, most notably those
Figure 36.8 Two images from Ataris arcade game I, Robot. Images from http://www.klov.com/.
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built using Incentive Softwares Freescape engine, including Driller (1987) and Castle
Master (1990). Ironically, 3-D gaming became widely popular through the release of id
Softwares Doom, whose game engine is not fully three dimensional. The engine integrated
texture maps (2-D images applied to a surface and interpolated according to a set point of
view) with some trade offs: the walls, floors, and ceilings of the game world were bound by
strict rendering restrictions, thus limiting the first-person point of view, and objects (such
as power-ups and enemies) were made of scaled sprites. In 1996, the game engine behind
id SoftwaresQuake rendered most of its world in textured 3-D, including the various
creatures that populated it (see Figure 36.9).
Whereas Dooms sectors had a uniform lighting value, Quakes settings integrated light
maps: lighting and shadowing produced by the light sources in a given scene were prerendered and applied on the textures. Along with a few other games, Quake became an incentive to buy one of the first-generation 3-D accelerator cards that now replace the standard
graphic adapter cards in personal computers. Arcade games and homes consoles, too, had
hardwired 3-D capabilities, and many genres began their transition to the third dimension
[for example, Tamsofts Battle Arena Toshinden (1994) for the Playstation; Nintendos
Super Mario 64 (1996) for the N64; and Segas arcade game Sega Rally Championship
(1995)].
In todays game worlds, polygons are indeed the most commonly used bricks. CGI
artist Alvy Ray Smith once estimated that it would require 80 million polygons per second
in order to reproduce reality on the screen.5 It would be naive, however, to think that the
sole challenge of 3-D engines resides in geometrical complexity. Our visual world is
populated with phenomenon far less tangible than bricks; water, smoke, fog, fire, and
explosions are difficult to mimic with simple textured polygons. Modern special effects
in video games convene an impressive array of techniques. Programmable shaders, for instance, affect the display of pixels or vertices (points in space defined by 3-D coordinates),
thus contributing to many subsystems of the graphics engine. The particle system reformulates simple primitives (usually small 2-D objects) and coordinates them in order to
simulate the subtle behavior of flames, smoke, and so forth. Bump mapping and normal
mapping add the shading values of an uneven surface to a regular flat polygonal surface;
the values adapt to the position of light sources in the scene, thus creating bumps with
no additional geometry. Incidentally, the integration of light-related phenomenon in
Figure 36.9 Light maps and textured 3-D creatures in id Softwares Quake (1996). (http://
planetquake.gamespy.com, used by permission.)
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GameCube, Sega-AM2s Shenmue II (2001) for the Dreamcast, or Quantic Dreams home
computer game Indigo Prophecy (2005)], whereas previous generations condemned it for
being more cinema than game. Camera-related effects like motion blur, focus, and
lens flare are simulated and refined just like any other illusion. Some first-person shooters
even introduce third-person segments, such as those found in Bungies Halo: Combat
Evolved (2001) or Starbreezes The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay (2004),
both for the Xbox.
Clearly, the game industrys fascination for the medium of cinema is still strong. The
harmonious fusion of cinematic expressivity and interactivity (the ideal of interactive cinema) might very well be a major force driving the evolution of games for years to come.
The unsteady character of the evolution of imaging techniques is now more apparent; a
given technique sacrifices the gains of another one in order to develop a specific aspect
of the illusion or to respond more completely to user input. Visual design in video games
goes beyond the obvious graphical technicalities. Beneath the quality and diversity of
animations, artificial intelligence determines how characters evolve in the environment
and react to the virtual worlds other actors. Beneath the appearance of this world, virtual
physics simulate gravity and calculate the intensity of deflagrations in real time. As they
integrate these dynamic behavior models, virtual game worlds explore a whole new layer
of visual realism. It would be naive to assume that the medium will evolve solely to
integrate evermore complete and complex simulation models. But as new techniques
emerge, as video games strive to refine their illusionistic deception, it is undeniable that
these models, too, affect the way we look at games.
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the different possible waveforms (square, sine, saw, etc.) were tuned differently; the same
note played in two different waveforms could be off by as much as half a semitone.3 Later
machines like the Colecovision (1982) and Commodore 64 (1982) had sound chips
capable of three and four sounds at once, along with increased storage capacity, but space
was always at a premium. The Atari VCS, for example, had 128 bytes of internal RAM,
with a four kilobyte maximum capacity on its cartridges. Compared to the current home
consoles (Sonys PlayStation 2, Nintendos GameCube, and Microsofts Xbox), with
RAM in the 4060 megabyte range, more than 64 sound channels, and disc storage capacity of several gigabytes, the computers of the late 1970s and early 1980s were extremely
constrained in their sound capabilities.
Beyond purely technical limitations, the music and sound effects of early video games
were also hindered by the nature of the games themselves. The first arcade games were
designed to appeal to a public who knew nothing about video games or computers.
As designer Richard Rouse III explained,
The thought was to get players to easily understand a game, so that by the end of their very first
game they had a good sense of how the game worked and what was necessary for success. Second,
the players game, even the game of an expert, could not last very long, since any one player had
only paid a quarter, and if the game only earned a single quarter in a half hour, it would not be
profitable to operate.4
Players were impressed primarily by the technology. As video games grew in popularity,
however, players began to expect a higher level of innovation from their gaming experiences. A game with the newest sound chip or the most realistic effects would not succeed over
a less advanced game if the newer game lacked compelling gameplay. By the mid-1980s,
home consoles and personal computers had brought video games out of the arcade and into
the living room, and with this transition the emphasis of the games shifted. Rather than
designing games primarily to catch a players eye and ear, developers began to use sound
to expand the scope of their games narratives. Whereas arcade games were intended to
be played repeatedly for an average of 2.5 minutes per quarter, home console and computer
games could take hours, days, or months for the player to fully experience once.5 As the
storytelling aspect of games became more integral to the players experience, the musical
accompaniment became more closely entwined with the story; the composers aspired to
make music an essential part of the game, rather than something extra or unnecessary.6
Two home gaming platforms in particular were at the heart of game sound development in the 1980s: the Commodore 64 and the NES. The Commodore 64 computer
contained a dedicated SID (sound interface device) chip, designed by engineer Robert
Yannes. The SID chip could produce three channels of sound with four available waveforms and multiple filters. 7 Compared with the other 8-bit consoles (such as the
Atari 2600 and 5200, the Colecovision, and the Intellivision) and home computers (such
as the Atari 800, Apple II and ZX Spectrum) available at the time, its sound capabilities
were unmatched. Both the Commodore 64 and its successor, the Amiga (one of the first
computers that utilized sampled sounds instead of standard waveforms), remain popular
today as a platform for chiptune and demoscene composers. (Composers of chiptune
and demoscene music practice the art of game music in vitro, with no particular commercial endeavor, writing instead to show off their skill and to pay tribute to the games of the
past. Using programs that emulate the sound quality of old consoles and computers, they
produce original works and covers that are at once both nostalgic and futuristic.)8
When the NES was first released in the United States in 1985, its five-channel sound
system was unprecedented in home consoles, and its cartridges (up to 512 kilobytes in
capacity, more if memory management chips were used) allowed more space to be devoted
to sound. The success of the systems flagship game, Super Mario Bros., ushered in a new
era of video game sound, thanks in no small part to the games composer, Koji Kondo.
Kondos innovative sound design, both laid-back and energized at the same time, was
unique in the extent of its adaptation to the gameplay; it followed the players movement
through the games environments (becoming low and percussive in an underground area
or light and bubbly when underwater) and reflected changes in the players status (increasing in tempo when the players time was about to run out or playing a special melody
while an invincibility power-up was in effect), making it a precursor to the adaptive
soundtracks of later games such as LucasArtss Star Wars: X-Wing (1993) and Nintendos
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (1998).9 Kondo, along with fellow composer
Hirokazu Hip Tanaka [composer for Nintendo games Metroid (1987), Dr. Mario
(1990), and Earthbound (1994)], provided the music for the earliest iterations of some
of Nintendos most popular franchises.10
With the arrival of Super Mario Bros. and games like it, the compositional complexity of
video game music grew considerably, even if the sounds themselves were still relatively
primitive. In 1986, Sega released the Master System, with sound capabilities comparable
to the NES; however, it was not until the release of the Sega Genesis (1989), Super
Nintendo (1991), and other 16-bit consoles that game sound design truly began to resemble what it is today. With six sound channels in the Genesis and eight in the SNES, game
soundtracks had the potential to have twice the texture and depth of their predecessors.
Waveform synthesis was replaced by FM (frequency modulated) and wavetable (sample)
synthesis, both of which sounded more realistic and could be tweaked easily by a composer for volume and effects (such as vibrato, reverb, panning, and fade). With larger
memory capacities (SNES cartridges had from 0.25 to 6 megabytes of space), games could
be of much greater length; they became more cinematic in their presentation, and they
began to have soundtracks that changed to reflect the mood of the story. A well-known
example of this trend is Squares Final Fantasy 3 (1994), whose composer, Nobuo
Uematsu, was one of the first game sound designers to achieve international recognition
for his work.11 In Final Fantasy 3, each hero and villain in the game had his or her own
musical leitmotif, which played whenever that character became the focus of the story.
The musical accompaniment was a form of wordless narration, giving insight on the
games characters and events in a way that text alone could not.
At the same time as console game sound was evolving, home computer games were also
undergoing a major transformation. Prior to the advent of compact discs in the mid-1990s,
game sound designers pioneered the widespread use of the versatile MIDI format. MIDI
(musical instrument digital interface), proposed as a protocol in 1981 by engineer David
Smith, published as a standard in 1983, and standardized as General MIDI in 1991 by
the MIDI Manufacturers Association, was inspired by electronic musicians interest in
linking together banks of synthesizers to simplify the logistics of live performances.12
MIDI files were relatively high quality compared to consoles of the time (boasting a sound
bank of 128 possible instruments playing in up to 16 separate channels) but still compact
enough to meet the size restrictions of 3.5-inch floppy disks (1.44 megabytes apiece). The
release of Rolands General MIDI-compliant sound card Sound Canvas in 1991 allowed
game composers to embrace MIDI as a viable format.13 Since MIDI files only contained
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instructions for what notes were to be played, rather than the actual synthesized instruments themselves, and their size was a fraction of what it would be in other formats, such
as WAV or AIFF files. MIDIs strength was its universality, since the files could be read by
any computer with MIDI capability, a feature which became ubiquitous in computers of
the early 1990s and which has since remained so. This strength, however, has also proven
to be a liability; since a MIDI file depends on the computers sound card to perform the
sound synthesis, the music quality of a MIDI soundtrack will vary from computer to computer according to the sound card installed, sometimes drastically so. According to Aaron
Marks, Internal instruments gradually became better as sound card manufacturers
included high-grade synthesizer chips, but because this quality differed greatly between
manufacturers, what sounded good on one card sounded like a train wreck on another.14
Despite this drawback, MIDI remains in use as a compositional format because of its
versatility; a piece of music is often composed with a MIDI sequencer or keyboard, and
then translated to a more sophisticated file format using a sample library.15
As data storage technology progressed beyond floppy disks, the technology of home
computers and consoles began to merge. The CD-ROM format, first used in 1985,
became the vehicle of choice for computer games of the mid-1990s.16 In the field of home
consoles, the Sega CD (1992), Panasonic 3DO (1993), Atari Jaguar (1993), Sega Saturn
(1995), and Sony PlayStation (1995) all stored their games on CD-ROMs, allowing them
to utilize Red Book digital audio, the format of a standard music CD. (The Red Book
format, first released in 1980 by Philips and Sony, has a sample rate of 44.1 kHz,
compared to the SNESs 32 kHz, or the 28 kHz of the NESs pulse waves.) Both the
PlayStation and Nintendo 64 (1996) could produce up to 24 sound channels. The
Nintendo 64 was cartridge based, which meant less storage space (464 megabytes) compared to the PlayStations CDs (650700 megabytes). In 1998 Konami released the arcade
game Dance Dance Revolution, notable for its incorporation of music and rhythm-based
dancing into its gameplay mechanic. With the increased capacity of CDs and DVDs, it
was perhaps inevitable that the next generation of consoles would all feature disc-based
games. Segas Dreamcast (1999), Sonys PlayStation 2 (2000), Nintendos GameCube
(2001), and Microsofts Xbox (2001) were the new faces of gaming at the start of the
twenty-first century, each with channel and sound bank capabilities many times greater
than those of the 1980s consoles. In 2000, the National Academy of Arts and Sciences
allowed video game soundtracks to compete for Grammy awards; as of 2007 no game
has yet won an award. With the release of the next generation of consoles in 2005 and
beyond, and the implementation in games of user-designated soundtracks [such as in
EAs The Sims 2 (2004) and Rockstars Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas], the line between
what is and what is not game music has been all but erased.
films have some kind of musical score, though diegetic sound still plays a large role, both as
short sound effects (gunfire, character voices) and as prolonged, ambient ones (wind in the
trees, a roaring fire). In Valves Half-Life 2, for example, diegetic sound makes up nearly
the entire soundtrack, except for short musical cues when the player reaches a new area.
The designers chose to forego the traditional use of cut-scenes, instead telling the story
in-game through character dialogue and events that unfold with no significant pause in
the action. The games sound design reflects this choice, heightening the immersion with
ambient sound that matches the games dystopian battlefields.
The process of sound design for a video game can vary greatly from game to game,
depending on what kind of game is being made, but it typically follows the course of game
design process as a whole. A composer or sound design team is hired or assigned, based on
the needs of the game and the resources available. As the cost of making games has grown
in size, the budgets for game sound design have also increased proportionately, with some
games incorporating soundtracks performed by classical ensembles and popular recording
artists. However, the majority of game sound design is still done by small in-house teams
or by freelance composers, and most games music features synthesized instruments rather
than real ones, for reasons of storage space and budget. After meeting with the rest of the
design team, which can include artists, programmers and writers, the sound designer
learns what is expected for the game and begins composing. Depending on the games
complexity, the sound design required can be no more than a handful of sound effects,
or it can be several hours of fully orchestrated soundtrack. There may be a team of foley
artists, composers, voice actors, and musicians, or one designer may perform all these
roles himself. Whatever the scope of his work, the sound designer attempts to match the
vision of the programmers while adhering to strict deadlines and hardware constraints.
Throughout the process, the sound designer remains in constant contact with the rest
of the design team to stay apprised of any changes. As in film scoring, video game
sound designers are often tasked with doing a great deal of work near the end of a projects
timeline, after most or all of the games visuals have been finalized; last-minute alterations
to the game can necessitate the reworking or rewriting of its soundtrack. No single
aspect of a game can necessarily ensure its success, but high-quality sound design is fast
becoming essential for any video game that hopes to do well, regardless of genre, system,
or audience.17
Though film and game music share certain similarities, there is still a vital difference
between them: interactivity. Films are viewed passively, and thus their scores must be
passive. Video games are played interactively, and thus have the potential for interactive
music. A games story cannot progress without the players input, and for that reason a
games music is inevitably tied to the players actions. Game music must match the style
of play: if a game allows a player a great deal of freedom to act and explore, the games
music must be able to keep pace with whatever use of that freedom the player makes. Fully
interactive music (or adaptive music) has long been the goal of many designers in the
games industry, and while some games have achieved various levels of success, the question
of how to respond to and even anticipate a players actions still remains. As author
Alexander Brandon explains,
Interactive music is audio that happens when a user does pretty much anything with any kind
of device, whether it be to click a mouse or hit a key. Adaptive music refers to something that
happens. . .when the user influences the audio, and the audio influences the user.18
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The issue becomes increasingly complicated in light of the open-ended format of more
recent games, sometimes referred to as sandbox games (the term sandbox is used to
mean a playing environment that encourages experimentation and creativity, sometimes
to the exclusion of any set narrative). The somewhat rigid nature of Red Book audio
(i.e., the tempo and pitch cannot be modulated, only one track can be played at a time,
etc.) makes its use in adaptive music problematic. Simpler, more modular sound file
formats, such as MIDI, are better suited to the task, a fact capitalized on by LucasArts
in the 1990s with their development of the iMUSE system, which permitted smooth
transitions between pieces of looped music in several of their games.19 Microsofts DirectMusic interface (introduced in 1999 and still widely used today) allows composers to pair
MIDI with more advanced sound formats.
Most games feature some level of adaptation in their music; often, it is no more complicated than changing melodies whenever the player reaches a new level or location, or when
the players status in the game changes. Even the game over music that accompanies
player death or defeat in any given game can be said to be adaptive, since it is the players
action or inaction that causes it. The style of game often dictates how much adaptivity a
games soundtrack can employ. Role-playing games, for example, focus more closely on
character development than any other genre; they have the most potential for an extensive
story and, therefore, an extensive soundtrack. However, since RPGs are the most
narrative-dependent genre of games, their interactivity potential is thereby limited; most
of them do not allow significant deviation from the preprogrammed storyline and the
music that accompanies it. Thus, though the soundtrack of an RPG can be beautifully
written (and often is); at its heart it is most like film music. First-person shooters have a
high potential for adaptive music, since the players environment has a high interaction
potential; enemies appear suddenly, passageways open and close, and the player is constantly updating his playing style, moving slowly through the shadows when avoiding enemies, and then charging out with guns blazing to take them by surprise. A truly adaptive
soundtrack would tailor itself closely to the players style while still providing atmosphere
and audio cues; for example, the appearance of an enemy would cause an enemy theme
to play for both a cautious player and an aggressive player, but the cautious player would
hear the theme played in a different style than the aggressive playerin a minor key, for
example, as opposed to a major one, or with slurred notes rather than sharply articulated
ones.20 As games become more complicated and allow for even greater levels of player
freedom, game music will have to adapt to an ever-increasing number of scenarios and
narrative moods. Most video games are still primarily combat-oriented, but as game
technology begins to allow for player interaction that goes deeper than pure antagonism,
the need for effectively nuanced game sound design is greater than ever. As video games
continue to evolve in scope and detail, their music must necessarily evolve with them.
The importance of music in games has become increasingly apparent since its inception
in 1972, both to game players and game developers. Game sound design has progressed to
the point where the music is no longer considered secondary to graphics or gameplay, but
rather part of a dynamic whole that succeeds or fails as a single unit. The works of
celebrated sound designers and composers have been elevated in status to the point where
today gamers and non-gamers alike listen to game music entirely separated from the
games that contained them, on soundtrack CDs and at live performances in concert
halls.21 In 2005, companies EA and Square-Enix began offering music from their games
through the online music service iTunes. Video game music ringtones for cell phones have
also grown in popularity (on May 6, 2006, the ringtone Super Mario Bros. Theme was
No. 2 on Billboards Top 10 Ringtones after 80 weeks on the list.).22 The May 19, 2005,
Business Week Online article, From Beeps to Billboard puts the phenomenon into
perspective:
The soundtrack for Halo 2, a game in which a genetically enhanced supersoldier battles evil, has
sold more than 90,000 copies since its release last November. Peaking at No. 162, it marked game
musics first entry into the Billboard 200 chart. (A typical movie soundtrack, on the other hand,
sells only 10,000 copies and never comes even close to the chart.).23
Game sound has grown from the looped beeps of its beginnings to fully realized
digital audio that rivals the output of the traditional music industry in fidelity and
originalitywell on its way to being recognized as a true genre of music in its own right.
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Atari 2600 is essentially a version of Defender with helicopters replacing the spaceships.
Conversely, an analysis of the content of Space Invaders, Spaceward Ho!, Defender, and
Star Wars, as well as many other games, would consider them all science fiction even
though they vary widely in player experience. As narrative games grow more complex
and cinematic, image-based and thematic generic classifications from film will be able to
be applied more usefully, but interactivity will always be an important factor in the way
the games are experienced.
The kind of interactivity present in a game will depend on the games main objective. In
a video game, there is almost always a definite objective that the player strives to complete
(or find and complete, as in the case of Myst), and in doing so very specific interactions are
used. Thus the intention, of the player-character at least, is often clear and can be analyzed
as a part of the game. The games objective is a motivational force for the player, and this,
combined with the various forms of interactivity present in the game, are useful places to
start in building a set of video game genres. The object of the game can be multiple or
divided into steps, placing the game in more than one genre, just as films can be placed
in multiple genres (the film Blade Runner, for example, fits both science fiction and
hardboiled detective genres). The main objective in Pac-Man by which a player gains
points and advances levels, for example, is the eating of the yellow dots. In order to do
so successfully, the player-character must avoid the pursuing ghosts, and also navigate a
maze. Thus while Pac-Man may be primarily classified as a Collecting game, we may
also classify it as an Escape or Maze game, albeit secondarily. By beginning with
the interaction required by the games primary objective, we can start to divide the wide
variety of video games into a series of interactive genres.
feature different sequences or scenarios each of which can be categorized into different
genres. Video games used as examples here include arcade video games, home video games,
home computer games, and in a few cases, networked games. The format of this list is
patterned after the Library of Congress Moving Imagery Genre-Form Guide compiled by
Brian Taves (chair), Judi Hoffman, and Karen Lund, whose work was the inspiration and
model for this list. The decision was made to use their list as a model not only because it
was rigorous enough to be accepted and used at the Library of Congress, but also due to
the way in which it attempts to articulate the genres it describes by examining the differences that demarcate individual genres relative to one another, seeking to divide the field of
moving imagery forms in such a way so as to be as inclusive and exhaustive as possible,
rather than setting up finite and absolute criteria for genre membership. Thus the following genres below tend towards inclusion, with some genres (i.e., Demo, Diagnostic,
Utility) which are arguably not games as noted above.
Genres covered in the following list Abstract, Adaptation, Adventure, Artificial Life,
Ball-and-Paddle, Board Games, Capturing, Card Games, Catching, Chase, Collecting,
Combat, Demo, Diagnostic, Dodging, Driving, Educational, Escape, Fighting, Flying,
Gambling, Interactive Movie, Management Simulation, Maze, Obstacle Course, Penciland-Paper Games, Pinball, Platform, Programming Games, Puzzle, Quiz, Racing, Rhythm
and Dance, Role-Playing, Shooting, Simulation, Sports, Strategy, Table-Top Games,
Target, Text Adventure, Training Simulation, and Utility.
Abstract
Games which have nonrepresentational graphics and often involve an objective which is
not oriented or organized as a narrative. Often the objective involves construction or visiting or filling every part of the screen (as in Tetris, Qix, Pipe Dream, or Q*bert), or destruction or emptying of the screen (as in Breakout or Pac-Man). Characters appearing in
abstract games may even resemble people or animals but usually do not attempt to represent real world animals or people or their behaviors. Abstraction is, of course, a matter
of degree, though it is usually possible to discern whether or not the game was intended to
be deliberately representational. For example, despite their simple, blocky graphics, early
Atari 2600 games such as Basketball or Street Racer attempt to represent people and race
cars, which is reflected not only in their design but in their interaction within the game.
Nor should the term be used for games which are adaptations of games existing in different media, such as Checkers or Othello, which are abstract in design and play, but which are
nonetheless adaptations and thus representations of games from other media.
EXAMPLES: Arkanoid; Amidar (with Collecting); Ataxx; Block Out (with Puzzle);
Breakout; Marble Madness; Pac-Man (with Collecting, Escape, and Maze); Pipe Dream;
Q*bert; Qix (with Collecting); Super Breakout; Tempest (with Shooting); Tetris (with
Puzzle).
Adaptation
Games based on activities adapted from another medium or gaming activity, such as
sports, table-top games, board games, card games, or games whose action closely follows
a narrative from a work existing in another medium, such as a book, short story, comic
book, graphic novel, or play. This involves such questions as how the original work is
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changed to allow for interactivity and the completion of an objective, or in the case of
adapted games, how the original activity changes as a result of being adapted. This term
should not be used for games which use the same characters as existing works in another
medium but make no attempt to even loosely follow plots or imitate activities found in
those works. Home video games and computer games may also be adaptations of arcade
video games, in which case they are usually reduced in graphic detail, complexity, or
speed when compared with the original. In a few cases, arcade games, such as Computer
Space, are adaptations of mainframe computer games. This term should only be applied
to Simulation games when they are adapted from games or gaming activities in other
media.
NOTE: See Sports, Table-top Games, Board Games, Card Games, Pencil-and-Paper
Games, and Simulation.
EXAMPLES: Adapted from card games: Casino; Erics Ultimate Solitaire; Ken Uston
Blackjack/Poker. Adapted from cartoons: Spy Vs Spy; The Simpsons. Adapted from comic
books: Spiderman, X-MEN, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Adapted from film: Tron; Star
Wars; Krull; Muppet Treasure Island. Adapted from pencil-and-paper games: Hangman;
Tic-Tac-Toe. Adapted from sports: American Football; Atari Baseball; Hot Shots Tennis.
Adapted from table-top games: PONG; Sure Shot Pool; Virtual Pool. Adapted from television game shows: Family Feud; Jeopardy; Jokers Wild; Password; The Price is Right; Tic-TacDough; $25,000 Pyramid; Wheel of Fortune.
Adventure
Games which are set in a world usually made up of multiple, connected rooms or
screens, involving an objective which is more complex than simply catching, shooting,
capturing, or escaping, although completion of the objective may involve several or all
of these. Objectives usually must be completed in several steps, for example, finding
keys and unlocking doors to other areas to retrieve objects needed elsewhere in the
game. Characters are usually able to carry objects, such as weapons, keys, tools, and so
on. Settings often evoke a particular historical time period and place, such as the middle
ages or Arthurian England, or are thematically related to content-based genres such as
Science Fiction, Fantasy, or Espionage. This term should not be used for games in which
screens are only encountered in one-way linear fashion, like the levels in Donkey Kong,
or for games like Pitfall! which are essentially limited to running, jumping, and avoiding
dangers (see Obstacle Course). Nor should the term be used to refer to games like Dragons
Lair, Gadget, or Star Trek: Borg, which do not allow a player to wander and explore the
games world freely, but strictly limit outcomes and possible narrative paths to a series of
video sequences and linear progression through a predetermined narrative (see Interactive
Movies).
NOTE: For adventure games which are primarily text based, see Text Adventure.
For related games similar in theme to adventure games, see also Obstacle Course and
Interactive Movies.
EXAMPLES: Adventure (for the Atari 2600); E.T.: The Extraterrestrial (with Adaptation); Haunted House, Krull (with Adaptation); Myst (with Puzzle); Raiders of the Lost
Ark (with Adaptation); Spy Vs Spy (with Adaptation); Superman (with Adaptation);
games in the Tomb Raider series; Venture; games from the Daggerfall series; games from
theUltima series.
Artificial Life
Games which involve the growth and/or maintenance of digital creatures of some sort,
which can die without the proper care by the player. Often growth and the happiness
or contentedness of the characters are the goals of the game. (Whether or not all such
programs constitute games is debatable.) The term should not be used for games which
deal with the allocation of resources or games which are primarily concerned with
management (see Management Simulation).
EXAMPLES: AquaZone; Babyz; Catz; Creatures; Dogz; The Little Computer People;
The Sims (with Management Simulation).
Ball-and-Paddle
See Table-top Games.
Board Games
Games which are an adaptation of existing board games (see Adaptation) or games
which are similar to board games in their design and play even if they did not previously
exist as board games. Games of this genre include either classic board games like Chess,
Checkers, or Backgammon, or trademarked ones such as Scrabble or Monopoly. This term
should not be used for games adapted from games such as pool or table tennis, in
which physical skills are involved (see Table-top Games), nor for games adapted from
games which require only paper and a pencil to play, such as Hangman or Tic-Tac-Toe
(see Pencil-and-Paper Games), nor for games adapted from games which are primarily
card based and do not use a board (see Card Games). Three games made by Philips/
Magnavox, Conquest of the World, Quest for the Rings, and The Great Wall Street Fortune
Hunt, required a board game to be used along with the video game itself.
NOTE: Not necessary to cross-list with Adaptation as this is implied in Board Games.
Most Board Games can also be cross-listed with Strategy.
EXAMPLES: Backgammon; Battleship; Clue; Conquest of the World; The Great
Wall Street Fortune Hunt; Monopoly; Othello; Quest for the Rings; Scrabble; Stratego; Video
Checkers; Video Chess.
Capturing
Games in which the primary objective involves the capturing of objects or characters
that move away from and try to evade the player-character. This may involve stopping
the object or character (as in Gopher or Keystone Kapers), or closing off their access to an
escape route (as in Surround or in the light cycle section of the arcade game Tron).
This term should not be used for games in which objects or characters do not move
(see Collecting) or do not actively try to avoid the player-character (see Catching), nor
should it be used for Strategy games (such as Chess and Checkers) involving the capturing
of pieces which are controlled by the player, but which are not player-characters directly
representing the player in the game.
NOTE: Not necessary to cross-list with Chase as this is implied in Capturing. Many
games with more than one player can be cross-listed with Escape, as game play often
involves player-characters alternately trying to capture one another and escape from one
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another. Capturing objectives also occur briefly in some games; for example, in Pac-Man
after eating a power pill when the ghosts can be chased and eaten, or the capturing of
criminals in Superman.
EXAMPLES: Gopher; Hole Hunter; Keystone Kapers; Surround (with Escape); Take the
Money and Run; Texas Chainsaw Massacre; the light cycle game in Tron.
Card Games
Games which are adaptations of existing card games, or games which are essentially like
card games in that they are primarily card-based (such as various solitaire computer
games). While most Card Games use the standard four-suit deck, some games use
specialized cards (such as 1000 Miles, a shareware game which is an adaptation of Parker
Brotherss Milles Bornes racing card game). This term should not be used for Trivia Games
which are primarily question-and-answer games.
NOTE: Not necessary to cross-list with Adaptation, as that is implied in Card Games.
Many card games which involve betting can also be cross-listed with Gambling.
EXAMPLES: 1000 Miles (with Racing); Blackjack (with Gambling); Casino (with
Gambling); Erics Ultimate Solitaire; Ken Uston Blackjack/Poker (with Gambling);
Montana; Video Poker (with Gambling).
Catching
Games in which the primary objective involves the catching of objects or characters that
do not actively try to evade the player-character. If the objects or characters are in motion,
it is usually along a predetermined path and independent of the movements of the
player-character. In some cases the player-character can affect the motion of the objects
or characters (such as in Stampede, where the player-character can nudge the cattle
forward), but at no time do the objects or characters try to actively avoid the playercharacter. This term should not be used for games in which objects or characters do not
move (see Collecting) or games in which they actively try to avoid the player-character
(see Capturing). Nor should the term be used for games that require timing in order to
use moving objects, such as the moving logs in Frogger, or the swinging vines in Pitfall!,
nor for Sports games with balls which are thrown, bounced, or caught, as these objects
are used and reused but not caught and removed from the game.
EXAMPLES: Alpha Beam with Ernie (with Educational); Big Birds Egg Catch; Circus
Atari, Fishing Derby; Lost Luggage; Stampede; Quantum; and games 21 through 27 in Street
Racer.
Chase
See Catching, Capturing, Driving, Escape, Flying, and Racing.
Collecting
Games in which the primary objective involves the collecting of objects that do not move
(such as Pac-Man or Mousetrap), or the surrounding of areas (such as Qix or Amidar).
Often scoring in these games is determined by the number of objects collected or areas
bounded. Collecting here can mean simply running over or hitting objects which then
disappear (as the dots in Pac-Man or the balloons in Prop Cycle). This term should not be
used for games in which objects or characters sought by the player-character are in motion
(see Catching) or games in which they actively try to avoid the player-character (see Capturing). Nor should the term be used for games that require the use of objects (such as keys,
currency, or weaponry) which are only indirectly used in the attainment of the games
objective. Some games involve the collecting of pieces of an object which can be assembled
once all the pieces are found, such as the bridge in Superman or the urn in Haunted House,
although these games often have objectives that involve more than simply collecting and so
should not be considered as belonging to this genre.
EXAMPLES: Amidar (with Abstract); Mousetrap (with Maze and Escape); Pac-Man
(with Maze and Escape); Spy Vs Spy (with Combat and Maze); Prop Cycle (with Flying);
Qix (with Abstract).
Combat
Games which involve two or more players, or one player and a computer-controlled
player, shooting some form of projectiles at each other, and in which all players are provided with similar means for a fairly balanced fight. These games usually emphasize
maneuverability and sometimes the outwitting of the opponent. This term should not
be used for Shooting games in which the two sides are clearly unequal or not evenly
balanced, nor for Fighting games which do not involve shooting. Although these games
may range in the appearance of their content, for example, cowboys in Outlaw, tanks or
planes in Combat, or paddles in Warlords, the basic play of the game, shoot the opponent
while avoiding getting shot, remains essentially the same.
NOTE: For related games, see Fighting and Shooting.
EXAMPLES: Battletech; Battlezone; Combat; Dactyl Nightmare; Outlaw; Spy Vs Spy
(with Collecting and Maze); Warlords.
Demo
Cartridges, discs, or downloads designed to demonstrate games or a game system. Such
cartridges were primarily used in store displays to demonstrate games. While they may not
contain complete games themselves, these cartridges have the same appearance as game
cartridges and are sometimes collected and traded as game cartridges, and they are often
included in listings of cartridges. As discs or downloads, Demos allow a player to try out
a game for free without buying the full-sized game.
NOTE: Not necessary to cross-list with Utility, as that is implied in Demo.
EXAMPLES: Adam Demo Cartridge, Dealer Demo (Bally Astrocade), Demonstration
Cartridge (RCA Studio II), Music Box Demo (Coleco Adam).
Diagnostic
Cartridges designed to test the functioning of a system. While they are not games themselves, these cartridges have the same appearance as game cartridges and are sometimes
collected and traded as game cartridges, and they are often included in listings of
cartridges.
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Escape
Games whose main objective involves escaping pursuers or getting out of some form of
enclosure. Games can be open-ended, with the game ending when a player escapes from
an enclosure or enters a place safe from the pursuers, or closed, in which a player escapes
pursuers for as long as possible but always succumbs in the end (as in Pac-Man). This term
should not be used for games in which the player-character battles the opponent instead of
fleeing (see Combat and Shooting), nor for games like Adventure or Haunted House in
which the player-character is only occasionally pursued by characters.
EXAMPLES: Pac-Man (with Collecting and Maze); Maze Craze (with Maze);
Mousetrap (with Collecting and Maze); Ms. Pac-Man (with Collecting and Maze);
Surround (with Capturing).
Fighting
Games involving characters who fight usually hand-to-hand, in one-to-one combat situations without the use of firearms or projectiles. In most of these games, the fighters are
represented as humans or anthropomorphic characters. This term should not be used for
games which involve shooting or vehicles (see Combat and Shooting), or for games which
include fighting, like Ice Hockey, but which have other objectives (see Sports).
NOTE: Many Fighting games can be cross-listed with Sports. For related games,
see also Combat.
EXAMPLES: Avengers; Body Slam; Boxing (with Sports); games in the Mortal Kombat
series; Soul Edge; games in the Tekken series; Wrestle War.
Flying
Games involving flying skills, such as steering, altitude control, takeoff and landing,
maneuverability, speed control, and fuel conservation. This term should not be used for
games in which shooting an opponent is the main objective (see Combat and Shooting),
unless flying skills are essential to game play and to the winning of the game. Flying games
can involve airplanes, birds, or spaceships, and movement can take place in the sky (as in
A-10 Attack and Prop Cycle), through caverns (as in Descent), or in outer space (as in Starmaster and Star Ship).
NOTE: See also Combat, Shooting, Sports, and Training Simulation.
EXAMPLES: A-10 Attack (with Training Simulation); Descent (with Maze and
Shooting); F/A-18 Hornet 3.0 (with Training Simulation); Flight Unlimited (with Training
Simulation); Prop Cycle (with Collecting); Solaris; Starmaster (with Shooting).
Gambling
Games which involve the betting of a stake, which increases or decreases the players
total assets in the following round. These games usually involve multiple rounds of
betting, allowing a players stakes or money to grow or diminish over time. This term
should not be used for games in which betting does not occur, or for games in which wins
and losses do not carry over into the following round.
NOTE: See also Card Games and Table-top Games.
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EXAMPLES: Blackjack (with Card Games); Casino (with Card Games); Slot Machine;
Video Poker (with Card Games); You Dont Know Jack (with Quiz).
Interactive Movie
Games which are made up of branching video clips or other moving images, the branching of which is decided by a players actions. Players are often called to make decisions at
points in the game where the action stalls or loops, or during action sequences that allow
player input which can stop or change the course of action while the video clip is running.
While the player may be given limited freedom of movement or action, revelation of the
story is still largely linear in structure, with little or no variation possible in its overall
sequence of events. This term should not be used for games which place a controllable
player-character over backgrounds which are video clips, like Rebel Assault, nor should
the term be used to refer to games like Myst which allow a player to wander and explore
its world freely, but still limit outcomes and possible narrative paths to a series of video
sequences and linear progression through a relatively predetermined narrative.
EXAMPLES: Dragons Lair; Space Ace; Gadget; Johnny Mnemonic; Star Trek: Borg.
Management Simulation
Games in which players must balance the use of limited resources to build or expand
some kind of community, institution, or empire, while dealing with internal forces within
(such as the crime and pollution in SimCity) or external forces such as those of nature or
chance (such as natural disasters and monsters in SimCity, or planets that require various
amounts of terraforming as in Spaceward Ho!) and often competition from other players
as well. Single-player games are often open-ended, where the community or institution
grows and is developed over time and continues changing, while multiple-player games
usually have the objective of dominating all of the other players, at which point the game
ends. In some cases, these games can take on an educational function as well, for example,
games found in museum displays which simulate supply and demand or other economic
principles.
NOTE: See also Educational and Utility.
EXAMPLES: Aerobiz; Caesar II; Sid Meiers Civilization; M.U.L.E.; Monopoly; Railroad
Tycoon; SimAnt; SimCity; SimFarm; SimTower; Spaceward Ho!
Maze
Games in which the objective requires the successful navigation of a maze. What can be
called a maze is, of course, a matter of degree, though it is usually possible to discern
whether a configuration of rooms or hallways was intended to deliberately cause difficulties in navigation (consider, for example, the difference in complexity between the mazes
found in Berzerk, Pac-Man, and Doom). Mazes may appear in an overhead view (as in
Pac-Man), a side view (as in Lode Runner), or first-person perspective (as in Doom) or hidden from view (as in certain games in Maze Craze). In some cases, the player-character can
alter the maze, such as opening or closing passageways (as in Mousetrap), or even digging
holes or passageways (as in Lode Runner or Dig Dug). Some mazes, such as those found in
Lode Runner, focus less on navigation and more on how to gain access to certain portions
of the screen in order to achieve certain results or obtain objects. Often the playercharacter must navigate the maze under the pressure of pursuers, although this is not
always the case. Mazes are also often imbedded within other games, such as the Blue
Labyrinth in Adventure, or the underground maze of the Selenetic Age in Myst.
EXAMPLES: Descent (with Flying and Shooting); Dig Dug; Doom (with Shooting);
K.C. Munchkin (with Collecting and Escape); Lode Runner (with Platform); Maze Craze;
Mousetrap (with Collecting and Escape); Pac-Man (with Collecting and Escape); Tunnel
Runner; Tunnels of Doom (with Adventure); Ms. Pac-Man (with Collecting and Escape);
Spy Vs Spy (with Collecting and Combat); Take the Money and Run.
Obstacle Course
Games in which the main objective involves the traversing of a difficult path or one
beset with obstacles, through which movement is essentially linear, often involving
running, jumping, and avoiding dangers. This term should not be used for games which
do not require more than simply steering down a clear path (see Driving) or avoiding
objects or characters without a linear progression of movement (see Dodging), nor should
it be used for games which involve chasing or being chased (see Chase), or shooting at
opponents or getting shot at (see Combat and Shooting), nor for games with complex
objectives (see Adventure), nor for games involving more than traversing a path of
obstacles (see Platform).
NOTE: While Obstacle Courses are generally linear in design as far as the playercharacters advancement through them is concerned, this degree of linearity can vary somewhat; for example, in games allowing a character to backtrack, or choose an alternate route.
EXAMPLES: Boot Camp; Clown Downtown; Freeway (with Dodging); Frogger (with
Dodging); Pitfall!; Jungle Hunt.
Pencil-and-Paper Games
Games which are adaptations of games usually played by means of pencil and paper
(see Adaptation). This term should not be used for drawing or doodling programs
(see Utility) or for games like those in the Dungeons & Dragons series whose adaptations
are very different from the version of the game played with pencil and paper.
NOTE: Not necessary to use with Adaptation as this is implied in Pencil-and-Paper
Games.
EXAMPLES: 3-D Tic-Tac-Toe; Effacer; Hangman from the 25th Century; Noughts and
Crosses; Tic-Tac-Toe; and Hangman which appears as a cartridge in several game systems.
Pinball
Games which simulate the play of a pinball game. Although these games could be considered Table-top Games, there is a tradition of video pinball games and a wide enough
variety of them to warrant categorizing them in a genre of their own.
NOTE: Not necessary to cross-list with Table-top Games as that is implied in Pinball.
EXAMPLES: Arcade Pinball; Astrocade Pinball; Electronic Pinball; Extreme Pinball;
Flipper Game; Galactic Pinball; Kirbys Pinball Land; Midnight Magic; Pachinko!; Pinball;
Pinball Challenge; Pinball Dreams; Pinball Fantasies; Pinball Jam; Pinball Quest; Pinball
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Wizard; Power Rangers Pinball; Pro Pinball; Real Pinball; Sonic Spinball; Spinball;
Super Pinball: Behind the Mask; Super Sushi Pinball; Thunderball!; True Pinball; Video
Pinball.
Platform
Games in which the primary objective requires movement through a series of levels, by
way of running, climbing, jumping, and other means of locomotion. Characters and settings are seen in side view as opposed to top view, thus creating a graphical sense of up
and down as is implied in Platform. These games often also can involve the avoidance
of dropped or falling objects, conflict with (or navigation around) computer-controlled
characters, and often some character, object, or reward at the top of the climb which provides narrative motivation. This term should not be used for games which do not involve
ascending heights or advancement through a series of levels (see Adventure), nor for games
which involve little more than traversing a path of obstacles (see Obstacle Course).
NOTE: For related games, see also Adventure and Obstacle Course.
EXAMPLES: Crazy Climber; Donkey Kong; Donkey Kong Jr.; Lode Runner (with Maze);
Spiderman (Atari 2600); Super Mario Bros. (with Collecting); Warioland; Yoshis Island.
Programming Games
Games in which the player writes short programs that control agents within a game.
These agents then compete and react to situations based on the players programming.
This term should not be used for games in which a player must learn to operate a
machine, such as in Riven (see Puzzle), nor for games in which the player controls the
player-characters directly. Depending on what the programmed agents do, games may
be able to be cross-listed with other genres.
EXAMPLES: AI Fleet Commander; AI Wars, CoreWar; CRobots; Omega; RARS (Robot
Auto Racing Simulator); Robot Battle.
Puzzle
Games in which the primary conflict is not so much between the player-character and
other characters but rather the figuring out of a solution, which often involves solving
enigmas, navigation, learning how to use different tools, and the manipulating or reconfiguring of objects. Most often there is a visual or sonic element to the puzzles as well, or at
least some verbal description of them. This term should not be used for games which only
involve the answering of questions (see Quiz). Many Text Adventures also contain puzzles
and use text to describe their sights and sounds.
EXAMPLES: The 7th Guest; Atari Video Cube; Block Out (with Abstract); Dice Puzzle;
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (with Text Adventure); Jigsaw; Myst (with Adventure); Rubiks Cube (with Adaptation); Sokoban; Suspended Animation (with Text Adventure); Tetris (with Abstract).
Quiz
Games in which the main objective is the successful answering of questions. Scoring is
usually based on either how many questions are answered correctly, or on the amount of
money players have after betting on their answers. Some of these games are adaptations of
board games or quiz shows from television.
NOTE: Games in which the player can place a bet on their answers should be crosslisted with Gambling.
EXAMPLES: $25,000 Pyramid (with Adaptation); Fax; Jeopardy (with Adaptation);
NFL Football Trivia Challenge 94/95; Name That Tune; (with Adaptation); You Dont
Know Jack (with Gambling); Sex Trivia; Trivial Pursuit (with Adaptation); Trivia Whiz;
Triv-Quiz; Video Trivia; Wizz Quiz.
Racing
Games in which the objective involves the winning of a race or the covering of more
ground than an opponent (as in Slot Racers). Often these games involve driving skills
and can be cross-listed with Driving. One-player games can be considered Racing if there
are other computer-controlled cars or vehicles competing on the race track; however, if
they are not competitive and act only as obstacles, use Driving.
NOTE: See also Driving. Not necessary to cross-list with Sports as this is implied in
Racing. Although most of these games involve driving skills and can be cross-listed with
Driving, some of them, like 1000 Miles, do not.
EXAMPLES: 1000 Miles (with Card Games); Daytona USA (with Driving); High
Velocity (with Driving); Indy 500 (with Driving); Mario Kart 64 (with Driving); Math
Grand Prix (with Educational); Pole Position (with Driving); Red Planet (with Driving);
Slot Racers (with Dodging);Street Racer (with Dodging and Driving); Super GT (with
Driving).
Rhythm and Dance
Games in which gameplay requires players to keep time with a musical rhythm. These
games may employ a variety of controllers beyond the usual video game hardware, including controllers simulating drums (as in DrumMania), turntables (as in Beatmania), guitars
(as in GuitarFreaks) or even maracas (as in Samba de Amigo); or players may have to dance
to a beat following prescribed dance steps (as in Dance Dance Revolution).
EXAMPLES: Beatmania; Bust-a-Groove; Dance Dance Revolution; GuitarFreaks;
PaRappa the Rapper; Popn Music; Samba de Amigo; Space Channel 5; UmJammer Lammy;
Vib-Ribbon (with Obstacle Course).
Role-Playing
Games in which players create or take on a character with a developed persona that
often has a description often including specifics as species, race, gender, and occupation,
and may also include various abilities, such as strength and dexterity, to limited degrees
usually represented numerically. The games can be single-player, such as Ultima III:
Exodus (1983), or multiple-player games such as those which are networked. This term
should not be used for games like Adventure or Raiders of the Lost Ark in which identity
is not emphasized or important.
NOTE: Many networked games, including MUDs (Multi-User Dimensions), MOOs
(MUD, Object-Oriented), and MUSHs (Multi-User Shared Hallucination) fall into this
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category, although the degree to which they can be considered games may vary depending
on the players and system operators, and whether or not objectives are set for the players
and competition occurs.
EXAMPLES: Anvil of Dawn; Diablo; Dragon Lore 2; Fallout; Mageslayer; Phantasy Star;
Sacred Pools; games from the Ultima series or Dungeons & Dragons series. Networked
games include: Interstate 76; Ivory Tower; JediMUD; Northern Lights; OutlawMOO;
PernMUSH; RiftMUSH; Rivers of MUD; Sunflower; Unsafe Haven; VikingMUD; Zodiac.
Shooting
Also known colloquially as Shoot Em Up or Shooters. Games involving shooting
at, and often destroying, a series of opponents or objects. As opposed to Combat games
which feature one-on-one battles with opponents of roughly equal attributes and means,
Shooting games usually feature multiple opponents (the Em is short for them) attacking at once (as in Space Invaders or Galaga) or multiple objects which can be destroyed (as
in Centipede), which are often potentially harmful to the player-character (as in Asteroids).
In many cases, the player-character and opponents of the player-character have unequal
attributes and means and do not even resemble one another (as in Yars Revenge), and
the games usually require quick reflexes. Do not use this term for games like Stellar Track,
in which the player-character and opponents fire at each other, but in such a way that
quick reflexes are not necessary (see Strategy). There are three types of Shooting games
which are common: in one, the player-character moves horizontally back and forth at
the bottom of the screen shooting upward while opponents moving around above shoot
downward (as in Space Invaders); in the second, the character moves freely about the
screen, encountering opponents from all sides (as in Berzerk or Robotron: 2084), and the
third features a first-person perspective (as in Doom). This term should not be used for
fighting games which do not involve shooting (see Fighting), nor for games in which
opponents are fairly evenly matched (see Combat), nor for games in which none of the
objects the player-character fires upon can harm the player-character (see Target). In a
few cases, the player-character is primarily defending rather than attacking, as in Atlantis,
Commando Raid, Missile Command, and Missile Defense 3-D.
EXAMPLES: Asteroids; Berzerk; Centipede; Doom; Duckshot; Galaga; Millipede; Missile
Command, Robotron: 2084; Space Invaders; Yars Revenge; Zaxxon.
Simulation
See Management Simulation and Training Simulation.
Sports
Games which are adaptations of existing sports or variations of them.
NOTE: No need to cross-list with Adaptation as this is implied in Sports. See also
Driving, Fighting, Obstacle Course, Racing, and Table-top Games.
EXAMPLES: American Football; Atari Baseball; Bowling; Boxing (with Fighting);
Fishing Derby (with Catching); Hot Shots Tennis; Golf; Human Cannonball (with Target);
Ice Hockey; Madden Football 97; Miniature Golf; NHL Hockey 97; PONG (with Tabletop Games); Skeet Shoot (with Target); Track & Field; Summer Games; Video Olympics;
RealSports Soccer; RealSports Tennis; RealSports Volleyball; SimGolf; Sky Diver; Tsuppori
Sumo Wrestling; World Series Baseball 98.
Strategy
Games emphasizing the use of strategy as opposed to fast action or the use of quick
reflexes, which are usually not necessary for success in these games.
NOTE: See also management simulation games like M.U.L.E. and Spaceward Ho!, as
well as many Board Games, Card Games, and Combat games.
EXAMPLES: Ataxx (with Abstract); Checkers (with Board Games); Chess (with Board
Games); Monopoly (with Board Games); M.U.L.E. (with Management Simulation); Othello (with Board Games); Spaceward Ho! (with Management Simulation); Stellar Track.
Table-top Games
Games involving adaptations of existing table-top games requiring physical skill or
action (such as pool or table tennis). This term should not be used for games involving little or no physical skill or action (see Board Games and Card Games), nor should it be used
for games which cannot be played on a table-top of some sort (see Sports). For games
which resemble pinball games, see Pinball.
NOTE: Not necessary to cross-list with Adaptation, as this is implied in Table-top
Games.
EXAMPLES: Battle Ping Pong; Electronic Table Soccer!; Parlour Games; Pocket Billiards!;
PONG (with Sports); Sure Shot Pool; Trick Shot; Virtual Pool.
Target
Games in which the primary objective involves aiming and shooting at targets.
Occasionally the targets may be harming the player-characters property (as in Wabbit).
This term should not be used for games in which the player-character can be fired upon
by opponents (see Combat, and Shooting), or games do not involve shooting (see Catching and Collecting), nor for games in which the objects or characters actively elude the
player-character.
EXAMPLES: Air-Sea Battle; Carnival; Human Cannonball; Marksman/Trapshooting;
Shooting Gallery; Skeet Shoot (with Sports); Wabbit.
Text Adventure
Games which rely primarily on text for the player interface, and often for the description of the games world and the action which takes place there as well. Some games
may use images, but these are usually noninteractive illustrations which are not central
to the play of the game. Games range from allowing free movement throughout the
games world (usually by commands such as north, south, east, west, up,
and down) with a variety of options for interaction, to more linear, branching narratives.
Players often are able to carry objects which are kept track of by an inventory function and
are able to converse with computer-controlled player-characters through a very limited
vocabulary. Although some games may incorporate text-based informational screens
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(as in Stellar Track), rely on text for description (such as the books in the library in Myst),
or even use text as a graphic element (such as Rogue), this term should only be used for
games in which the world of the game is primarily experienced through text which
describes the world of the game and the events occurring in it.
NOTE: Not necessary to cross-list with Adventure since that is implied in Text
Adventure. Multiple-player Text Adventures which are networked are considered to be
Role-Playing games (see Role-Playing). Almost all Text Adventures can be cross-listed
with Puzzle.
EXAMPLES: The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy; Planetfall; Leather Goddesses of
Phobos; Suspended Animation; Zork.
Training Simulation
Games or programs which attempt to simulate a realistic situation for the purpose of
training and usually the development of some physical skill such as steering (as in driving
and flight simulators). This term should not be used for simulations which focus on management (see Management Simulation) or the employment of strategy (see Strategy).
These games can range from realistic simulations used by institutions, such as those used
to train astronauts, tank drivers, or airline pilots, to simplified gamelike approximations of
them used mainly for entertainment, such as Police Trainer or A-10 Attack.
NOTE: Not necessary to cross-list with Utility or Simulation, as that is implied in
Training Simulation.
EXAMPLES: A-10 Attack; Comanche 3 (with Flying); F/A-18 Hornet 3.0 (with Flying);
Flight Unlimited (with Flying); Police Trainer; military and airline flight simulators; and
driving simulations used in driver education.
Utility
Cartridges or programs which have a purpose or function beyond that of entertainment, although they may be structured in a manner similar to games (such as Mario
Teaches Typing) or contain elements of entertainment. While they are often not games
themselves, some of these programs have the same appearance as game cartridges and
are sometimes collected and traded as game cartridges, and they are usually included in
listings of cartridges.
NOTE: See also Demo, Diagnostic, Educational, and Simulation.
EXAMPLES: Basic Programming; Beginning Algebra; Beginning Math; Computer
Programmer; Diagnostic Cartridge (Identification No. FDS100144) for the Atari 5200
system (with Diagnostic); Home Finance; Infogenius French Language Translator; Mario
Teaches Typing; Music Box Demo (with Demo); Number Games; Speed Reading; Spelling
Games; Touch Typing, Word Games.
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the first wave of investigations, research, claims, counterclaims, and passionate speeches on
the subject, the main results of which have entered popular culture and general knowledge.2 For most people, video games on the one hand developed hand-eye coordination,
problem-solving skills, and spatial navigation and comprehension in general, with some
particular titles being capable of teaching classic subject matters like geography and history
(as in such games as Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? and Civilization), and on the
other hand video games were thought to be responsible for antisocial or increased aggressive behaviors and health problems ranging from obesity to epileptic seizures
(as of 2007, many video games instruction manuals contained a warning that playing video
games may trigger an epileptic seizure).3
Violence
The aforementioned case of Death Race had set the tone for video games major source of
moral debate: the increasingly detailed graphical depiction of violence. In 1992, Midways
Mortal Kombat went further down that road. Designed as a response to Capcoms very
successful Street Fighter II, the game attempted to attract notoriety with excessive, overthe-top content: characters would fly across the screen, throw fireballs, freeze their opponents, or instantly teleport themselves and eventually face a four-armed humanoid and a
shape-shifting sorcerer. However, many found these features marginal, due to the exaggerated depiction of blood and gore, with simple jabs causing streams of blood to pour from
the opponents face or body. The one fighting game innovation that caused much of the
controversy was the inclusion of gory fatalities. When an opponent was beaten, instead
of dropping to the ground, he or she stood up, stunned and incapable of doing anything.
The winner could finish off the loser with any move of his choice and had a few seconds
to execute a special command. If done correctly, the character would dismember, incinerate,
or behead his victim.
Unlike Death Race, more realistic graphics were one of the games strengths. Instead of
hand-drawing and animating the characters, the development team filmed real actors,
digitized their performance as still photographs, and individually animated them. This
made the extreme violence scandalous enough that in 1993 U.S. Senator Joseph Lieberman
arranged a hearing on video games, which he claimed were marketing violence to kids.4
The hearings particularly focused on Mortal Kombat and the Sega CD game Night Trap
(1992), chiefly because these two games featured digitized footage of actors and actresses.
The main outcome of these hearings was the creation of the Entertainment Software
Rating Board, a self-regulatory body developed by the video game industry.
Numerous controversial games followed in the next years. Some titles deserving special
mention include Doom, which popularized the first-person shooter genre and was used by
one of the boys responsible for the 1999 Columbine High School shooting, and the
Grand Theft Auto series for bringing violence into a realistic contemporary urban setting
and letting the player engage law enforcement officials, civilians, and even prostitutes with
a wide array of weaponry.
Sexual Content
Troublesome sexual content in video games appeared rather early. In 1982 Mystique
developed and released Custers Revenge, an infamous game for the Atari 2600 console.
The player controlled a naked man, running from a fort and through a plain, who had to
dodge obstacles in order to reach a Native American woman tied to a pole and rape her.
Predictably, the game caused controversy from all kinds of social groups and tarnished
Ataris reputation, even though the latter had no involvement in this game.
A relatively small and marginal production of erotic video games continued in the wake
of Custers Revenge, appearing not on video game consoles but rather on personal computers. The most famous of these was Sierras Leisure Suit Larry in the Land of the Lounge
Lizards (1987), an adventure game that by 1996 would span five sequels in which the
player controlled a middle-aged loser desperately trying to have sex with various women.
The visuals were still low-resolution due to the limited graphical power of the time, and
the games main appeal resided in their humor. Aside from Larry, most games that featured
sexual content or nudity consisted of electronic renditions of various strip poker, pinball,
mahjong, and puzzle games. The arrival of full-motion video technology in the 1990s
meant that erotic and pornographic video games could now feature live-action videos
of real actors and actresses, and a number of titles were produced to test the grounds of
adult interactive entertainment, Riana Rouge (1997) and Michael Ninns Latex (1998)
being among the higher-profile ones. Erotic video games should not be confused with
interactive adult videos, interactive software pioneered by Digital Playgrounds Virtual
Sex series that also appeared in 1997, which are not formally games.
From the late 1990s and onward, the growing popularity of the Internet coupled with
the advent of accessible Web-based development tools like Adobe Flash allowed the
production of many erotic games, often by hobbyists, in the hentai style (a hand-drawn
style popular in Japan) and often belonging to the dating sim genre. Pornographic and
erotic video games have caused less controversy as they are not handled through any
organized distribution channels as standard video games are, and much in the same way
that amateur or webcam pornography does not appear side-by-side with mainstream
cinema and blockbuster movies.
Rather, it is the presence of objectionable content in otherwise standard, widely distributed video games that caused controversy in the mainstream media. Night Trap was one of
the first titles to cause a stir for featuring a group of college-aged girls having a slumber
party in a typical high-class suburban house. Under scrutiny of the Congressional hearings
mentioned earlier, the main content found offensive was that the player could let the girls
die instead of saving them. The fact that some of them appeared in nightgowns or were
otherwise scantily clothed, however, furthered the games already precarious position.
Night Trap was pulled from multiple stores in the United States that refused to be associated with it, but at the same time its sales increased dramatically thanks to the exposure it
received. In the next two years, it was remade for multiple platforms and the ESRB rated it
Mature. Phantasmagoria followed in 1995 and took the controversy to another level
with a simulated rape scene. Even though the camera did not film below waist level and
the aggressorthe heroine Adriennes husbandwas clearly shown to be possessed by a
demon, the game was banned in Australia and received adult ratings in Germany and
the United Kingdom. In the United States the game was rated Mature by the ESRB
and was not subjected to any particular treatment.
In the following years, Rockstars Grand Theft Auto series caused a stir twice, the first time
in 2001 with Grand Theft Auto III because the player could pick up a prostitute in his car
and have sex with her, and in 2004 with Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas for the hot coffee
incident which received considerable media coverage. In GTA3 the sexual activity was not
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represented on-screen, the player only saw his car rocking back and forth for a time. In San
Andreas, the players girlfriend would ask him to come in her house for some coffee, and
the camera remained outside the house while some moaning sounds were heard from
inside. However, the Rockstar developers had designed a mini-game to govern the intercourse, in which the player had to push buttons in rhythm to fill up an excitement bar
eventually leading his girlfriend to orgasm in order to improve his relationship with her.
This content was disabled upon the games release, but the data was left on the game disc.
Players eventually made it available by modifying the program code for the PC version of
the game and using third-party cheating devices for the console versions. As a result, the
game had its Mature rating revised to Adults Only by the ESRB, and was pulled from many
retailers shelves in accordance with their policies. Rockstar later re-released the game with
the hot coffee content removed, thus regaining its former rating.
The same principle of inaccessible, dormant content caused a similar controversy with
Bethesda Softworkss The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion (2006). While characters could not
be undressed further than their underwear, some modders (people engaging in game modifications, often as a positive expression of creativity and with the goal of expanding their
favorite games) found character art for topless women hidden away in the game data. They
released a patch for unlocking it, and the games rating was increased from Teen to Mature.
Ideology
Some games have sparked controversy because of ideological implications seen as dangerous or subversive, or for the treating of sensitive subject matter. JFK: Reloaded (2004) put the
player in the shoes of Lee Harvey Oswald, John F. Kennedys alleged assassin, in order to
reenact the assassination attempt. The Grand Theft Auto series was condemned not only for
sexual content but also for having the player live out a life of criminality. Rockstars
subsequent offering, Bully (2006; also known as Canis Canem Edit in the UK) similarly
had the player becoming a troublemaker kid in a boarding school who is given the possibility
of hitting other children, pulling pranks, and generally causing mischief. Additionally, the
players male character could kiss certain boys, in a manner similar to the way the male hero
of Lionhead Studioss Fable (2004) could marry some men. At the other end of the ideological spectrum, Americas Army (2002) was developed by the U.S. Army, explicitly to be used as
a recruitment tool. (See Chapter 34, Video Games in Australia, for other examples.)
Rule of Rose (2006) had its release cancelled in the UK, and was subsequently banned in
Australia. The games story revolved around a 19-year old woman being captive to a cast of
young, evil girls. David Charter of The Times reported that The game puts the player in
the shoes of a teenage girl who is repeatedly beaten and humiliated as she tries to break
out of an orphanage. She is bound, gagged, doused with liquids, buried alive and thrown
into the Filth Room,5 a depiction that was rejected by Laurie Hall of the Video Standards
Council, the organization that gave the game its original 16+ rating: I have no idea where
the suggestion of in-game sadomasochism has come from, nor children being buried
underground. These are things that have been completely made up.6 And while Charter
suggested that Sony did not release Rule of Rose in the United States for fear of an outcry,
particularly over alleged overtones of lesbianism and sadomasochism, Hall declared that
There isnt any underage eroticism. Shuji Ishikawa, the games director, thinks otherwise,
as he said in an interview on Gamasutra: There are definitely erotic parts to it, and some
things that might make people uncomfortable, but its not the focus.7 As the case of Rule
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dozens of times, unlike other media productions like films, television shows, or books,
which are consumed usually no more than a few times. Players may even have to learn
to think strategically or analytically when puzzle-solving is involved, or, on the other hand,
train themselves to respond with fast, reflex reactions that are automatic and do not
involve thinking.
For some time, the influence of video games was overlooked because they were seen as a
medium mainly for kids, despite the huge adult market and growing complexity of the
games, as well as the adult material and themes found in some games. Part of the reason
for this may be the way games first began; early games had relatively simple graphics that
were iconic and more abstract in design. Likewise, the actions occurring within the games
were also iconic and a far cry from the real experiences they attempted to depict (and thus
were seen as harmless). But as video game graphics sophistication and verisimilitude
increased, so did the nature of the players experience. Graphics that had been mainly
conceptual (so abstract and blocky that the games manual had to describe what each was
meant to be) became more perceptual and looked more like the things they were meant
to represent, and the simulation improved. Of course, high-resolution on-screen characters exhibiting complex behavior are certainly no more real than low-resolution ones
with simple behaviors, but the players experience of them differs due to the level of detail
and complexity of gameplay.
Nor is high resolution necessary to convey violent or pornographic ideas. One of the
first games to feature human figures, Exidys 1976 arcade game Death Race, had small,
blocky stick people which were used as targets to be run over, and because of this the game
became an object of controversy. While a single pink pixel can hardly be called offensive,
at what resolution does an image become recognizably pornographic or violent? Even the
low-resolution Atari 2600 system had enough pixels to convey such ideas; in 1982, 250
protestors gathered outside the New York Hilton where third-party developer Mystique
released the first X-rated game, Custers Revenge (see Chapter 39, The Video Game as
an Object of Controversy). Atari later sued the company for associating its product with
the Atari name.1
In video games, graphics are the means of conveying ideas, regardless of their resolution. Higher resolutions allow for a greater and more detailed articulation of these ideas.
And as graphics look more and more photographic, these ideas grow more concrete in
their visual representation and more like the images produced in other media, including
those through which knowledge of the real world is obtained and through which social
interaction is conducted. And, in many multiple-player games and especially online
role-playing games, social interaction between players becomes an important part of the
game.
Online, Asherons Call, Star Wars Galaxies, EverQuest, and World of Warcraft may have
millions of players in their online worlds, who meet, converse, and form alliances and
guilds without having to meet their compatriots face-to-face outside of the game. Because
the player-characters are controlled by real people, the social interaction taking place is
real, albeit in a more limited bandwidth than in-person interaction.
Social elements enrich game play, and the fact that most players will only know of each
other through their player-characters means that a player may have a greater stake in the
character that represents them in a game. Most role-playing games are long term, ongoing
over years, allowing player-characters to build up skills, powers, and abilities over time.
The time, effort, emotional investment, and even financial investment spent on character
development increases identification and the player-characters value, and the character
can become a players alter ego instead of merely an on-screen surrogate.
Character identification also can be strong in console- or cartridge-based games and
even single-player games. Players will often say things like I got killed or It got me
even when the on-screen player-character has a name and identity of its own apart from
the player. While film audience members watch a characters involvement in various situations provided by the storyline, perhaps imagining what it would be like if they were in a
similar situation themselves, in the video game, the player causes on-screen events to
happen by acting or reacting, and there is a shift from simulation to emulation. Within this
shift, we can identify three areas in which video games can exert an influence: reflexes and
behaviors of players, ethical worldviews, and certain ways of thinking that are promoted
and sharpened by the games.
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aggression. A major study conducted by Craig A. Anderson and Karen E. Dill and
featured in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology found that violent video game
play was positively related to aggressive behavior and delinquency, and that exposure to
a graphically violent video game increased aggressive thoughts and behavior.3 The study
considers other factors along with game content, including predispositions of players,
delinquency, favorite games, time spent on games, and other data, and it is more extensive
in its investigation than many of its predecessors. Still, correlations with such aspects as
degrees of graphical resolution, gameplay speed, character identification, narrative
involvement, and so on have yet to be explored.
And finally, the context of a players actions and behavior must be taken into consideration. As in film, the reaction to a violent scene can differ depending on whether the
audiences identification coincides with the victim or the aggressor. In video games with
a kill-or-be-killed mentality, players may find themselves alternating between both positions though the predominant one is usually that of killer, at least in most shooting games.
Over time, the reflexes and behaviors learned can become deeply ingrained and affect a
players personality. Studies have shown that video games can be addictive, and one study
by Griffiths and Hunt suggests that as many as one in five adolescents may be pathologically dependent on them.4 According to Anderson and Dill,
When the choice and action components of video games. . .is coupled with the games reinforcing
properties, a strong learning experience results. In a sense, violent video games provide a complete
learning environment for aggression, with simultaneous exposure to modeling, reinforcement, and
rehearsal of behaviors. This combination of learning strategies has been shown to be more powerful
than any of these methods used singly.5
Many psychological studies of video games focus on the relationship between video games
and violence and aggression, but, as noted above, skills and reflexes learned in video games
do not always involve violent or aggressive behavior. If violent and aggressive games can
influence a players behavior, it seems possible that games could be designed to encourage
positive and useful skills. Studies typically do not ask whether contemplative adventure
games make players more observant or increase their problem-solving skills, although
Anderson and Dills study did use Myst and Tetrix (a game similar to Tetris) to control
for differences between violent and nonviolent games. The existence of educational
games for children and others for adults that teach mental skills (such as problemsolving or resource management) or physical skills (such as hand-eye coordination or
typing) also suggests that much can be learned through video games. Educational games
have also been developed in more academic environments, such as the I.C. Squared Institute in Austin, Texas, or MITs Games-to-Teach program.
Yet most games do not have learning as an objective, and the learning that occurs can be
inadvertent. As one colonel in the U.S. military put it in an interview with ABCnews.com,
A flight simulator played on a computer will teach you how to fly, and you can transfer the skill
from a simulator to reality. In the same way, a murder simulator played on a computer screen can
teach you how to kill, and those skills will transfer over to reality.6
And, because video games differ from other types of software in that they are often
narrative based and set in an on-screen diegetic world, not only skills, but also certain
worldviews7 may be encouraged or taught which may also transfer over to life outside of
the games.
Ethical Worldviews
Stories involving some point or moral often embody them by causally linking actions
and consequences. Villains and evildoers are punished at the storys end, and heroes and
good characters are rewarded. Consequences and outcomes to characters actions are also
explored, and the importance of an individuals actions and their effect on others is a
common theme in literature and film. By setting the authors ideas in a narrative context,
ideas of how actions and consequences are linked can seem more natural and similar to
occurrences in the real world or the audience members own life than if the lessons
involved were stated directly and overtly. Because video games involve the players own
choices and participation and because players can do things differently and explore
alternate causal chains of actions and consequences, video games can even more covertly
embody a worldview. Player activity and the sense of live-ness that it adds to the players
experience make events appear to be happening in the present, rather than in the past,
and the opportunity for making choices makes the outcome seem less predetermined
even though the games programming has already determined how actions and
consequences will be linked. Games like SimCity, The Sims (2000), and other simulation
games contain dozens of rules by which the simulation advances, and discovering these
through trial and error becomes an overall goal of the player who wants to be successful in
the game.
The malleability and repeatability of most video game experiences may undermine
some of the positive effects of simulated worlds or situations. Nothing is final or irreversible when a game can be restarted or when a player has multiple lives. Careless actions
may end a game but have no lasting effects beyond that. Few video games can elicit deep
emotions or feelings, which may be one of the reasons the video game still has not been
accorded the status of art; however, film and television also had similar struggles when
they were young, developing media. Instead of empathy, games with graphic violent content can lead to desensitization, especially when the games frame the violence as humorous
or cool or promote violence as the solution to ones problems (and as a default response
at that). On the other hand, there are games which overturn these default assumptions (for
example, in Ultima IV: The Quest for the Avatar, ethics became important; indiscriminate
killing and looting could work against a player).
Online role-playing games, however, differ greatly from arcade games or home video
games and involve on-screen diegetic worlds which in some ways are more like the real
world. The worlds of games like World of Warcraft or Asherons Call are persistent; play
continues 24 hours a day, whether players are logged in or not (since these games have several hundred thousand players, there are always at least a few thousand players logged in at
any given time). The games cannot be restarted, and players may invest large amounts of
time and money in the game, so there is more at stake when player-characters combat to
the death. Alliances of player-characters cooperate and compete, and hierarchical social
systems exist. While aggressive and violent behavior still exists, the persistent nature of
the world, its social elements, and the long-term play make for a rather different gaming
experience, and debates over the nature and limitations on violence continue. Too much
player-versus-player combat in which players can kill each other results in fewer accounts
(and thus corporate income), while too little conflict may also displease players, so a
balance between the two must be found. Dr. Simon Carne, a player of Asherons Call,
explained it this way:
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In virtual worlds where players have invested time and money and built relationships and
social structures, ethics takes on greater importance as consequences within the game
extend into the real world.
Clearly there is a difference (usually) between the morality of the real world and the
virtual morality of the diegetic world of the online game. While the killing of another
players character may be considered an act of aggression, it still falls within the established
rules of play in Ultima Online, and players can avoid it by staying off the Darktide server.
And even players whose characters are killed off can come back online with new characters. Yet the metaphor of killing remains, as does the question of why pretend killing
is considered fun by so many people. The idea of shooting or killing has become so
ingrained in video game culture that it seems difficult for many people to imagine it
otherwise. The question first arose in 1976 with the game Death Race, at a time when
video game graphics were so simple that images were little more than very rough iconographic representations; today, as graphics advance toward photorealism, the question is
more pertinent than ever.
Graphic violence, killing, lying, cheating, and other ethical issues involving social interactions between player-characters are often the subjects of discussion among players and in
the larger debate surrounding video games and even in the courts; families of the children
slain in the Columbine High School shooting started a $5 billion lawsuit against big video
game companies, arguing that the shooting might not have occurred were it not for the
opportunity to practice made possible by the violent games.9 Yet there are other potential
effects which may be more subtle than these, involving the players default assumptions
and ways of thinking about or conceptualizing the world, a kind of inherent philosophical
outlook lingering in the background and shaping the players experience.
Ways of Thinking
Players who vicariously enter the diegetic world of a video game through playercharacter surrogates must also adapt their thinking to the games demands if they are to
be successful. This is perhaps best illustrated by violent kill-or-be-killed-style video games
in which the player-character is constantly in jeopardy. As Anderson and Dill summarize it,
Not only violent games, but also games that are frustrating due to difficulty level,
programming bugs, or poor design, can have similar effects. As psychologist Rebecca Tews
writes,
Gameplay may modify the players behavior in interpersonal relationships. Game-play, particularly
with violent or frustrating games, seems to elicit increased perception of threat, increased physiological arousal in game threat situations (which may translate to other perceived threat situations),
and less use of traditional problem-solving strategies and appropriately assertive person-to-person
conflict resolution.11
A players choices within a game scenario are often very limited, and repetitive gameplay,
either as practice in lower levels of a game until higher levels can be achieved, or because of
computer crashes and software bugs, may wear on players patience and agitate them into
a frustrated state. Losing a game at home among friends or in a public arcade among
strangers may impact a players ego and self-esteem. And, interestingly, many video games
are designed in such a way that they always end with the players failure and defeat; the
Space Invaders always manage to get to the bottom of the screen and crush the player;
Pac-Man eventually gets caught by the ghosts chasing him, and a wide variety of fighting
and shooting games always end with the player-characters death (or deaths, in the case of
multiple lives).
Not all games have such a pessimistic outlook, however, and many, like Myst, Riven, and
Ultima III: Exodus have realizable objectives and storylines that can end with the players
success. Yet even these games each feature their own models of world analysis and promote
certain decision-making processes, all of which may influence a players thinking outside
the game. One such effect comes from the way the players point of view is constructed.
The video game is perhaps the only medium that makes frequent use of the secondperson address, particularly in adventure games. Graphically, these games simulate a
first-person point of view, but the player is addressed as a participant (second-person
mode) as opposed to a close confidant (first-person mode) or merely an observer (thirdperson mode). Everything is structured around the player and is present to produce an
experience for the player. Other characters in the game are usually there either to help or
to hinder the player-character, and when they speak it is often in direct address to the
player-character (as opposed to other characters in the game). Objects exist in the game
for the player to use, take, consume, or destroy. The overall effect can be a self-centered,
utilitarian point of view, in which players consider everything in the games world according to how it will affect them or be of use to them.
Positive effects are also possible. Completing an adventure games objective, for example, usually requires goal-oriented behavior and single-minded pursuit. Even when they
are laden with puzzles and ambiguity, most adventure games problems and goals are relatively clear-cut and simple relative to the problems and goals typically encountered in real
life. The video game may remove the player momentarily from the complex problems of
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real life and offer solvable, simplified conflicts and goals which can be solved in a few
hours (or days) and for which solutions already exist.
In either case, these effects may be subtle, but repeated exposure to situations in which
one is required to think a certain way can have gradual, long-term effects. Some may find
affirmation outside the games; certain ways of thinking like overcompetitiveness and the
accruing of personal wealth and goods are already driving forces in capitalistic society,
which may explain the rise and popularity of games with similar themes. On the other
hand, video games can have a positive influence, enhancing problem-solving skills, powers
of observation, and patience.
While most people can clearly distinguish between video games and real life, ideas
learned through the games can spill over to other behaviors in either positive or negative
ways. As media becomes more prevalent in peoples lives, however, the line between video
games and real life can begin to blur. Electronic Artss game Majestic (2001) is an example
of a game for people who enjoy blurring the line. Billed as the suspense thriller that infiltrates your life and leaves you guessing where the game ends and reality begins,12 Majestic
sent its players clues via e-mail, voicemail, and faxes and even made use of AOL Instant
Messaging. Gameplay took place in real time over a period of months, with players receiving clues at any time. As ABCnews.com columnist Dianne Lynch reported,
Electronic Arts and its partner Anim-X have gone to extraordinary lengths to make it happen.
Theyve purchased hundreds of telephone numbers all over the country, constructed scores of
websites embedded with sophisticated access restrictions and hidden clues, and even set up dummy
corporations to confuse you.13
For those concerned about the blurring of the line, the game also featured adjustable
realism settings which identified incoming messages as part of the game. The game could
be played alone or with others in the Majestic online community, who may or may not be
actual players.
While Majestic was largely experienced alone, the online RPGs, with their social structures and 24-hours-a-day, 7-days-week persistence, are the ones that most combine fantasy
and reality. Some players spend several hours every day on their RPGs, where their friends
and compatriots spend their time, sometimes supplanting relationships in the world outside of the game. Friendships and marriages occurring between player-characters can affect
real-world relationships. In Computer Games, Christine Gilbert writes about such virtual
marriages:
Do some of these cyber-relationships survive into the real world? Yes. Have some individuals lost
their spouses to other members of their guild or to an uber-level warrior? According to the forums,
yes. [Sony Interactives Scott] McDaniel verifies that EverQuest has received complaints from
spouses not only regarding the addictive qualities of the game, but also the damage to real world
relationships the game is allegedly responsible for. It also turns out that people have actually left their
real world spouses for individuals who can take out a Hill Giant without destroying the souffle.
But while there are some sad stories, there are considerably more happier ones. There is a
multitude of married couples who team together every night and share the fun of seeking new
adventures.14
As online RPGs develop into new forms of social experience that emulate the real world
(at least in rudimentary ways), they become more than just games. They do not simply
influence a players real life, they can become a significant part of it as players spend several
hours a day online. And game complexity, graphical detail, and the numbers of player
accounts continue to grow.
A Growing Medium
While it is true that the content of most video games has been less than edifying, there
does seem to be hope that the medium is maturing as its possibilities are explored. Shooting games and violent content may always be around just as one can still find slapstick and
pratfalls in cinema and television, but a much wider range of content is becoming available. Many past best-selling games, like Pac-Man, Tetris, Myst, and The Sims, are nonviolent ones with a great crossover audience potential. In an article on the best games of the
year 2000, Computer Games noted that the Most Ignored Fact was that Most of the
best-selling games of the year didnt feature any violent content whatsoever.15 Game
designer Peter Molyneuxs epic game Black & White (2001) is built around the theme of
morality, and the company actually brought in a team of psychologists to explore
the concept of morality, and to relate it to actions that have real-life consequences.16
Furthermore, one role-playing game from eGenesis, A Tale in the Desert, had no player
combat in it at all; instead of killing or accruing wealth, character advancement depends
on the completion of projects and challenges based on virtues.
That many of the best-selling games are nonviolent should encourage developers to
expand the range of the medium and explore its possibilities. Commercial success has
driven the technological development of the video game, and technology has revealed
the mediums potential for creating vicarious experience and interaction. One hopes that
designers and developers will rise to the challenge of meeting that potential as the medium
matures.
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place.2 All these examples reveal a kin partnership among these industries. The music
industry is also becoming an essential player in the video game industry, and video game
soundtracks are increasingly popular.3 Live concerts of video game music (like the Video
Games Live tour in 2006) have played to sold-out crowds. Nowadays, the music created
for video games is composed in a similar fashion as film music scores. As on television,
advertisements in video games have become a common phenomenon. A study by
Activision and Nielsen Entertainment was conducted in late 2005 on this issue and found
that young gamers felt that the presence of in-game advertisements, if well integrated into
the games, increased their enjoyment of the games.4
Much video game theory shares a close connection with other media, since many of its
basic concepts and thoughts came principally from film and television studies.5 For media
theorist Henry Jenkins, all these associations are consequences, or symptoms, of a much
larger manifestation in culture which he calls media convergence. Such convergence
manifests itself in many ways, including technologically, economically, socially, culturally,
and globally.6
Such relationships between video games and other media go back to the early days of
video game history. In the early 1980s, video games already were known for their adaptations of television series and American films, especially on the Atari 2600 console:
Film and television industries realized the potential of the new medium as early as the mid-1970s,
when they sought to have a hand in the video game market; CBS Electronics and 20th Century Fox
made their own game cartridges, and several dozen movies and television shows were planned to be
adapted into game cartridges for the Atari 2600 alone.7
It was not until 1983 that the movie industry stopped showing interest in video
games, as a result of the video game crash caused by the saturation of the market and
the eager releases of poorly made licensed games for the Atari 2600 like Pac-Man or the
video game adaptation of the movie E.T., which was a monumental flop and quickly
became an icon of the crash. Another reason may be the commercial failure of Steven
Lisbergers film Tron (1982) (the first movie based on a video game world), which helped
push Hollywood away from CGI technology and the whole video game industry for a
decade.8
Since the video game industry continued to release video game adaptations of movies at
the end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s (especially for the NES console,
where many games were based on movies),10 it was therefore only a matter of time before
Hollywood, in return, adapted a video game. The obvious choice at that time was to adapt
one of the biggest video game icons of all time: Nintendos Mario. In 1993, Hollywood
Pictures in association with Nintendo released Super Mario Bros. starring Bob Hoskins
as Mario. Even though the film was a commercial and critical failure ($20 million gross
for a $42 million budget11), movie studios saw this as an opportunity to attract gamers
into theaters while it gave the video game industry an occasion to have licensed revenues
and better media coverage.
Thanks to fighting games like Street Fighter II, Mortal Kombat, Virtua Fighter (1993)
and many others, arcade games enjoyed a renewal of popularity: from 1990 to 1995 alone,
more than 100 arcade fighting games were manufactured by more than 20 companies,
most notably Capcom (Street Fighter series), Midway (Mortal Kombat series) and SNK
(The King of Fighters series). Movie studios then decided to adapt some of them, these
games being well suited for audiences of Hollywood action movies, due to their kinetic
combat and stylish graphic violence. In 1994, following Double Dragon (directed by James
Yukich) based on the 1987 arcade game of the same name, an adaptation of Street Fighter
(directed by Steven de Souza) was released, but without much success ($33 million gross
for a $35 million budget). The first relative success came with Mortal Kombat (1995)
directed by Paul W. S. Anderson. Made for a budget of $20 million, the film grossed
$70 million in the United States and $122 million worldwide. The popularity of the
film was sufficient for a sequel, Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (1997) directed by John
R. Leonetti.12
After the box office failure of the film Wing Commander (1999) based on the science
fiction video game series of the same name, a commercial success even bigger than Mortal
Kombat followed with the first adaptation of a video game with a female icon: the heroine
Lara Croft. With an $80 million budget, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider directed by Simon
West, grossed $131 million in the United States ($47 million the first weekend), making
it the biggest commercial success for a video game adaptation. A sequel followed in
2003, Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life (directed by Jan de Bont), again starring Angelina
Jolie as Lara Croft.
Meanwhile in Japan, a company named SquareSoft, who was responsible for Final
Fantasy, the most popular role-playing game series worldwide, worked on a flamboyant
adaptation of its own video game series. Square Pictures (their movie division) in association with Columbia Pictures wanted to make the first entirely photorealistic digital animation movie. Although the film was noted for its technical achievement, thanks to the
enormous budget of $137 million, Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (directed by
Hironobu Sakaguchi, 2001) was a major commercial failure, grossing only $32 million
in the United States, and $85 million worldwide. Ironically, the studios losses of approximately $123 million (taking the marketing cost into account) eventually bankrupted
Square Pictures, leading to the merging of SquareSoft with their longtime rival, Enix.
Back in Hollywood, the major studios decided to take advantage of new interest in
popular culture that had begun in Japan a few years before: horror movies and games.
As a result, Hollywood studios hastened to produce several remakes of Japanese horror
movies rather than to simply import them [for example The Ring (Ringu), The Grudge
(Ju-On), Dark Water, and Pulse (Kairo)]. Soon after, Hollywood decided to devote their
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film adaptations of video games to survival horror games. The first one to be adapted
to cinema was the Resident Evil series, and in 2002, Paul W. S. Anderson directed
Resident Evil, starring Milla Jovovich. The film had a budget of $32 million and grossed
$101 million worldwide. A sequel followed in 2004, Resident Evil: Apocalypse directed
by Alexander Witt.
Following on the horror craze, the controversial German director Uwe Boll purchased
the rights of several horror video game hits and started to make his own adaptations of such
games as House of the Dead (2003), Alone in the Dark (2005), and BloodRayne (2005).
These adaptations were mostly famous for being the weakest ones, irritating gamers who
nevertheless went to see Bolls pictures or purchased the DVDs of his films. (House of the
Dead grossed $10 million in the United States with a budget of only $7 million, while
Alone in the Dark, with a budget of $20 million, only grossed $5 million in the United
States. BloodRayne grossed a mere $3 million worldwide in theaters with a budget of $25
million. Nevertheless, the DVD sales of these films were much more profitable.) The controversy surrounding Uwe Boll continued in 2006 when he decided to organize a boxing
event, Raging Boll, with his most virulent critics. The footage of these fights was used
for his next movie, another adaptation of a violent video game, Postal (2007).
Another horror movie based on a video game, based on a popular sci-fi first-person
shooter, was released in 2005: Doom (directed by Andrejz Bartkowiak), starring the wrestling champion The Rock. Despite the common practice of casting celebrities, the adaptation was again a critical and commercial failure (it was shot with a budget of $70 million
and grossed $28 million in the United States). At the time of this writing, the last movie
adaptation of a video game was Silent Hill (2006), based on the critically acclaimed survival
horror series of the same name, directed by the French filmmaker Christophe Gans
(Brotherhood of the Wolf / Le Pacte des Loups, 2001) and written by Roger Avary (director
of Killing Zoe and writer of Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction). Even with these big names
behind the camera and the fact that Gans was a self-proclaimed gamer and fan of the Silent
Hill series, the film received bad reviews and did disappointingly at the box office (it was
shot with a budget of $50 million and grossed only $72 million worldwide).
Although none of these films became major blockbuster hits, the tendency to adapt
video games to cinema is far from over. Considering the large number of video games
licensed by Hollywood studios, there will be more adaptations than ever in the years to
come. Indeed, almost all video game best-selling hits had their rights bought by a movie
studio or a producer. Several projects are already in production, the most anticipated ones
(perhaps excluding the ones by Uwe Boll) being Splinter Cell (due in 2007), Halo
[announced for 2008, to be produced by WingNut Films (Peter Jacksons banner)], and
finally Metal Gear Solid (also announced for 2008, to be directed by the famous designer
of the game, Hideo Kojima). To ease the wait, fans can buy the graphic novels adapted
from some of these video games, an increasingly popular practice from the game developers. In early 2006, Hideo Kojima released a digital graphic novel based on the Metal Gear
Solid universe sold exclusively on UMD for Sonys PSP. Another graphic novel, based on
the game Halo was published by Bungie Studios in the summer of 2006.
and DC Comicss super heroes. The MobyGames website has listed more than 100 adaptations of Marvel and DC Comics (67 for Marvel and 39 for DC Comics more precisely).
The main characters adapted in this fashion have been Marvels X-Men and Spider-Man,
and DC Comicss Superman and Batman.
In Japan, the list is significantly larger, since video games have always been strongly
associated with other Japanese media, especially anime and manga. Manga is the word in
Japanese for comics or printed cartoons. Anime are Japanese animated films created
according to a distinct aesthetic, influenced almost exclusively by manga. Video games,
which have such a major importance in Japanese popular culture,13 appeal to a whole
generation, named the visual generation (shikaku sedai) in Japan.14 The obsessive fans
of these hobbies are called by the Japanese pejorative term otaku.
Consequently, almost every popular manga and anime have been adapted into video
games in Japan,15 with increasing numbers of them being imported into Europe and
North America. Although children in countries such as France, Italy, Canada, and the
United States grew up with Japanese animation since the end of the 1970s, the craze for
all that touches Japanese popular culture truly started with the manga-based anime Akira
(1988) directed by Katsuhiro Otomo and was followed by several others during the
1990s, like Mamoru Oshiis Ghost in the Shell (1996) based on a manga by Masamune
Shirow, and Hideaki Annos television series Neon Genesis Evangelion (1995). These titles
have also had their video game adaptations. Akira was adapted into a video game in 1988
on the NES, Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex in 2004 on the PlayStation 2, and
Neon Genesis Evangelion in 1999 on the Nintendo 64, although the latter had never been
released outside of Japan.
Not surprisingly, many young people worldwide who are interested in Japanese animation are also gamers and consumers of video games series adapted from manga and anime
(such as Dragon Ball, Mobile Suit Gundam, Full Metal Alchemist, and so on), to such a
point that even some fans in the United States have been called otaku. In the United
States, adaptations of animated films and television series was less of a phenomenon, with
the notable exceptions of games based on Disney characters (of which there are more than
100) and games based on the immensely popular series The Simpsons (of which there are
more than 20), until the emergence of movies using 3-D computer animation made by
studios like Pixar and DreamWorks. Every feature film from these studios has had a video
game adapted from it so far. For this genre, video games have become the obvious tie-in
products, since 3-D animation and video games share the same target audiences as well
as the same visual style and technology.
Conversely, fewer and less known are the adaptations of video games to comics and
animation. Once again, it is necessary to look at what has been done in Japan. With the
exception of the recent adaptation of Metal Gear Solid into a graphic novel as previously
mentioned, the best known example is the Pokemon video game series. It was so popular
in Japan and then in North America that one could forget that this franchise began as
Nintendo Game Boy Advance video games (Pokemon Blue and Pokemon Red, released in
Japan in 1996 and in North America in 1998). Indeed, Pokemon involved a great many
tie-in products, such as television series, animated films, figurines, cuddly toys, home
furnishings, and practically every piece of clothing for children with an effigy of the characters Pikachu and Ash. Even though the Pokemon franchise is best remembered in North
America as a cartoon and may be the most successful adaptation of a video game, it is not
the first manifestation of the close relationship between video games and television.
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products in the franchise, to obtain a complete vision of the whole, both materially and
narratively.
In her book Playing with Power, Marsha Kinder called this sort of marketed franchise a
supersystem of entertainment, and cited the huge success of the Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles (TMNT) as a good example of this phenomenon at the end of the 1980s.23 For
Kinder, the success of the TMNT with children was based on the judicious intertextual
mixture of animality (Turtles), science fiction (Mutant), and Japanese martial arts (Ninja),
and on the expansion of the franchise in several media. The TMNT supersystem
began with a cult comic book from Mirage and then an enormously popular cartoon series,
created in 1987. An arcade game appeared in 1989, followed by many console games,
the first ones being on the NES [Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1989); Teenage Mutant
Ninja Turtles_II: The Arcade Game (1990)]. Finally, a feature film directed by Steve
Barron was released in 1990, its success spawning a series of sequels. The success of this
kind of supersystem of entertainment relies enormously on the idea of transmedia storytelling.
This type of manifestation was advanced by the Star Wars franchise, in which the tie-in
products played a central role. During the 1980s, for instance, the accompanying line of
action figures and vehicles from Star Wars outgrossed the movies themselves,27 creating
a precedent in the marketing of ancillary products. Since then, goodsincluding video
gameshave been promoted with almost every Hollywood blockbuster targeting young
audiences. The Star Wars-related video games have been used for two main purposes:
the re-creation of the most memorable scenes from the trilogies (to be played by
their fans), and the addition of new storylines and fresh approaches expanding the Star
Wars universe. Such effects are not limited to the United States. Recent examples of
transmedia storytelling in Japan include such franchises as Neon Genesis Evangelion
(19951997) and Blood, the Last Vampire (2001). These franchises consist of many
manga, anime, novels, and video games, each one telling a different story which adds to
the franchises world.
Inspired by these notable achievements, the Wachowski Brothers, the creators of
The Matrix film series and declared aficionados of video games, Japanese anime and
manga, and comic book cultures in general, attempted to expand on the concept of
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transmedia storytelling by creating Enter the Matrix (Infogrames, 2003), a video game that
could expand the story of The Matrix Reloaded (which was released the same day as the
Enter the Matrix video game, May 15, 2003), and anticipate developments of the third
opus of the movie trilogy. Thus, in the game Enter the Matrix players can play as two
minor characters in the movies, Niobe and Ghost (played by actors Jada Pinkett-Smith
and Anthony Wong, respectively). These characters became increasingly crucial (especially
Niobe) to the victory of the humans in The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions
(2003). In this way, the game is not a mere spin-off but an integral part of a complex work
spanning several media forms and platforms, which fills in blanks in the movies stories to
facilitate the comprehension of the movie trilogy. In addition to the video game, the
Wachowski Brothers simultaneously released derivative material such as a series of nine
animated films (The Animatrix, 2003), two comic books (Matrix Comics, Vol. 1 and 2,
2003), and complementary content on the official movie website (http://whatisthematrix.
warnerbros.com/).
Two more video games were released with the same objective in mind. In 2005, the
Wachowski Brothers released an MMORPG called The Matrix Online, which continued
the story of the trilogy beginning just after the end of the third film where machines and
humans have reconciled thanks to Neo (Keanu Reeves). The Matrix Online allowed players to be part of one of three opposing groups (the humans of Zion, the machines, or the
exiles of the Merovingian), all of whom strive to achieve control of the Matrix. The game
producers released on a regular basis what they called Live Events to stimulate players
immersion in the virtual universe. At the end of 2005, Infogrames released another
video game based on the Matrix franchise, also written by the Wachowski Brothers, called
The Matrix: Path of Neo. The game put the player in the shoes of Neo himself, reliving the
main adventures of Neo in the movie trilogy, but with new perspectives never seen in the
movies.
The marketing strategies of this groundbreaking franchise helped create a unique transmediatic work brought about by the convergence of several media (film, video games,
websites, comics, anime, etc.). Media convergence and transmedia storytelling are becoming the new trend for creators who do not want to be confined to a unique medium or
platform and for producers who want to maximize the profits from a hit, no matter what
the original platform. This kind of cultural practice underscores the importance of other
media in the emergence and construction of the video game and helps to predict the
possible directions that video games may take in the future. The intermedial nature of
the video game is far from being a mere tendency but instead forms an essential part of
the medium.
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game included with Microsoft Windows), and of course, on personal digital assistants,
wristwatches, and cell phones. In the future we can probably expect to find games on
any interactive electronic device that has a screen.
Games with multiple players may find new places to play as well. Currently games with
larger numbers of players are found online, but other configurations are possible, for
example, people playing as contestants on a television show via their cell phones. Large
gatherings of physically present players also could be explored; imagine, for example, an
Imax theater with game controls for every seat in the theater, each controlling a character
in a larger projected screen image, allowing several hundred people to play at once all on
the same large screen.
Another way the video game is a part of our culture is as an outlet for cross-media
franchises, including tie-ins to movies, television shows, board games, card games,
table-top games, novels, other video games, and so forth. Today it is not unusual to find
franchises developed for a range of media all at the same time. For example, the Enter
the Matrix video game was developed at the same time as the second and third Matrix
films and incorporated the same actors, storylines, and effects. Often an entire series of
games is produced, as in the Star Wars and Star Trek franchises. And as game graphics
improve and grow more photorealistic, and film imagery becomes more and more computer generated, the appearance of imagery in both media continue to converge.
Entertainment will probably remain the dominant use of the medium, just as it has for
film and television. And, just as it is in film and television, the dominant form of that
entertainment will likely remain narrative.
the stories taking place in games: the use of computer-controlled characters driven by
algorithms and artificial intelligences helped make more character interaction possible,
and in the case of online role-playing games, the other characters in a game are all
controlled by other people. Both allow for a greater variety of game events, as well as
open-ended games that can go on indefinitely (like the Sim series of games or most online
games).
An interesting question to consider is how increasing narrative possibilities will impact
the scholarly study of the games themselves. The researcher will have to spend more
time exploring narrative possibilities, with no guarantee that everything has been seen or
experienced. Many games already are designed to take 40 hours or more to complete,
compared to the two-hour or so time slot that most movies fit into.
As artificial intelligences and other game structures generate narratives through the use
of algorithms, games move into another realm, that of computer simulation, which is
where the future of interactive narrative will be found.
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much less question whether or not those theories are sound. Of course, anything used
as a tool of education has the potential to become a political tool with a hidden agenda
as well.
As video games are used to express certain ideas or points of view, we can see them as
becoming forms of artistic expression and experiential art.
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User-Generated Games
The future of video games will almost certainly continue to include user-created content and games written by users themselves. Dozens of game creations programs, such as
Chris Joness Adventure Game Studio (1997, with updates appearing throughout the following decade) or James Paiges OHRRPGCE (Official Hamster Republic Role Playing
Game Creation Engine) (1997), allow users to create their own games, and gamecreation communities have sprung up around some of these programs. The video game
industry as well has begun to encourage user-created games, with the release of programs
like Microsofts XNA (2004, with updates since), and Nintendos WiiWare program
(unreleased as of August 2007). Nintendo even announced in June 2007 that users will
be able to buy and sell user-created games on their WiiShop channel on the Wii console.7
While the possibility of user-generated games will not level the playing field, as few
users have the time, money, and resources to put into a game as a large production studio
does, it will open up new possibilities and increase the diversity of games available.
Projects too small, too esoteric, or not commercial enough for larger companies to
consider will have their chance to reach an audience, and many new, smaller companies
may result from the successes of such games. In the end, user-generated games will benefit
both users and the game industry alike.
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could present new challenges for game designers and game players alike (at the time of this
writing, only the Nintendo DS features more than one screen). Even older and simpler
games could be played in a new way; for example, imagine playing a game like Pac-Man
on a spherical screen that covers most of a ball. With a mercury switch that, through the
use of gravity, tells the game which direction is up, Pac-Man could be made to always
appear at the top of the ball, and the player would have to rotate the entire game to move
him through the maze. Thin screens with the flexibility of paper would open up even
more possibilities for video game hardware design. And for every new hardware design
will come a whole series of games that make use of that design, including ones that were
simply not possible without the new technologies.
Over the last decade, video games had advanced tremendously in their depth and complexity, and the study of video games has been one of the fastest-growing areas of media
studies. The great potential variety of uses and functions of video games is already beginning to be explored, by a wide variety of people including game designers, educators,
media theorists, and artists. For many players, video games represent the greatest percentage of media usage in their everyday life, and for a growing number of online players,
these games have become a way of life. However one may wish to speculate about the
future of media in general, it is clear that the video game is certain to play an increasingly
important role.
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Glossary
Glossary
home systems. Emulators do not always accurately reproduce games, however, and care
must be taken if they are used in research.
Gestalt The word Gestalt is a German word translated as a shape, form, guise, or
figure, and often refers to the overall effect of the sum of the parts which make up the
whole being perceived. Gestalt psychology is the psychology of how the human sensory
system perceives parts and wholes, and how the perception of parts and wholes relate to
each other.
gigabyte A gigabyte is a unit of information storage equal to one billion bytes. Used
to refer to RAM, a gigabyte (abbreviated GB) equals 230 bytes, or 1,073,741,824 bytes
(although to avoid confusion, this is now sometimes referred to as a gibibyte).
haptic feedback A device that simulates a force moving the controller held in the players hands, either providing resistance or vibrations which are synched up with events in
the game being played.
indie Indie is short for independent and refers to games or films produced and
financed outside of the main industrial companies, making them independent.
interface An interface is the collection of devices which allow a software program and a
user to interact, which may include such conceptual things as menus, cursors, and textboxes, and physical devices such as a screen, mouse, joystick, game controllers, or a
microphone and speakers. Interface design usually determines which of these will be
used and how they will be used together.
JAMMA The Japanese Arcade Machine Manufacturers Association (JAMMA) began
in 1982, and in 1985 it introduced a wiring standard, known as the JAMMA standard
for arcade video games, which would become one of the main ones used in the video
game industry in Japan and the United States during the 1980s and 1990s.
kilobyte A kilobyte is a unit of information storage equal to one thousand bytes. Used
to refer to RAM, a kilobyte (abbreviated KB) equals 210 bytes, or 1,024 bytes (although
to avoid confusion, this is now sometimes referred to as a kibibyte).
kilohertz A kilohertz is a unit of frequency in electronics. One hertz equals one cycle
per second, and a kilohertz (abbreviated kHz) is one thousand cycles per second. In
computers, the amount of hertz refers to the computers processing speed.
laserdisc An optical disc storage medium used mainly during the 1980s for movies and
also used in some video games either for background video imagery, as in M.A.C.H. 3
or Firefox or for a collection of video clips of game events that could be played in a
sequence determined by the games algorithm, as in Dragons Lair and Space Ace.
LCD See liquid crystal display.
LED See light-emitting diode.
light-emitting diode (LED) Light-emitting diode display devices use diodes made
with gallium arsenide phosphide, which produces light when a current is applied to
the diode. LEDs can come in red, yellow, or green, although red LEDs are the most
common. Although many handheld electronic games use LED displays, Nintendos
Virtual Boy is the only pixel-based imaging system to use one.
liquid crystal display (LCD) A liquid crystal display contains a thin layer of long,
crystalline molecules that polarize light, sandwiched between grids of fine wires and
polarizers. The polarizers are lined up in such a way so that light passing through the
crystals is polarized and reflected back to the viewer, resulting in a bright, clear square.
When a current is applied to the grids, the molecules line up together in the same direction and have no polarizing effect, and light is absorbed, resulting in a darkened square.
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Glossary
Early LCD screens were black and white and can be found in games from the early
1980s and game systems such as Milton Bradleys Microvision or Nintendos Game
Boy. Color LCD screens are now common, appearing in game systems like the Atari
Lynx or Game Boy Color, as well as in laptop computer screens.
logic circuit Logic circuits are basic electronic circuits which take one or more
inputs (expressed as bits) and produce a single output. The two basic logic gates are
the NAND and NOR gates. A NAND gate returns a 0 if both of its inputs are 1 otherwise it returns a 1. A NOR gate returns a 1 only if both its inputs are 0, otherwise it
returns a 0. All other logic gates can be built from these two gates.
massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) An online computer
role-playing game played by hundreds of thousands of players in a virtual world,
usually one which is available 24 hours a day. Examples include Everquest, Ultima
Online, Star Wars Galaxies, and World of Warcraft, which has become the largest
MMORPG in the world, with over nine million players.
MMORPG See massively multiplayer online role-playing game.
megabyte A megabyte is a unit of information storage equal to one million bytes.
Used to refer to RAM, a megabyte (abbreviated MB) equals 220 bytes, or 1,048,576
bytes (although to avoid confusion, this is now sometimes referred to as a mebibyte).
megahertz A megahertz is a unit of frequency in electronics. One hertz equals
one cycle per second, and a megahertz (abbreviated MHz) is one million cycles
per second. In computers, the amount of hertz refers to the computers processing
speed.
microchip A microchip, known technically as a microprocessor, contains many
semi-conductors on a single computer chip, which can perform a variety of functions.
Before the microprocessor, individual components, often vacuum tubes, would have
to be connected together, taking up much more room and power, severely limiting
computer power and speed.
multimedia Short for multiple media, multimedia is usually used to refer to electronic information technology which integrates audio, video, animation, and interactivity together.
non-player character (NPC) A character in a video game which is not controlled by
any human player but rather by the computer.
NPC See non-player character.
NTSC A color television standard (adopted by the National Television System
Committee, after which it is named) used in North America, Japan, and several other
countries. It has 29.97 interlaced frames of video per second, an aspect ratio of 4:3,
and 525 scan lines.
PAL A color television standard (known as phase-alternating line) used in parts of
Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia. It has 25 interlaced frames of video per second,
and 576 scan lines.
parallax scrolling Parallax scrolling involves scrolling graphics in which a foreground plane scrolls faster than a background plane, giving the impression of a
three-dimensional space, even though no three-dimensional computation is occurring.
pixel Short for picture element, a pixel is the smallest unit of a picture and is a single
color or value. Pixels can be round, square, or rectangular in shape, and they represent
the smallest unit into which a picture can be divided.
Glossary
polarizer A polarizer is a filter which only allows electromagnetic waves (light) with
certain properties to pass through it. Some polarizers will absorb the unwanted light
which does not have the desired properties, while others will deflect it as a second beam.
PCB See printed circuit board.
player-character The character in a video game which is controlled by the player.
polygonally based graphics Graphics which are built from polygons and generated in
a three-dimensional space, as opposed to sprite-based graphics which are generated as a
series of two-dimensional planes.
port Used as a verb, port refers to the adaptation of a video game from one system or
platform to another, which sometimes involves slight changes to a game.
printed circuit board (PCB) A nonconductive board on which are fastened electronic
components which are joined by circuitry etched into the board. The memory chips
reside here, where they are joined to the other components of the game. Printed refers
to the method used to etch the circuitry for the mass production of the board.
RAM Random access memory, which stores data temporarily and can be changed, but
which is erased when power is turned off.
raster, raster scan A type of scan used by a CRT to produce an image on-screen.
The scan pattern goes back and forth, line by line, filling the entire screen, to produce
an image with filled areas, as opposed to a vector scan which just draws individual line
segments on-screen and does not fill the screen. Television imagery and most video
games use raster scanning.
RGB A color monitor with separate inputs for the red, green, and blue component
video signals, which together make up the color image.
role-playing game (RPG) A game in which the players take on the roles of fictional
characters in a game world, and collaboratively undertake adventures there. In many
cases, aspects of the characters identities can be determined by the players controlling
them, and characters can change as the game progresses.
ROM Read-only memory: computer memory which is hardwired into a system and
can be read but not changed and which remains when power is turned off. Examples
would be the chips in cartridges that hold game programs.
RPG See role-playing game.
scaling The enlarging or reducing of an image by the changing of its resolution.
scrolling (horizontal, vertical, diagonal, 4-way, 8-way) The moving of a large image
behind a small window which shows only a portion of it at a time. In video games,
scrolling first appeared in Kee Gamess Super Bug (1977).
SECAM A French color television standard (known in French as Sequentiel couleur a`
memoire (sequential color and memory) used in parts of Europe, Asia, and Africa. Like
the PAL standard, it has 25 interlaced frames of video per second and 576 scan lines.
sprite A computer graphics entity which is a bitmap (a small grid of pixels used to
make an image) that can be moved about the screen and resized, though its surface is
always facing the camera. Groups of sprites are used to create larger images and can
be moved and resized to give an illusion of depth to a game.
suicide battery Presumably installed to fight piracy, these batteries supply power to a
small amount of RAM which holds a decryption key. The decryption key is used to
decode the program code in the games ROM, so when the battery dies, the RAM is
erased, and without the decryption key the game can no longer run. Several companies
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Glossary
used suicide batteries in their arcade games, the largest two being Sega, who began using
them around 1987, and Capcom, whose system used them from 1989 onward.
terabyte A terabytes is a unit of information storage equal to one trillion bytes. Used to
refer to RAM, a terabyte (abbreviated TB) equals 240 bytes, or 1,099,511,627,776
bytes (although to avoid confusion, this is now sometimes referred to as a tebibyte).
trackball, track-ball, trak-ball A type of game controller which uses a housed rolling
ball as an input device for moving a cursor around on-screen. It allows for fast action
and quick changes of direction and was used in games including Ataris Football
(1978), Missile Command (1980), and Marble Madness (1984).
upright The most common type of arcade video game cabinet which stands upright
and which the player stands in front of to play the game.
vector graphics Vector graphics are produced using a vector monitor, which creates all
of its graphics as a series of line segments drawn one after another (see vector monitor).
vector monitor, vector scan monitor A kind of monitor in which the electron beam
moves in straight lines that can begin and end anywhere on the screen. Images are
drawn from these lines, as opposed to being created by a raster scan. Examples of vector
games include Asteroids (1979), Battlezone (1980), Tempest (1980), and Star Wars
(1983).
wireframe Wireframe is the name given to graphics in which everything is represented
as a series of lines, with no filled areas. Wireframe renderings are used to show spatial
locations and interactions of graphical objects, without having to render their surfaces,
speeding up the time it takes to create the graphics.
XY monitor See vector monitor.
z-axis In a three-dimensional space, the direction of movement which is towards or
away from the players point of view.
RESOURCE GUIDE
WEBSITES
Company websites are useful, but do not always list games and are often rather limited beyond advertising themselves and their products. Other sites vary in their reliability and usefulness; below are sites
which are useful and reliable. The term video games appears sometimes as one word (videogames),
so web searches often must include both spellings. These websites were all working as of April 2, 2007.
http://fly.hiwaay.net/~lkseitz/cvg/cvglit.shtml The Classic Video Games Literature List is an extensive
list of books and published essays relating to video games, although as of April 2007, it only listed
books up to 1998.
http://marvin3m.com/arcade/ An excellent source regarding arcade games, particularly electromechanical ones, from before 1977.
http://vgrebirth.org Video Game Rebirth (VGR) is an information source for home video game
consoles and includes an online community and a game catalog with profiles of over 34,000 games.
http://www.arcadecollecting.com/dead/dead.html The Dead Battery Society webpage contains information on the suicide batteries found in some arcade games from the 1980s and 1990s.
http://www.arcadeflyers.com The Arcade Flyer Archive contains promotional flyers for a wide range of
older arcade video games. Useful information about the games, including screen imagery, special
features, and cabinet design can be found in these flyers, as well as a sense of how they were marketed
by the companies that made them.
http://www.arcade-history.com/index.php?page=detail&id=2623 Another extensive source of arcade
game history.
http://www.atari2600.com A place to buy old Atari goods and many other early home video game
systems and games as well.
http://www.cooganphoto.com/gravitar/gravitar.html A nice website dedicated to the game Gravitar
(1982), with a detailed analysis by the games high score record holder, Dan Coogan.
http://www.dadgum.com/giantlist The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers is useful for establishing game authorship and providing possible contacts for primary research into the creation of the
games on the list.
http://www.digipen.edu Digipen Institute of Technology offers degrees in digital interactive entertainment technology, and many of their students are pursuing careers in the video game industry.
http://www.dmoz.org/Games/Video_Games Part of the Open Directory Project, this page lists thousands of websites on video games, neatly arranged and categorized hierarchically by topic and subject
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Resource Guide
matter, making searches easier than a search engine style of search. Includes annotations with listings
of websites.
http://www.dragons-lair-project.com/community/related/articles/dl.asp This page features many
scans of magazine articles on laserdisc games.
http://www.fullsail.com/game-development/overview.html Full Sail advertises that you can complete
its Game Development Bachelors Degree Program in only 21 months.
http://www.gamasutra.com Gamasutra.com is a source for video game industry news and includes job
listings, resumes, product news, and more.
http://www.gamearchive.com A searchable archive of material related to video games.
http://www.gamegirlz.com A magazine-format website with material of interest to women gamers and
with connections to women gamers online communities.
http://www.gameinformer.com These websites are magazine-style formats featuring gaming news,
reviews, previews, and some downloads. Though most of the material pertains to newer games, some
sites have archives as well.
http://www.gamesindustry.biz/ Gameindustry.biz features industry news, job listings, a company
directory, and podcasts on the video game industry.
http://www.gamespot.com Gamespot.com has news, game reviews, previews, cheat codes, downloads,
forums, and more.
http://www.gamestudies.com The first online academic journal of video game studies.
http://www.geocities.com/TimesSquare/Lair/9260/labels.html An interesting and in-depth site
regarding Atari cartridge labels.
http://www.islandnet.com/~kpolsson/timeline.htm#vidgame Ken Polsson has complied one of the
best and most detailed timelines of video game history, complete with source references for every
entry.
http://www.klov.com The homepage of the Killer List of Videogames (KLOV) is a growing list
of arcade video games including technical information, images, and some video clips of the
games. It is perhaps the largest single collection of arcade video game information gathered into
one site, with information on over 4,400 games. For a sample of the detailed information available
on the games, see http://www.klov.com/game_detail.php?letter=P&game_id=10816 , the page for
Pac-Man.
http://www.pong-story.com David Winters pong-story site contains an enormous amount of information on dozens of PONG systems and imitators both in the United States and Europe and some of
the history behind them. The site is well organized and features many pictures of these early systems
as well as images of their boxes, cartridges, and even their chips.
http://www.retrogames.com A source of information on older video games as well as emulators which
run them.
http://www.solvalou.com/subpage/arcade_dips Dual in-line parallel (DIP) switch settings for over
5,000 arcade video games.
http://www.starcade.tv/starcade/episodes.asp Complete episodes of Starcade, a TV show about video
games.
http://www.system16.com A good source of video game system hardware used by a variety of companies. Good information on games as well; for example, the Sega Museum section has information
on over 1,000 Sega games.
http://www.thedoteaters.com/ Video game history with many images.
http://www.vaps.org The Video Arcade Preservation Society is an international group of arcade video
game collectors and has a membership of over 2,500 collectors. Contact information is provided
for many of these collectors, along with what games they own, which is useful to video game researchers wishing to do primary research or for anyone interested in learning more about arcade games.
http://www.vgf.com Video Gamers Forum features various forums and archives pertaining to video
games.
http://www.videogames.org Includes a Museum page link to Greg Chances The History of Home
Video Games, a good source for information about home systems, and contains links to lists and
photographs of early systems, all collected together in a timeline format.
Resource Guide
http://www.videotopia.com Keith Feinsteins Videotopia, based on his traveling museum exhibit of the
same name, includes essays on video games, information on The Electronics Conservancy, and
assorted video game hyperlinks.
EMULATORS
Emulators are programs that simulate the graphics and game play of video games and video game
systems. For researchers trying to track down hard-to-find games, they can sometimes give a good idea
what certain early games were like. However, many emulators do not give exact renditions of the games
they are emulating; graphics may not appear at their original ratios, and the experience of watching a
computer screen is often quite different than that of the kind of monitor on which the games would have
been played. While emulators can be useful, users should be aware of the differences and get firsthand
experience whenever possible.
http://hive.speedhost.com/ Makers of commercial video game emulators.
http://stella.sourceforge.net/ Stella is an Atari 2600 emulator available for several operating systems,
with a large collection of game ROMs for it.
http://www.classicgaming.com/vault/ Scroll down this page for a list of emulators of home game
systems, including the Arcadia 2001, Atari 2600, Atari 5200, Atari 7800, Coleco systems, MSX,
NeoGeo, NES, Odyssey2, Sega, Genesis, Sega Master System, TurboGrafx16, and Vectrex.
http://www.daphne-emu.com An emulator specifically for laserdisc games. Includes downloads, a
forum, FAQ, and screenshots.
http://www.mame.net/ Probably the largest collection of games for one emulator, the Multiple Arcade
Machine Emulator (MAME) is able to run over 3,000 arcade games, and its home page shows more
than 54 million visitors since May 12, 1997. Also has a good links page leading to other emulator
sites.
http://www.pong-story.com/odyemu.htm The story and status of ODYEMU, an emulator of the
Magnavox Odyssey, can be found on this page.
VIDEO
Game Over: Gender, Race, & Violence in Video Games, 35 min. The Media Education Foundation, 2000.
http://www.mediaed.org. An educational documentary which addresses questions of gender, race, and
violence in video games.
Lara Croft: Lethal and Loaded, 50 min. West Long Branch, NJ: White Star Video, 2001.
Once Upon Atari, 120 min. Directed by Howard Scott Warshaw. Scott West Productions, 2003. http://
www.onceuponatari.com/contact.html.
BOOKS
Aarseth, Espen. Cybertext: Perspectives on Ergodic Literature. Baltimore, MD, and London: The Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1997.
Adams, Ernest. Break into the Game Industry: How to Get a Job Making Video Games. New York:
McGraw-Hill Osborne Media, 2003.
Avedon, Elliott M., and Brian Sutton-Smith. The Study of Games. New York: Wiley, 1971.
Banks, J. Gamers as Co-creators: Enlisting the Virtual AudienceA Report from the Netface. In Critical Readings: Media and Audiences. Edited by Virginia Nightengale and Karen Ross. Maidenhead,
England: Open University Press, 2003.
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Bell, A.G. Games Playing With Computers. London: Allen and Unwin, 1972.
Bethke, E. Game Development and Production. Plano, TX: Wordware, 2003.
Blanchet, Michael. How to Beat the Video Games. New York: Simon and Schuster/Fireside,
1982.
Bogost, Ian. Unit Operations: An Approach to Videogame Criticism. Cambridge, MA, and London: MIT
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Buchsbaum, Walter H., and Robert Mauro. Electronic Games: Design, Programming, and Troubleshooting.
New York: McGraw-Hill, 1979.
Buckwalter, Len. Video Games. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1977.
Bueschel, Richard M. Guide to Vintage Trade Simulators and Countertop Games. Atglen, PA: Schiffer,
1997.
Burnham, Van. Supercade: A Visual History of the Videogame Age 19711984. Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 2001.
Cassell, Justine, and Henry Jenkins, eds. From Barbie to Mortal Kombat: Gender and Computer Games.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1988.
Castronova, Edward. Synthetic Worlds: The Business and Culture of Online Games. Chicago and London:
University of Chicago Press, 2006.
Chiang, Bor-Yang. Involvement and Motive in Sports Video Game Playing, Televised Sports Viewing, Live
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Cohen, Scott. Zap: The Rise and Fall of Atari. New York: McGraw, 1984.
Crawford, Chris. The Art of Computer Game Design. Berkeley, CA: McGraw-Hill/Osborne Media,
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DeMaria, Rusel. The 7th Guest: The Official Guide. Rocklin, CA: Prima, 1993.
DeMaria, Rusel, and Johnny L. Wilson. High Score! The Illustrated History of Electronic Games. Berkeley,
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Fine, Gary. Shared Fantasy: Role-Playing Games as Social Worlds. Chicago and London: University of
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Frasca, Gonzalo. Ephemeral Games: Is It Barbaric to Design Videogames after Auschwitz? In Cybertext
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Frasca, Gonzalo. Videogames of the Oppressed: Videogames as a Means for Critical Thinking and Debate.
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Goodman, Robert L. How to Repair Video Games. Blue Ridge Summit, PA: Tab Books, 1978.
Greenfield, Patricia Marks. Mind and Media: The Effects of Television, Video Games, and Computers.
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Heiserman, David L. How to Design & Build Your Own Custom TV Games. Blue Ridge Summit, PA: Tab
Books, 1978.
Resource Guide
Herman, Leonard. Phoenix: The Fall and Rise of Home Videogames, 4th ed. Springfield, NJ: Rolenta Press,
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Herz, J. C. Joystick Nation: How Videogames Gobbled Our Money, Won Our Hearts and Rewired Our
Minds. Boston, MA: Little Brown, 1997.
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London: MIT Press, 2005.
Kafai, Yasmin Bettina. Minds in Play: Computer Game Design as a Context for Childrens Learning.
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Kent, Steven L. The Ultimate History of Video Games: The Story behind the Craze that Touched Our Lives
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Kinder, Marsha. Playing With Power in Movies, Television, and Video Games: From Muppet Babies to
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1991.
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King, Geoff, and Tanya Krzywinska, eds. Screenplay: Cinema/Videogames/Interfaces. London: Wallflower
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King, Lucien, ed. Game On: The History and Culture of Video Games. New York: Universe,
2002.
Klanten, Robert, and Jaro Gielens, eds. Electronic Plastic. Berlin: Die Gestalten Verlag, 2000.
Kohler, Chris. Power Up: How Japanese Video Games Gave the World an Extra Life. Indianapolis: Brady
Games, 2005.
Kristof, Ray, and Amy Satran. Interactivity by Design. Mountain View, CA: Adobe Press,
1995.
Kubey, Craig. The Winners Book of Video Games. New York: Warner Books, 1982.
Kurtz, Bill. Encyclopedia of Arcade Video Games. Schiffer Book Farm, PA: Schiffer, 2003.
Lambert, Steve, and Suzan Ropiquet, eds. CD-ROM: The Current and Future State of the Art. Redmond,
WA: Microsoft Press, 1986.
Lammers, Susan. Programmers at Work. Redmond, WA: MicroSoft Press, 1986.
Le Diberder, Alain, and Frederic Le Diberder. LUnivers des Jeux Video. Paris: Editions La Decouverte,
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Marks, Aaron. The Complete Guide to Game Audio. Manhasset, NY: CMP Books, 2001.
McGowan, Chris, and Jim McCullaugh. Entertainment in the Cyber Zone. New York: Random House
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Mertens, Mathias, and Tobias O. Meiner. Wir waren Space Invaders. Frankfurt am Main: Eichborn,
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Resource Guide
PERIODICALS
Periodicals devoted to video games include Videogame Advisor, Arcade, Game Fan, NEXT Generation,
Ultimate Gameplayers, Computer Games Magazine, 2600 Connection Magazine, RePlay, Play Meter,
and others like Computer Graphics World which feature articles on video games from a graphics standpoint.
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NOTES
Chapter 2
1. Mark J.P. Wolf, The World of the Dni: Myst and Riven (Milan: Costa and Nolan, 2006), for a
detailed comparison.
Chapter 4
1. Richard M. Bueschel, Guide to Vintage Trade Simulators and Countertop Games (Atglen, PA:
Schiffer, 1997).
2. Ken Durham, History of Pinball Machines, GameRoomAnitiques.com, http://www.
gameroomantiques.com/HistoryPin.htm, (accessed August 14, 2007).
3. J. Martin Graetz, The Origin of Spacewar! Creative Computing (August 1981).
4. Sol Lewitt, Paragraphs on Conceptual Art, Artforum 5, no. 10 (June 1967): 7983.
5. Gene Youngblood, Expanded Cinema (New York: E.P. Dutton, 1970).
Chapter 5
1. See Mark J. P. Wolf and Bernard Perron, editors, The Video Game Theory Reader (New York:
Routledge, 2003), Introduction, for a more detailed history of the study of video games.
2. Available online, http://www.klov.com/.
3. Available online, http://gamestudies.org/0601.
Chapter 7
1. See Vintage Coin Operated Fortune Tellers, Arcade Games, Digger/Cranes, Gun Games and
Other Penny Arcade Games, pre-1977, http://marvin3m.com/arcade/ (accessed April 5, 2007); and
electromechanical game, http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1242873 (accessed March 27,
2007).
2. According to Steve Fulton, Atari: The Lost Years of the Coin-Op, 19711975, http://www.
armchairarcade.com/aamain/content.php?article.101 (accessed March 27, 2007).
3. According to Steve Fulton, Atari: The Lost Years of the Coin-Op, 19711975, http://www.
armchairarcade.com/aamain/content.php?article.102 (accessed March 27, 2007).
4. Steven L. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games: The Story Behind the Craze that Touched Our
Lives and Changed the World (New York: Three Rivers Press, 2001), 116.
330
Notes
Chapter 8
1. For more on early home game systems, see David Winters website, http://www.pong-story.com/.
Chapter 9
1. Leonard Herman, Phoenix: The Fall and Rise of Video Games (Springfield, NJ: Rolenta Press,
2007), 4th ed.
2. Herman, Phoenix: The Fall and Rise of Video Games.
3. Leonard Herman, The Baer Essentials, Electronic Gaming Monthly (January 2000): 16876.
Chapter 11
1. Herman, Phoenix: The Fall and Rise of Video Games.
2. Telka S. Perry and Paul Wallich, Design Case History: The Atari Video Computer System, IEEE
Spectrum (March 1983).
Chapter 12
1. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 130.
2. Although some sources list Starhawk as appearing in 1977, the author of Starhawk, Tim Skelly,
gives 1978 as the year of its creation, in his account at http://www.dadgum.com/giantlist/archive/
cinematronics.html (accessed April 10, 2007).
3. According to GameArchive.com, http://www.gamearchive.com/Video_Games/Manufacturers/
Atari/asteroids.html (accessed July 27, 2007).
4. According to klov.com, http://www.klov.com/game_detail.php?letter=A&game_id=6939 (accessed
April 10, 2007). For the 70,000 units figure, see Asteroids, GameArchive.com, http://
www.gamearchive.com/Video_Games/Manufacturers/Atari/asteroids.html (accessed April 10, 2007).
Also see http://markn.users.netlink.co.uk//Arcade/aster.html for a history of Asteroids.
5. A number of sources give 1980 as the release date for Red Baron; however, GameArchive.com gives
the release date of both the cockpit and upright versions of the game as 1981 (see http://www.
gamearchive.com/Video_Games/Manufacturers/Atari/red_baron.html), and the site includes a scan of
the original Red Baron operators manual, which also has a copyright date of 1981.
6. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 164.
7. Although 1982 is often given as the year of Black Widows release, Owen R. Rubin, who programmed vector games at Atari, gives 1983 as the date in his essay Memories of a Vector World,
ACM SIGGraphs Computer Gaming 32, no. 2 (May 1998), http://www.siggraph.org/publications/news
letter/v32n2/contributions/rubin.html (accessed April 11, 2007).
Chapter 13
1. Chris Morris, Game Over: Pac Man Turns 25: A Pizza Dinner Yields a Cultural Phenomenon
and Millions of Dollars in Quarters, CNNMoney.com, May 10, 2005. Morris reports on a study undertaken by Twin Galaxies, http://money.cnn.com/2005/05/10/commentary/game_over/column_gaming/
index.htm (accessed January 24, 2007).
2. From an interview in Susan Lammers book, Programmers at Work (Redmond, WA: MicroSoft
Press, 1986), and subsequently posted on the Internet, http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/
Heights/5874/iwatani.htm (accessed January 23, 2007).
3. See The Virtual Pac-Man Museum, http://www.zutco.com/pacman.htm, for images of some of
these products.
Notes
Chapter 14
1. BYTE Magazine 3, no. 7 (July 1978): 67
2. According to http://www.economicexpert.com/a/TRS:80.htm (accessed August 25, 2007); and
http://indopedia.org/TRS-80.html (accessed August 25, 2007).
Chapter 15
1. The history of Colossal Cave Adventure and its various versions can be found at http://www.
rickadams.org/adventure/a_history.html (accessed on February 25, 2004).
2. On the connection of the game and the actual cave on which it is based, see The Real Colossal
Cave, http://www.rickadams.org/adventure/b_cave.html.
3. A Short History of Interactive Fiction, http://www.inform-fiction.org/manual/html/s46.html.
4. See Mark J. P. Wolf and Bernard Perron, ed., The Video Game Theory Reader (New York:
Routledge, 2003), foreword by Robinett, for an in-depth look at the problems encountered in adapting
Adventure into a graphical game.
5. According to http://www.atariage.com/software_page.html?SoftwareLabelID=1.
6. From the Lucasfilm Games manual to Maniac Mansion, 1987.
7. Video clips had been used in laserdisc games as early as Dragons Lair (1983), and even in Rick
Dyers Halcyon home laserdisc game system, but the amount of memory needed to store video clips
was not available in home computers until the advent of the CD-ROM.
8. According to http://www.greatgamesexperiment.com/user/EA%20Games (accessed July 28, 2007).
9. According to Gamespot.com, http://www.gamespot.com/news/index.html (accessed July 28, 2007).
10. According to Gamasutra.com, http://www.gamasutra.com/php-bin/hews_index.phy?story=9051
(accessed July 28, 2007).
11. Robert Summa, No more online gaming for you! says EA, posted on joystiq.com, http://
www.joystiq.com/2006/08/06/no-more-online-gaming-for-you-says-ea/.
Chapter 16
1. According to Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 152.
2. Both Pac-Man and Defender are typically said to have grossed over a billion dollars, for example,
see the Gamespot website, http://www.gamespot.com/gamespot/features/all/greatestgames/p-44.html
(accessed July 21, 2006).
3. While Battlezone had the first 3-D polygon-based environments, Vectorbeams Speed Freak (1978)
had the first 3-D polygon-based objects, making it the first arcade game to feature true 3-D computation.
4. Although Tempests title screen gives the copyright date as 1980 (in roman numerals), its release
date was in 1981. This is the case for a number of games which are released sometime after their
programming is completed, so screen dates do not always coincide with release dates.
5. The numbers here are from Bernstein Research and reported in Albert Mehrabian and Warren
Wixen, Lights Out at the Arcade, Psychology Today (December 1983): 72; and Charles P. Alexander,
Video Games Go Crunch! Time (October 17, 1983): 64.
6. DIP switch settings for over 5,000 arcade games can be found at http://www.solvalou.com/
subpage/arcade_dips (accessed August 2, 2006).
7. For more information on suicide batteries, see The Dead Battery Society website, http://
www.arcadecollecting.com/dead/dead.html (accessed on August 2, 2006).
8. Many of the data regarding the arcade games discussed in this chapter came from http://
www.klov.com/, http://www.videotopia.com/, and http://www.gamearchive.com/.
Chapter 17
1. Cathleen McGuigan and Peter McAlevey, Mini-Movies Make the Scene, Newsweek (August 8,
1983): 79.
331
332
Notes
2. Dan Persons, Lasers Last Stand: Where Have All the Lasers Gone? Can This Be the End of the
Road for The Saviour of the Arcades? Electronic Games (July 1984): 78.
3. According to Saku Taipale, MSX and Laserdiscs, MSX Computer & Club Webmagazine, no. 93
(JuneDecember 2000), http://www.mccw.hetlab.tk/93/msxlaserdisc/en.html (accessed April 16, 2007).
4. See www.daphne-emu.com.
Chapter 18
1. The figure of $5 billion for 1981 is found both in Newsweek and Time. See Lynn Langway et. al,
Invasion of the Video Creatures, Newsweek (November 16, 1981): 9094; and John Skow, Games
that Play People, Time (January 18, 1982): 5058.
2. Video Games Are Suddenly a $2 Billion Industry, Business Week (May 24, 1982): 7883.
3. Skow, Games that Play People, 58.
4. Video Games Are Suddenly a $2 Billion Industry, 78.
5. Jerry Eimbinder and Eric Eimbinder, Electronic Games: Space-Age Leisure Activity, Popular
Electronics, (October 1980): 55.
6. Ibid.
7. Peter Nulty, Why the Craze Wont Quit, Fortune (November 15, 1982): 114.
8. See Game Informer 15, no. 145 (May 2005): 150.
9. From Arcade Games Start to Flicker,Business Week (December 6, 1982): 39.
10. Albert Mehrabian and Warren Wixen, Lights Out at the Arcade, Psychology Today (December
1983): 72; and Charles P. Alexander, Video Games Go Crunch! Time (October 17, 1983): 64.
11. The Trend is Back to Pinball Machines, Business Week (May 7, 1984): 37.
Chapter 19
1. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 279.
2. Ibid., 298. Consult David Sheff s book Game Over: How Nintendo Conquered the World (New
York: Vintage Books, 1994) for more details on the New York NES launch.
3. Ibid., 308.
4. Ibid., 360.
5. See Steven A. Schwartz and Janet Schwartz, Parents Guide to Video Games (Roseville: Prima Lifestyles, 1994). The Schwartzes made an enquiry to NOA regarding their content policies and reproduced
the letter they received in their book. The words quoted are taken directly from Nintendo of Americas
response.
6. For examples of game altering and the official Nintendo of Americas Video Game Content
Guidelines, see J. J. McCulloughs Nintendos Era of Censorship webpage, http://www.filibuster
cartoons.com/Nintendo.php (accessed August 14, 2007).
7. Douglas Crawford, The Untold Story of Maniac Mansion, Wired Magazine, no. 1.04 (September/October 1993), http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/1.04/nintendo.html.
8. These estimates were given personally to this author in response to an inquiry regarding the exact
scope of the NESs games library.
9. International NES/Famicom Cartridge List, The Nintendo Repository, http://www.gamers
graveyard.com/repository/nes/nesgames.html.
10. The chart is available at http://www.vgchartz.com/worldtotals.php?name=&console=NES&pu
blisher=&sort=Total.
11. For more extensive information on the NES hardware, see http://nesdev.parodius.com/.
12. Darrell Hartman, Life is Like a Game of Donkey Kong, The New York Sun, August 14, 2007,
http://www.nysun.com/article/60465?page_no=3 (accessed August 14, 2007).
13. Levi Buchanan, Its All in the Game, Chicago Tribune, May 17, 2005; and Greg Sewart, Sega
Saturn: The Pleasure and the Pain, 1up.com, http://www.1up.com/do/feature?cId=3142283&did=1
(accessed May 4, 2006).
Notes
14. Steven L. Kent, Nintendo Unveiling a New Portable, USA Today, May 11, 2004, http://
www.usatoday.com/life/lifestyle/2004-05-11-nintendo-ds_x.htm (accessed May 4, 2006).
15. Nintendo Unveils Game Boy Micro, CIOL.com, http://www.ciol.com/content/news/2005/
105051803.asp (accessed May 4, 2006).
16. According to Nintendos 2005 Annual Financial Report, http://www.nintendo.com/corp/report/
NintendoAnnualReport2005.pdf (accessed May 4, 2006).
Chapter 20
1. Herman, Phoenix: The Fall and Rise of Video Games.
2. Herman, Phoenix: The Fall and Rise of Video Games.
Chapter 22
1. See Andre Gaudreault and Tom Gunning, Le cinema des premiers temps, un defi a` lhistoire du
cinema? in Histoire du Cinema, Nouvelles Approches, ed. J. Aumont, A. Gaudreault, and M. Marie (Paris:
Publications de la Sorbonne, 1989), 4963; and Tom Gunning, The Cinema of Attractions: Early Film,
Its Spectator and the Avant-Garde, in Early Cinema, Space. Frame, Narrative, ed. Thomas Elsaesser
(London: British Film Institute, 1990), 5662.
2. From the September 1983 article, Dragons Lair: A Marriage of Science and Art included with
the game Don Bluth Presents Dragons Lair 20th Anniversary Special Edition (2003). However, the source
is not indicated.
3. Marc Saltzman, Dragons Lair, Supercade: A Visual History of the Videogame Age 19711984, ed.
Van Burnham (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2003), 348. As the first game to feature high definition TV
graphics, Dragons Lair 3D: Return to the Lair (Dragonstone Software/Ubisoft, 2002) also has its place in
history.
4. For information about early laserdisc games, the website http://www.dragons-lair-project.com/
remains the most significant reference.
5. A flyer is available at http://www.dragons-lair-project.com/games/materials/flyers/dl.asp (accessed
August 14, 2007).
6. The date on the box set of the game is 1992, but it is known to have been released in 1993. The
same is true of the Philips CD-i version of Voyeur (1993/1994).
7. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 45657.
8. Daniel Ichbiah, La saga des jeux video (Paris: Editions Generales First-Pocket, 1997), 208.
9. Rusel Demaria, The 7th Guest: The Official Guide (Rocklin, CA: Prima Publishing, 1993), 34445.
10. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 273.
11. Ibid., 470.
12. Philip Elmer-Dewitt, The Amazing Video Game Boom, Time (Attack of the Video Games)
142, no. 13 (September 27, 1993): 43.
13. Rick Barba, Under a Killing Moon. The Official Strategy Guide (Rocklin, CA: Prima Publishing,
1995), 229.
14. Rusel Demaria and Johnny L. Wilson, High Score!: The Illustrated History of Electronic Games
(Berkeley, CA: McGraw Hill/Osborne Media, 2002), 142.
15. Telka S. Perry, Video Games: The Next Wave, IEEE Spectrum 20, no. 12 (December 1983):
5259.
Chapter 23
1. David Kushner, Care for a Latte with That, Mr. Nukem? The New York Times, September 23,
1999, vol. 149, no. 51654; and Marcus Webb, Arcade-Style Viddies Confront Challenging Future
as Market Fragments and Shrinks, Vending Times 41, no. 11 (September 25, 2001October 24,
2001).
333
334
Notes
2. See KLOV.com, http://www.klov.com/game_detail.php?letter=A&game_id=7331. Many game
descriptions and dates in this essay were obtained at http://www.klov.com/.
3. According to the page for Airline Pilots, http://www.klov.com/game_detail.php?letter=A&
game_id=6835.
4. See http://www.bemani.com/ and http://www.konami.com/ for more information.
5. Tracy Smith, Video Game Thats Good for You, CBSnews.com, http://cbsnews.com/
stories/2002/06/13/earlyshow/contributors/tracysmith/main512169.shtml (accessed October 6,
2003).
6. Beth Snyder Bulik, Arcade Craze Swings into the Living Room, Advertising Age 75, no. 26
(June 28, 2004): 3, 52.
7. According to the Cyber Sled page of The Killer List of Videogames, http://www.klov.com/game_
detail.php?letter=C&game_id=7466 (accessed November 30, 2006).
8. For more information on Namcos System 16 hardware for their medium-sized attractions, see
http://www.system16.com/hardware.php?id=833.
9. Maureen Tkacik, Back to Bingo: Arcade Firm Shrugs Off High-Tech FlashGameWorks
Thinks It Has a Winner with Classics Like Bowling and Skee-Ball, The Wall Street Journal, July 23,
2001.
10. David P. Hamilton, Entertainment: Pow Goes Posh as Arcades Zap Old Image, The Wall Street
Journal, July 2, 1993.
11. George Jones and Ken Brown, Arcade 2.0: The Future of Public Gaming Doesnt Accept Coins,
Computer Gaming World, no. 230 (September 2003): 4044.
12. Rochelle Slovin, Hot Circuits: Reflections on the 1989 Video Game Exhibition of the American
Museum of the Moving Image, in ed. Mark J.P. Wolf, The Medium of the Video Game (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 2001), 13754.
13. Dan Hower, John Talarico, Tim Ferrante, The Arcade Video Game Price Guide (Cleveland, OH:
GameRoom Magazine, 2001).
14. Although the sounds in Double Donkey Kong are said to have a higher pitch than the original
version; see http://www.klov.com/game_detail.php?letter=D&game_id=7618.
Chapter 24
1. According to Aging Hipsters, http://www.aginghipsters.com/blog/archives/000022.php, (accessed
July 30, 2007).
2. According to The Gameroom, http://thegameroom1.blogspot.com/2007_03_27_archive.html,
(accessed July 30, 2007).
3. According to GamePro.com, http://www.gamepro.com/gamepro/domestic/games/features/
111822.shtml, (accessed July 30, 2007).
Chapter 25
1. See Answers.com, http://www.answers.com/topic/zzt (accessed August 14, 2007).
2. Maria Seward, interview with Jim Knopf, http://www.sharewarejunkies.com/invjikn.htm
(accessed October 13, 2006).
Chapter 26
1. According to http://www.spiritus-temporis.com/sega-saturn/ (accessed August 25, 2007); and
http://info.sonicretro.org/Sega_Saturn (accessed August 25, 2007).
2. Telis Demos, Ballmer: Xbox Will Capitalize on PS3 Delay, CNNMoney.com, March 17,
2006, http://money.cnn.com/2006/03/17/technology/ballmer_fortune/index.htm (accessed August 25,
2007).
Notes
Chapter 27
1. See Plato, The everyday blog of Richard Bartle, http://www.youhaventlived.com/qblog/2006/
QBlog010206A.html.
2. Marty Retro Rogue Goldberg, The History of Computer Gaming, ClassicGaming.com, 2001
2002, http://classicgaming.gamespy.com/View.php?view=Articles.Detail&id=330.
3. Ibid.
4. See Multi-User Dungeon, http://www.british-legends.com/.
5. See http://www.avalon-rpg.com/ (accessed August 14, 2007).
6. Chip Morningstar and R. H. Farmer, The Lessons of Lucasfilms Habitat, in ed. Michael
Benedikt, Cyberspace: First Steps (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1991), 273301.
7. See Ultima Online Release (Part I), http://www.aschulze.net/ultima/stories9/release1.htm.
8. World of Warcraft Subscribers Surpasses 9 Million, Macworld.com, http://www.macworld.com/
news/2007/07/24/wow/index.php (accessed July 31, 2007).
9. See MMORPG Gamelist, http://www.mmorpg.com/gamelist.cfm?gameId=0&bhcp=1.
Chapter 28
1. Business Week, no. 3661 (December 27, 1999): 62.
2. Advertising Age 71, no. 7 (February 14, 2000): 17.
3. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 511.
4. Ibid., 511.
5. A list of Greatest Hits titles for the PlayStation, PlayStation 2, and PlayStation Portable systems
can be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Sony_Greatest_Hits_games. As noted therein, the
standard for acceptance was 150,000 copies at first, but was raised to 250,000 later.
6. See Playstation CD Laser Repair for a detailed procedure to correct these laser problems, http://
www.cyber-mag.com/station/laserPSX.htm (accessed March 30, 2007).
Chapter 29
1. Miranda Sawyer, Lara Hit in The Face, The Croft Times (June 5, 1997), http://www.cubeit.com/
ctimes/news0007b.htm (accessed April 30, 2007).
2. Lara Hit in The Face: Interview with Toby Gard, The Croft Times (June 5, 1997), http://
www.cubeit.com/ctimes/news0007a.htm (accessed April 26, 2007).
3. Laras Creator Speaks, tiscali.games, http://www.tiscali.co.uk/games/features/tombraider
legend/2.
Chapter 32
1. According to http://www.gameskank.net/company-Eidos%20Interactive.html (accessed August 25,
2007).
2. According to the European Game Developers Federation, http://egdf.eu/EGDF_Press_Relea
se_061110.pdf (accessed August 1, 2007). EGDF members are Tiga (UK), APOM (France), GAME
(Germany/Austria), BGIn (Benelux), Producentforeningen (Denmark), Spelplan-ASGD (Sweden), and
Neogames (Finland). The federation represents about 500 studies based in Austria, Belgium, Germany,
Great Britain, France, Italy, the Netherlands, and the Nordic Countries, which together employ over
15,500 people.
Chapter 33
1. The work described in this chapter was supported by a grant from the Research Grants Council of
the Hong Kong Government (CUHK4680/05H). Some of the data and analysis about Singapore video
335
336
Notes
games in this work is modified from Japanese Video Games in Singapore: History, Culture, and Industry, Asian Journal of Social Sciences 29:1 (June 2001, Brill), which the author would like to gratefully
acknowledge.
2. Reiji Asakura, Revolutionaries at Sony: The Making of the Sony PlayStation and the Visionaries Who
Conquered the World of Video Games (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2000); and Chris Kohler, Power-Up: How
Japanese Video Games Gave the World an Extra Life (Indianapolis: Brady Games, 2005).
3. Michael Hayes and Stuart Disney, Games War: Video Games, A Business Review (London:
Bowerdean, 1995); J.C. Herz, Joystick Nation: How Videogames Ate Our Quarters, Won Our Hearts,
and Rewired Our Minds, (Boston, MA: Little Brown, 1997); Marsha Kinder, Playing with Power in
Movies, Television, and Video Games: From Muppet Babies to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Berkeley
and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1991); and David Sheff, Game Over: How Nintendo
Zapped an American Industry, Captured Your Dollars, and Enslaved Your Children (New York: Random
House, 1993).
4. Benjamin Wai-ming Ng, Street Fighter and The King of Fighters in Hong Kong: A Study of
Cultural Consumption and Localization of Japanese Games in an Asian Context, Game Studies 6,
no. 1 (December 2006), http://gamestudies.org/0601 (accessed August 14, 2007).
5. Wui Seng Ng, Japanese Video Games in Singapore: A Study of Hardware, Software and Players
(Honors Thesis, Department of Japanese Studies, National University of Singapore, 1998): 26.
6. Kinder, Playing with Power in Movies, Television, and Video Games, 8993.
7. Yat-fai Tsang, A Study of the Game Console Market in Hong Kong (MBA thesis, Chinese University
of Hong Kong, 1991).
8. Koichi Iwabuchi, Return to Japan: Japan in Asian Audiovisual Markets, in Kosaku Yoshino, ed.,
Consuming Ethnicity and Nationalism (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1998), 185196; and
Roland Robertson, Glocalization: Time, Space and Homogeneity-Heterogeneity, in Roland Robertson, Mile Featherstone, and Scott Lash, ed., Global Modernities (London,: Thousand Oaks, 1995),
2544.
9. Benjamin Wai-ming Ng, A Preliminary Investigation of the Jin Yong Fever in Japan, Hong Kong
Journal of Social Sciences, no. 27 (Spring/Summer 2004): 13146.
10. Brian Underdahl, PS2: Blow the Lid Off (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2002).
11. Anne Allison, Millennial Monsters: Japanese Toys and the Global Imagination (Berkeley and Los
Angeles: University of California Press, 2006), chap. 6.
12. The Straits Times, April 9, 1997, p. 8.
13. Suet-Yin Cheng and Cui-Yuk Lo, Consumer Behavior of Tamagotchi Keepers (MBA Thesis,
Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1998).
14. Lianhe Wanbao, December 1, 1998, p. 11.
15. Hodo Suzuki, Kaizoku Sofuto No Hon (Book of Pirated Software) (Tokyo, Japan: Sansai Books,
1997): 4350.
16. Steven Poole, Trigger Happy: Videogames and the Entertainment Revolution (London: Little Brown,
2004).
17. Ng, Street Fighter and The King of Fighters in Hong Kong.
18. John Fiske,Understanding Popular Culture (New York: Routledge, 1989), 32.
19. Herz, Joystick Nation; and Sheff, Game Over.
20. Koichi Iwabuchi, Return to Japan: Japan in Asian Audiovisual Markets, in Kosaku
Yoshino, ed., Consuming Ethnicity and Nationalism (Honolulu, University of Hawaii Press, 1998),
179183.
Chapter 34
1. J. Hill, Game Industry at the Crossroads, The Age (September 7, 2006), http://
www.theage.com.au/news/games/game-industry-at-the-crossroads/2006/09/06/1157222139337.html?
page=fullpage.
2. Insight Economics, Australian Electronic Game Industry Profile, prepared for the Game Developers
Association of Australia, 2006, page iii, http://www.gdaa.com.au/docs/Industry_Profile.pdf.
Notes
3. J. Banks, Gamers as Co-creators: Enlisting the Virtual AudienceA Report from the Netface, in
ed. Virginia Nightengale and Karen Ross, Critical Readings: Media and Audiences (Maidenhead, England:
Open University Press, 2003), 26878; and S. Humphreys, B. Fitzgerald, J. Banks, and N. Suzor,
Fan-Based Production for Computer Games: User-Led Innovation, the Drift of Value and Intellectual
Property Rights, Media International Australia 114 (2005): 1629.
4. Hill, Game Industry.
5. For the 85 percent statistic, see Insight Economics, Australian Electronic Game Industry Profile,
page 4. For the 90 percent statistic, see Hill, Game Industry.
6. Hill, Game Industry.
7. M. Swalwell, The Meme Game: Escape from Woomera, RealTime 55 (2003), http://
www.realtimearts.net/rt55/swallwell.html (accessed February 2, 2007).
8. S. Nicholls, Ruddock Fury over Woomera Computer Game, The Age (April 30, 2003), http://
www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/04/29/1051381948773.html.
9. Swalwell, The Meme Game.
10. Keith Gallasch, Australia Council Restructures: New Media Arts Wasted, message posted to the
Fibreculture Forum, December 9, 2004, archived at http://www.fibreculture.org/myspinach/fibreculture/
2004-December/004292.html; and M. Swalwell, K. Neil, Unaustralia the Game and the Possibility of
Independent Satirical Videogames, unpublished conference paper, presented at the annual conference of
the Cultural Studies Association of Australasia, December 2006.
11. Office of Film and Literature Classification, http://www.classification.gov.au/special.html.
12. Office of Film and Literature Classification brochure, Guidelines for the Classification of Film and
Computer Games, http://www.comlaw.gov.au/comlaw/management.nsf/lookupindexpagesbyid/
IP200508205?OpenDocument.
13. For the online petition addressed to the Office of Film and Literature Classification, see http://
www.petitiononline.com/oflcr18/petition.html.
14. C. Fitzsimmons, Push for 18+ Game Ratings Fails, Australian IT, November 12, 2002, http://
web.archive.org/20021115103906/http://australianit.news.com.au/articles/0,7204,5466570%
5e15319%5e%5enbv%5e15306,00.html (accessed January 20, 2007).
15. See B. Hutcheon, L. Hearn, and D. Braithwaite, Australia First to Ban Graffiti Game, The Age
(February 17, 2006), http://www.theage.com.au/news/breaking/australia-first-to-ban-graffiti-game/
2006/02/17/1140064210144.html (accessed January 20, 2007).
16. Ibid.
17. Ibid.
18. Review Board Decision for Marc Eckos Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure, http://
www.oflc.gov.au/resource.html?resource=794&filename=794.pdf, 69.
19. Review Board Decision, sections 6.1.1, 6.1.2, 6.1.4, 6.1.5, and 6.1.7.
20. Review Board Decision, sections 6.1.6, 6.1.9, 6.1.10, 6.1.11, and 6.1.12.
21. Review Board Decision, section 7.13.2.
22. Review Board Decision, sections 7.8, 7.9.1, and 7.9.2.
23. Review Board Decision, sections 7.11.1 and 7.11.2.
24. Review Board Decision, section 7.13.4.
25. Review Board Decision, section 7.14.5.
Chapter 35
1. M. Cerny and M. John, Game Development Myth vs. Method, Game Developer
(June 2002).
2. E. Bethke, Game Development and Production, (Plano, TX: Wordware Publishing, 2003).
3. From an interview with Wright by the author.
4. Bethke, Game Development and Production.
5. From interviews done by the author. See Feichin Ted Tschang, When Does an Idea Become an
Innovation? The Role of Individual and Group Creativity in Videogame Design (Copenhagen: DRUID
2003 Summer Conference, June 1214, 2003).
337
338
Notes
6. Bethke, Game Development and Production.
7. Feichin Ted Tschang, Videogames as Interactive Experiential Products and Their Manner of
Development, International Journal of Innovation Management 9, no. 1 (2005): 10331.
8. Y. Baba and Feichin Ted Tschang, Product Development in Japanese TV Game Software: The
Case of an Innovative Game, International Journal of Innovation Management 5, no. 4 (2001): 487515.
9. From the authors interviews with various game designers.
Chapter 36
1. Steven Poole, Trigger Happy: Videogames and the Entertainment Revolution (New York: Arcade
Publishing, 2000), 125.
2. Mark J.P. Wolf, Inventing Space: Toward a Taxonomy of On- and Off-Screen Space in Video
Games, Film Quarterly 51, no. 3 (Fall 1997): 12.
3. Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin, Remediation: Understanding New Media (Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press, 2000).
4. Philippe Queau, Eloge de la Simulation: De la vie des Langages a` la Synthe`se des Images (Seyssel:
Editions du Champ Vallon, 1986), 31, my translation.
5. Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin, Remediation: Understanding New Media (Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press, 1999), 121.
6. Alison McMahan, Immersion, Engagement, and Presence, in The Video Game Theory Reader, ed.
Mark J.P. Wolf and Bernard Perron (New York: Routledge, 2003), 67.
Chapter 37
1. Scott Cohens Zap! The Rise and Fall of Atari (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1984), 28; and Kent,
The Ultimate History of Video Games, 4142.
2. See the Video Game History website, The Dot Eaters, for more on early uses of speech synthesis
and laserdisc technology in arcade games (http://www.thedoteaters.com).
3. Karen Collins, Flat Twos and the Musical Aesthetic of the Atari VCS [http://www.popularmusicology-online.com/issues/01/collins-01.html (accessed August 14, 2007)] for more on the Atari
VCSs unique sound system, particularly regarding the limitations the system placed on sound designers,
and how that may have influenced their compositional style.
4. Richard Rouse III, Game Design Theory and Practice, 2nd Ed. (Plano, TX: Wordware Publishing,
2005), 58.
5. Ibid., page 58. Also see Chris Granner, Tales from the Trenches of Coin-op Audio,
Gamasutra.com, http://www.gamasutra.com/features/19991118/Granner_pfv.htm, for more on the
requirements of arcade game audio versus home games (paper originally published in the 1999 Game
Developers Conference proceedings).
6. Rob Bridgett, Hollywood Sound: Part Three, Gamasutra.com, http://www.gamasutra.com/
features/20051012/bridgett_01.shtml.
7. Karen Collins, Loops and Bloops, soundscapes.info, http://www.icce.rug.nl/~soundscapes/VOL
UME08/Loops_and_bloops.shtml.
8. Dave Green, Demo or Die! Wired, no. 3.07 (July 1995), http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/
3.07/democoders.html; and Flat four radio (United Kingdom), http://www.mcld.co.uk/flatfour/chip
tunes/ for the four-part podcast on chiptunes.
9. Zach Whalen, Play AlongAn Approach to Videogame Music, GameStudies.org, http://
www.gamestudies.org/0401/whalen/. Whalen discusses video game musics relationship to animated film
soundtracks (especially in Super Mario Bros.), and the role of game music as an enhancement to gameplay.
10. 1UP.com, interview with Koji Kondo, http://www.1up.com/do/feature?pager.offset=5&
cId=3140040; and Alexander Brandons interview with Hip Tanaka at Gamasutra.com, http://www.
gamasutra.com/features/20020925/brandon_01.htm.
Notes
11. Christopher John Farley, Innovators: Time 100: The Next WaveMusic, Time.com (2001),
http://www.time.com/time/innovators_v2/music/profile_uematsu.html. In this article, Nobuo Uematsu
was named one of the magazines top innovators.
12. See Jeff Rona, The MIDI Companion: The Ins, Outs, and Throughs (Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard,
1994), 57, for more on the origins of MIDI.
13. See George Sanger, The Fat Man on Game Audio: Tasty Morsels of Sonic Goodness (Indianapolis:
New Riders, 2003), 187192, for more on George Sanger and Team Fats endorsement of Rolands
Sound Canvas chip and the subsequent widespread adoption of the chips sound quality as a further
standardization of General MIDI.
14. Aaron Marks, The Complete Guide to Game Audio (Lawrence, KS: CMP Books,
2001), 4.
15. Ibid., 200201.
16. Chris McGowan and Jim McCullaugh, Entertainment in the Cyber Zone (New York: Random
House Information Group, 1995), 2529.
17. Marks, The Complete Guide to Game Audio; Sanger, The Fat Man on Game Audio; Alexander
Brandon, Audio for Games: Planning, Process, and Production (Berkeley, CA: New Riders Games,
2004); and Jeannie Novak, Game Development Essentials: An Introduction (Clifton Park, NY: Thomson
Delmar Learning, 2004) for more on the process of game sound design,
18. Alexander Brandon, Adaptive Audio: A Report, in ed. Sanger, The Fat Man on Game Audio,
203.
19. See composers Michael Land and Peter McConnells 1994 patent for iMuse (U.S. Patent
No. 5,315,057) at http://pat2pdf.org/patents/pat5315057.pdf. Pages 21 through 22 in particular discuss
the limitations of looped game music and the need for a dynamic game sound system. See iMuse Island
at http://imuse.mixnmojo.com/.
20. See Guy Whitmore, Design with Music in Mind: A Guide to Adaptive Audio for Game
Designers, Gamasutra.com,http://www.gamasutra.com/resource_guide/20030528/whitmore_01.
shtml, for possible approaches to adaptive audio in first-person shooters and similarly action-oriented
games.
21. In what was previously a Japan-only event, live orchestral performances of video game music are
now finding favor with American audiences, in touring venues such as Video Games Live (http://
www.videogameslive.com/index.php?s=home) and PLAY! (http://www.play-symphony.com/).
22. See Billboard.com, http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/charts/chart_display.jsp?g=Singles&f=Hot
+Ringtones. See also Elliot Smilowitz, Ringtone Market Hits a High Note, UPI Perspectives, May 27,
2005 http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-6807568_ITM.
23. Olga Kharif, From Beeps to Billboard, Business Week.com, May 19, 2005, http://www.
businessweek.com/technology/content/may2005/tc20050519_8337_tc024.htm.
Chapter 38
1. Chris Crawford, The Art of Computer Game Design (Berkeley, CA: McGraw Hill/Osborne Media,
1984).
2. Video Game Set Sales Record in 2005: Game Boy, PSP Lift the Industry, Despite Languid
Holiday Season, CNNMoney.com, January 14, 2006, http://money.cnn.com/2006/01/13/technology/
personaltech/gamesales/index.htm (accessed January 26, 2007); and James Brightman, Breaking:
U.S. Video Game Industry Totals $12.5 Billion in 2006, GameDailyBiz, http://biz.gamedaily.com/
industry/feature/?id=14940 (accessed January 26, 2007).
3. Jeff Gerstmann, The Greatest Games of All Time, GameSpot, http://www.gamespot.com/
gamespot/features/all/greatestgames/p-44.html (accessed January 26, 2007).
4. According to http://www.games4nintendo.com/ and numerous other sites across the Internet.
5. Trey Walker, The Sims Overtakes Myst: Electronic Arts Virtual-Life Game Has Surpassed the
Popular Adventure Game Myst in Terms of Sales to Become the Best-Selling PC Game of All Time,
GameSpot (March 22, 2002), http://www.gamespot.com/pc/adventure/myst/news.html?sid=2857556
(accessed January 26, 2007).
339
340
Notes
6. Vladimir Cole, World of Warcraft Breaks 8 Million Subscribers, joystiq.com (January 11, 2007),
http://www.joystiq.com/2007/01/11/world-of-warcraft-breaks-8-million-subscribers/ (accessed
January 26, 2007).
Chapter 39
1. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 91.
2. See for instance Craig A. Anderson and Catherine M. Ford, Affect of the Game Player: ShortTerm Effects of Highly and Mildly Aggressive Video Games, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
12, no. 4 (1986): 390402; Diana Gagnon, Videogames and Spatial Skills: An Exploratory Study,
Educational Communication and Technology 33, no. 4 (1985): 26375; and Nicola S. Schutte, John
M. Malouff, Joan C. Post-Gorden, and Annette L. Rodasta, Effects of Playing Videogames on
Childrens Aggressive and Other Behaviors, Journal of Applied Social Psychology 18, no. 5 (1988):
45460.
3. James W. Wheless, M.D., Video Games and Epilepsy, epilepsy.com, http://www.epilepsy.com/
info/family_kids_video.html (accessed March 9, 2007). The link between video games and epilepsy is
still unclear and subject to research.
4. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 46280.
5. David Charter, Torturing This Child is a Game Too Far, Says Appalled EU Boss, Times Online
(November 17, 2006), http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/arti
cle639508.ece (accessed March 19, 2007).
6. Tim Ingham, 505 Games Pulls Rule of Rose Release, MCV: The Market for Home Computing &
Video Games (November 24, 2006), http://www.mcvuk.com/news/24913/505-Games-pulls-out-ofRule-Of-Rose-release (accessed March 19, 2007).
7. Brandon Sheffield, Thank Heaven for Little Girls: Why Rule of Rose May Be 2006s Most Controversial Game, Gamasutra.com. http://www.gamasutra.com/features/20060607/sheffield_01.shtml
(accessed March 19, 2007).
Chapter 40
1. Tim Moriarty, Uncensored Videogames: Are Adults Ruining It for the Rest of Us? Videogaming
and Computergaming Illustrated (October 1983).
2. According to entries for sympathy and empathy in Websters New Universal Unabridged
Dictionary, Revised Edition (New York: Dorset and Baber, 1983).
3. Craig A. Anderson and Karen Dill, Video Games and Aggressive Thoughts, Feelings, and
Behavior in the Laboratory and in Life, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 78, no 4 (April
2000): 77290, http://www.apa.org/journals/features/psp784772.pdf.
4. M.D. Griffiths and N. Hunt, Dependence on Computer Games by Adolescents, Psychological
Reports 82, (1998): 47580.
5. Anderson and Dill, Video Games and Aggressive Thoughts, Feelings, and Behavior in the
Laboratory and in Life.
6. The Games Kids Play: Lt. Col. Grossman on Violent Video Games, ABCnews.com, March 22,
2001, http://abcnews.go.com/
7. See, for example, Mary Fuller and Henry Jenkins, Nintendo and New World Travel Writing: A
Dialogue, in ed. Steven G. Jones, Cybersociety: Computer-Mediated Communication and Community
(Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1995), 5772. Fuller and Jenkins describe how imperialist
ideas can be embodied in games featuring versions of colonialism.
8. From an e-mail from Simon Carne to the author, sent March 25, 2001, 8:47 a.m.
9. Ted C. Fishman, The Plays the Thing, The New York Times Magazine, June 10, 2001.
10. From the section GAMM, Appraisal, and Aggressive Behavior, in Anderson and Dill, Video
Games and Aggressive Thoughts, Feelings, and Behavior in the Laboratory and in Life.
11. Rebecca R. Tews, Archetypes on Acid: Video Games and Culture, in ed. Mark J.P. Wolf, The
Medium of the Video Game (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 2001).
Notes
12. From the Majestic website which was online in 2001, http://www.majestic.ea.com, but is no longer available.
13. Playing the New Game of Life?: In the Upcoming, Cutting-Edge Game Majestic Its a Mans,
Mans World, ABCnews.com, March 7, 2001, http://abcnews.go.com/.
14. Christine Gilbert, Virtually Married, Computer Games, no. 125 (April 2001): 2226.
15. Tricia Gray, The Years Best, Computer Games,, no. 125 (April 2001): 46.
16. Tricia Gray, Shades of Gray: Peter Molyneuxs Epic Black & White Will Expose Your Morality
for the World to See, Computer Games, no. 125 (April 2001): 68.
Chapter 41
1. Tor Thorsen, Steven Spielberg, EA Ink Three-Game Next-Gen Deal, GameSpot (October 14,
2005), http://www.gamespot.com/news/6135746.html?q=spielberg (accessed July 22, 2006).
2. Mark J. P. Wolf, The Medium of the Video Game (Austin, TX: University of Texas Press,
2001), 2.
3. In Japan, it has been a huge phenomenon since the 1980s. See Chris Kohler, Power Up: How
Japanese Video Games Gave the World an Extra Life (Indianapolisa: Brady Games, 2005), 13164.
4. Activision and Nielsen Entertainment Release Results of Pioneering Research on In-Game Advertising, gamesindustry.biz (May 12, 2005), http://www.gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?aid=13408
(accessed July 17, 2006).
5. Wolf, The Medium of the Video Game, 25.
6. Henry Jenkins, Convergence? I Diverge, Technology Review (June 2001).
7. Wolf, The Medium of the Video Game, 12. In the first footnote on page 9, Wolf lists 33 game cartridges for the Atari 2600 based on movies and 23 based on television shows.
8. On the Atari 2600 adaptations, see Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 23739. On Tron
and its effect on CGI in Hollywood, see Philippe Lemieux, Limage Numerique au Cinema (Montreal,
Canada: Les 400 Coups, 2002), 26, 35; and Philippe Lemieux, Les Images Numeriques au Sein du Cinema
Commercial Hollywoodien (M.A. thesis, Universite de Montreal, 1997). Lemieux states that from 1982 to
1989 [ending with the success of The Abyss (1989)], CGI in Hollywood movies was almost nonexistent,
except for some rare sequences here and there.
9. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 422.
10. For a look at the movie-inspired games on the NES and Sega Genesis platforms, and others, go to
MobyGames.com, http://www.mobygames.com/game-group/movie-inspired-games/offset,0/so,1a/
(accessed August 5, 2006).
11. All figures are taken from the Internet Movie Database (http://www.imdb.com/).
12. The controversy surrounding the violence of this game certainly played in its favor at the box
office. For more on this subject, see Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 46180.
13. Masuyama, Pokemon as Japanese Culture? in ed. Lucien King, Game On: The History and
Culture of Videogames (London: Laurence King, 2002), 3435.
14. Kohler, Power Up, 6.
15. Often anime are adapted from manga first, which is why they are so interrelated.
MobyGames.com lists about 1,000 games inspired by or adapted from anime and manga, http://www.
mobygames.com/genre/sheet/anime-manga/ (accessed August 17, 2006).
16. Kinder, Playing with Power in Movies, Television, and Video Games, 34.
17. For more information on Starcade, go to http://starcade.tv/starcade/one.asp.
18. Kent, The Ultimate History of Video Games, 152; and Kohler, Power Up, 52.
19. See note 7.
20. See Chapter 39, The Video Game as an Object of Controversy.
21. Kohler, Power Up, 3839.
22. MobyGames lists 186 games directly inspired from cartoon shows on television. This includes
American and European animation and Asian anime. See http://www.mobygames.com/game-group/tvcartoon-inspired-games/offset,0/so,1a/ (accessed August 5, 2006).
23. Kinder, Playing with Power in Movies, Television, and Video Games.
341
342
Notes
24. Janet Murray, Hamlet on the Holodeck: The Future of Narrative in Cyberspace (Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press, 1998), 271.
25. Henry Jenkins, Transmedia Storytelling, Technology Review (January 2003): 1.
26. Henry Jenkins, Welcome to Convergence Culture, Receiver (March 2005): 2.
27. Stephanie Kang, A New Way to Use the Force, The Wall Street Journal, August 22,
2006. According to Kang, Lucasfilm says sales of Star Wars merchandise topped $12 billion since its
inception in 1977, about three times the worldwide box office for all six movies combined.
28. Ernest Adams, Break into the Game Industry: How to Get a Job Making Video Games (New York:
McGraw-Hill/Osborne Media, 2003).
Chapter 42
1. Tracy Smith, Video Game Thats Good for You, CBSnews.com, http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/
2002/06/13/earlyshow/contributors/tracysmith/main512169.shtml (October 6, 2003).
2. University of Texas at Austin: Simulated Workplace Builds Skills, Confidence, CampusTechnology (August 12, 2002), in Syllabus, http://campustechnology.com/articles/39197/ (July 16, 2003).
3. I.C. Squareds website, http://www.ic2.org/; and the Digital Media Collaboratorys website, http://
dmc.ic2.org/.
4. See Wired.com, http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/9.10/mustread_pr.html.
5. See Electronic Arts Sets Worldwide Record for Online Gaming; Ultima Online Beta Test
Hosts Nearly 3,000 Gamers Simultaneously Playing in the Same Virtual World over the Internet,
Business Wire, August 21, 1997, http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_1997_August_21/ai_
19683542.
6. Edward Castronova, Virtual Worlds: A First-Hand Account of Market and Society on the Cyberian Frontier, CESifo Working Paper Series No. 618 (January 14, 2002): 3.
7. Jeff OBrien, Nintendo to Sell User-generated Video Games, CNNMoney.com, June 27, 2007,
http://thebrowser.blogs.fortune.com/2007/06/27/nintendo-to-sell-user-generated-video-games/
(accessed August 3, 2007).
INDEX
344
Index
Adventure (text adventure), 34, 82, 188, 191
adventure games, 70, 8190, 100, 12325, 131,
184, 202, 204, 241, 245, 247, 260, 262, 279,
286
advergames, 306
advertisements. See in-game advertisements
Aerobiz, 268
Africa, 31415
After Burner, 97
After Burner II, 97
Aftermath Media (company), 130
After the War, 208
Agent Mulder, 184
Age of Conan: Hyborian Adventures, 208
aggression, 28689
Ahl, David H., 78, 99
AIFF files, 254
AI Fleet Commander, 270
Airline Pilots, 137
Air-Sea Battle, 41, 273
AI Wars, 270
Akallabeth, 190
Akira, 297
Albegas, 101
Alcorn, Al, 36, 59, 251
algorithm, 24, 37, 74, 245, 305, 311, 313
Alice (video game), 234
Alida, 90
Alien Hominid, 197, 200
Aliens (film), 193
Allen, Paul, 77
Alley Rally, 37
Allied Leisure, xvii, 3537, 39
Alone in the Dark, 205, 296
Alpha Beam with Ernie, 264, 266
Alpha Denshi, 68
alpha version of video games, 234
Alpine Racer, 14, 137
Alpine Racer 2, 137
Alpine Surfer, 137
Altair 8800, 77
Alternate Worlds Technology, 139
amateur radio, 201
Amazin Software (company), 89
American Civil War, 206
American Football, 262, 272
American Laser Games (company), 1012, 124,
12829, 139
American McGee (company), 234
Americas Army, 280
Amidar, 261, 26465
Amiga, 208, 241, 24344, 252
Amiga CD32 12325, 162
Amiga computer, 60
AMMI (American Museum of the Moving
Image), 142
Amstrad home computer, 208
Amusement and Music Operators Association,
99
amusement centers, 135, 159, 212
Amutech, 40
amyuuzumento sentaa (amusement centers), 141
Anarchy Online, 176, 208
Andamiro (company), 138
Anderson, Craig A., 286, 288
Anderson, Paul W. S., 29596
Andromeda (company), 118
Angler King, 137
AnimAction, 70
The Animatrix , 300
anime, 29697, 299300, 341 n.15
Anim-X, 290
Anno, Hideaki, 297
ANSI (American National Standards Institute),
155
Anti-Aircraft II, 38
Anvil of Dawn, 272
AOL, 175
AOL Instant Messaging, 290
Apogee Software (company), 15657, 192
Apollo Moon Shot Rifle, 18
Apple Computers, 59, 78, 89, 201
Apple I computer, 77
Apple II computer, 7778, 83, 99, 151, 18991,
242, 252
Apple Macintosh, 7980, 193, 201, 275
Apply Daily, 219
Aqua Jet, 137
AquaZone, 262
Arakawa, Minoru, 109, 118
arcade game cabinets, 96
arcade games, 1314, 22, 29, 3544, 6771,
7374, 91104, 118, 128, 133, 13542, 149,
159, 189, 194, 204, 21112, 220, 23940,
243, 24648, 25152, 254, 26162, 275,
287, 295, 298, 3034, 306, 31112, 316
arcade operators, 95, 96, 105, 120, 135, 140
Arcade Pinball, 269
The Arcade Video Game Price Guide, 142
Arcade video games start to flicker, 105
Archon, 89
Arda, 308
Argentina, 47, 50
Arkanoid, xviii, 96, 216, 261
Arm Champ, 137
Arm Champ II, 137
Index
Armor Attack, 68, 70
Arnold, Ken, 83
artificial intelligence, 192, 195, 250, 305
artificial life genre, 263
artistic expression, 307
Art Master, 70
The Art of Computer Game Design , 259
Aruze (company), 147
Ascaron (company, originally founded as
Ascon), 207
Ascii (American Standard Code for Information
Interchange), 152, 155
Ascii text graphics, 78, 83, 156
Ascon. See Ascaron
Ash (character), 297
Asherons Call, xx, 159, 285, 28788, 308
Asia, 21122, 224, 31415
Assault, xix
assembly language, 251
Asteroid, 36
Asteroids (arcade version), xviii, 1011, 44, 61,
64, 6869, 74, 91, 190, 194, 211, 246, 266,
272, 316
Asteroids (Atari 800 version), 60
Asteroids (Atari 2600 version), 59, 64, 93
Asteroids Deluxe, 68
Astrocade Pinball, 269
Astron Belt, 12, 99, 101, 128
Astro Race, 36
Asylum, 189
Asylum II, 189
Atari (company), xviixx, 19, 29, 3644, 45, 50,
5455, 5761, 65, 6771, 79, 9196, 100,
1035, 110, 11517, 13839, 141, 14344,
146, 163, 189, 2057, 211, 213, 224, 226,
243, 24647, 251, 275, 279, 284, 315,
330 n.7
Atari 400 computer, 15, 5859, 79, 151, 157
Atari 800 computer, 15, 59, 79, 151, 157, 189,
252
Atari 2600, 4, 13, 15, 23, 25, 29, 36, 4041, 51,
57, 5961, 6366, 8283, 93, 104, 110, 117,
121, 143, 161, 201, 213, 240, 25152, 259
60, 261, 275, 27778, 284, 294, 298, 306,
312, 338 n.3 ch.37, 341 n.7
Atari 2600jr, 60, 66
Atari 5200, 5859, 65, 252, 266, 274
Atari 7800, 5961, 66, 117, 266
Atari Baseball, 44, 262, 272
Atari Flashback, 61
Atari Flashback 2, 61, 66
Atari Games (company), 60, 7071, 9597,
101, 117, 137, 139
345
346
Index
Baker Street Irregulars, 131
Balance Try, 138
Baldurs Gate: Dark Alliance, 206
ball-and-paddle games, 37, 3940, 43, 4551,
143, 263
Balloon Gun, 38, 137
Bally Arcade, 57
Bally Corporation, 1819, 3536, 57, 93, 103
4, 128
Bally/Midway, 41, 43, 9496, 99100
Bandai, xx, 6, 110, 147, 21617, 219
bank-switching, 64, 311
Barrel PONG, 36
Barricade, 40
Barricade II, 41
Barron, Steve, 299
Bartel, Paul, 39, 277
Bartkowiak, Andrejz, 296
Bartle, Richard, 173
basementarcade.com, 142
Bashful (nicknamed Inky), 74
Basic (computer language), 33, 78
Basic Computer Games, 78
Basic Math, 266
Basic Programming, 4, 274
Basketball (arcade game), 37
Basketball (Atari 2600 version), 261
Batman (character), 297
Battle Arena Toshinden, 248
Battlefield 1942, 193, 208
Battle Ping Pong, 273
Battleship, 263
Battle Star, 69
Battletech, 139140, 265
Battlezone (arcade game), xviii, 10, 6869, 92
93, 138, 189, 24647, 265, 306, 316
Battlezone (Atari 2600 version), 59, 93
Bazooka, 40
Beam Software, 132, 22324
Beans on Toast, 183
Beast, 15253, 156
The Beast Within: A Gabriel Knight Mystery, 124,
133
Beatmania, 138, 271
Bedlam, 70
Bedquilt Cave, 82
Begas Battle, 100
Beginning Algebra, 274
Beginning Math, 274
Belgium, 114, 210
Bell Labs, 31
Belson, Jordan, 19
Benami Games (division of Konami), 138
Bendix G-15, 32
Benison, Ron, 141
Berzerk, 64, 70, 92, 191, 251, 268, 272
Betamax, 181
beta version of video games, 234
Bethesda Softworks (company), 280
Beyond Good and Evil, 206
bezel, 311
Big Birds Egg Catch, 264
Bigfoot Bonkers, 40
BigWorld Technology (company), 224
Billboard, 74
Billboards Top 10 Ringtones, 257
Bingo Novelty Company, 18
Bionic Commando, 112
Bios (Basic Input/Output System), 201
bit (defined), 311
bitmaps, 311, 315, 23942, 244
Black & White, 205, 291, 305
Black Dahlia, 132
Blackjack, 264, 268
Blackjack (computer game), 32
Black Widow, 70, 330 n.7
Blade Runner, 260
Blair, Christopher, 132
Blasto, 43
Bletchley Park, 33
Blinky. See Shadow
Blinx series, 26
Blitz!, 70
Blitz Games (company), 226
Blizzard Entertainment, xix, 176, 204, 206
Blockade, 40
Block Buster, 39
Block Out, 261, 270
BloodRayne, 296
Blood, the Last Vampire franchise, 299
Bloxeed, 136
Blue Byte Studio (company), 207
Blue Shark, 43
Blu-ray discs, 125
Bluth, Don, 100, 12
BMB Compuscience (company), 153
BMG Records, 181
board games, 61, 136, 207, 232, 26163
body genres of cinema, 187
Body Slam, 267
Boeing 777 aircraft, 137
Boll, Uwe, 296
Bolter, Jay, 244
Bomb Bee, 43
Bomber, 41
Bombs Away, 39
Index
Bonks Adventure, 140
Bonnell, Bruno, 2056
Boot Camp, 269
Boot Hill, 40
Borench, 136
Bourgeon, Francois, 206
Bowling, 272
Boxing, 215, 267, 272
Boxing Bugs, 69
Bradbury, Ray, 190
Bradley Trainer, 68, 92
Brainstorm (film), 190
Bram Stokers Dracula, 125
Brandon, Alexander, 255
Braun, Ludwig, 33
Braze Technology (company), 142
Brazil, 114
Breakout, xviii, 39, 43, 211, 261, 309
Breakout (Atari 2600 version), 64
Breakout clones, 41, 43
British Board of Film Classification, 131, 208
Brderbund Software (company), 132, 242
Bromley, Marty, 149
Brookhaven National Lab, 32
Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, 33
Brotherhood of the Wolf / Le pacte des loups, 296
Brothers in Arms, 206
Brown, Alan, 152
Brown, Bob, 54
Brown Box, 50, 5354, 57
Brussee, Arjan, 156
Bubble Bobble, xviii, 96
Budokan: The Martial Spirit, 89
Bug-Byte Software, 204
bugs (in programming), 23435
Bulletin Board Systems (BBSs), 107, 155, 174,
197
Bullet Mark, 38
Bullfrog Productions, 2045
Bully, 280
bump mapping, 248
Bungie Studios (company), xx, 193, 250, 296
Bunker-Ramo Corporation, 33
BurgerTime, 94
Burnham, Van, xiii
Burning Rush, 102
Burns, Raigan, 199
Bushnell, Nolan, xvii, 13, 17, 29, 3536, 5455,
59, 141
Business Week, 103, 105
Business Week Online, 257
Bust-a-Groove, 271
byte (defined), 311
347
348
Index
censorship, 11011, 114, 209, 22021
Centipede (arcade version), 61, 93, 272
Centipede (Atari 2600 version), 59, 93
Centuri (company), 70, 9294, 128
Century Electronics, 93
Cerny, Mark, 233
CERO (Computer Entertainment Rating
Organization), 281
CGDA (Computer Game Developers
Association), xix
CGE (Compagnie Generale des Eaux), 206
CGI. See computer-generated imagery
Channel F. See Fairchild/Zircon Channel F
Chapman, Bob, 31
Charter, David, 280
Chase Game, 48
chase games, 260, 264
Checkers (board game), 263
Checkers (video game), 261, 273
Checkmate, 41
Chess (computer game), 32
Chess (board game), 263,
Chess (video game), 273
Chicago Coin Machine Manufacturing
Company, xvii, 18, 3537, 39
China, 181, 21112, 21517, 21920, 224,
275, 309
China Town, 136
chip (defined), 312
Chipn Dale Rescue Rangers, 112
chiptune, 252
Cho, Kenta, 199
Choplifter (arcade version), 241
Chopper Command, 259
Christianity, 111
Christmas Comes to Pac-Land, 74
The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher
Bay, 250
Chrono Cross, 180
Chrono Trigger, 180, 254
ChuChu Rocket, 166
Chuck Yeager Advanced Flight Trainer, 247
cinema of attractions, 127, 133
cinematics, 129
Cinematique (game engine), 245
Cinematronics (company), 40, 42, 44, 6770,
92, 94, 100, 105, 128, 251
Cinemaware (company), 33, 124, 243
circularity. See recursion
Circus, 41
Circus Atari, 264
Cisco 400, 41
City of Heroes, 176
Civilization, 278
ClacQ, 202
Clancy, Tom, 206
Clark, David, 15253
Clark, Ron, 226
Classic Gaming Expo, 66
Clay Buster, 39
Cliff Hanger, 100, 128
Clown Downtown, 269
Club Drive, 61
Clue (board game), 129
Clue (video game), 263
Clue VCR Mystery Game, 5
Clyde. See Pokey
CMOS chips, 47
Cobra Command, 100
cockpit games, 97, 137, 14041, 159, 312
cocktail cabinet, 312
Codebreaker, 64
Code Monkeys, 125
Cohen, Kalman J., 32
Cohen, Scott, xiv
Coleco (company), 29, 45, 55, 5859, 104,
11516, 144
Coleco Adam (home computer), 15, 58, 115
16, 266
Coleco Telstar, 55
Coleco Telstar Arcade, 57
Coleco Telstar Combat, 57
Colecovision, 58, 65, 115, 252, 298
collecting games (genre), 260, 26465
Collegiate Licensing Company, 89
color graphics adaptor (CGA), 84
Colossal Cave Adventure, 78, 81
Colossal Pictures, 132
Colossus, 33
Columbia Pictures, 161, 181, 295
Columbine High School shooting, 278, 288
Columns, 136
Columns II: The Voyage Through Time, 136
Comanche 3, 274
Combat, 36, 41, 64, 259, 265
combat games, 265
comic books, 22021, 26162, 277, 296300
Command & Conquer series, 123, 129
Commander Keen, 156
Commando Raid, 272
Commandos, 205
Commandos: Behind Enemy Lines, 209
Commando series, 208
Commodore CDTV, 122, 162
Commodore Computers (company), 60, 64, 78,
117, 123, 151, 157, 189, 208, 252
Index
Commodore International, 162
Commodore PET, 7778
Commodore VIC-20, 78
communication, video games as, 303, 3078
Comotion, 41
compact discs (audio), 253, 256
The Complete Strategyst, 31
computer-assisted instruction (CAI), 33
Computer Games and Digital Cultures
(conference), 210
Computer Games and Digital Textualities
(conference), 210
Computer Games magazine, 29091
computer-generated imagery, 11, 12223, 125,
133, 24546, 294, 312. See also graphics
Computer Othello, 43
Computer Programmer, 274
Computer Quiz, 35
ComputerR-3, 43
Computers and Automation, 17
Computer Space, xvii, 13, 18, 24, 29, 35, 45, 59,
142, 239, 262
Condor, 92
The Condor Hero, 214, 219
Conquest of the World, 5, 263
Consumer Electronics Show (CES), 109, 115
16, 120, 16364, 177
Contra, 112, 213
controversy, 39, 13031, 133, 135, 18788,
193, 209, 217, 226, 229, 27781, 298
conversion, 312
Convert-a-Game, 93
Conway, John, 33
Cookie and Bibi 2, 136
Cool Pool, 139
COPS (arcade game), 101
Cops N Robbers, 39
Core Design (company), 18384, 205
core mechanics of gameplay, 232
CoreWar, 270
Corpse Killer, 130
Cosmic Chasm, 70
Cosmic Osmo, 88
Cosmos Circuit, 100101
cosplay (costume-play), 219
Counter-Strike, 141
CP System 1, 96
crane-drop games, 140
Crash!, 44
crash, video game industry, xviii, 29, 58, 65, 94
95, 100, 1036, 107, 109, 113, 115, 117, 139
Crash Bandicoot, 179, 206
Crash Course, 41
Crashing Race, 39
Crash N Score, 37
Crawford, Chris, 259
Crazy Climber, 270
Crazy Foot, 36
Creative Computing magazine, 99
Creative Labs (company), 122
creativity, 23335, 23738, 256
Creatures, 262
Crime Patrol, 102, 125, 129
Crime Patrol 2: Drug Wars, 102
CRobots, 270
Crockford, Douglas, 111
Croft, Lara. See Lara Croft
Croisie`re pour un cadavre, 241, 245
Cross Fire, 40
Croteam, 193
Crowther, William, 34, 81, 188
CRT. See cathode ray tube
Cryo Interactive, 125
Crystal Castles, 95
Crytek (company), 207
Csaba Rozsa, 198
Cube Quest, 100
cultural odorless theory, 222
culture jamming, 202
Curse of the Mummy, 204
Custers Revenge, 110, 27779, 284
cute games, 43, 74
Cutie Q, 43
cut-scene, 123, 312
CVC Gameline, 65
Cyan (company, also known as Cyan Worlds),
xix, 12224, 246
cybercafes, 135, 159
cyberdrama, 299
Cyberglobe, 141
Cyberglobe 2, 141
Cyberia, 125
Cybernaut. See Albegas
Cyber Sled, 139
cyberspace, 212
Cyberstation Amusement Zones, 140
Cyert, Richard M., 32
Dabney, Ted, 36, 59
Dactyl Nightmare, xix, 14, 13839, 265
Daggerfall series, 262
Dambusters, 95
The Dame Was Loaded, 132
dance, 259
Dance Dance Revolution (DDR), xx, 138, 169,
212, 254, 271, 303
349
350
Index
Dance Maniax series, 138
Daphne (emulator), 102
Darius, 97
Dark Age of Camelot, 176
Dark Chambers, 83
Dark Edge, 139
Dark Invader, 43
Dark Side of the Moon, 132
Darktide server, 288
Dark Water, 295
Dartmouth College, 33
Data Age (company), 58
Data East, 93, 95, 97, 312
Datsun 280 Zzzap, 3940
Davis Cup, 36
Daytona series, 212
Daytona USA, xix, 137, 271
Daytona USA 2: Power Edition, 137
DC Comics, 297
Dead Eye, 43
Deadline Games, 208
Dead or Alive++, 95
Dealer Demo, 265
deathmatches, 19293
Deathmaze 5000, 189
Death Race, 39, 27778, 284, 288, 298
Death Race 2000, 39, 277
Death Star, 42, 67, 6970
de Bont, Jan, 295
DEC (company), 76
DEC (Digital Equipment Corporation), 3334,
173
Decisive Battles of WWII series, 224
DECO Cassette System, 40, 93, 95, 312
Decuir, Joe, 63
dedicated system, 312
Deep Thought, 32
Defender (arcade game), xviii, 10, 22, 29, 64,
9293, 98, 1034, 190, 241, 254, 260, 275,
331 n.2 ch.16
Defender II, 93
Deja` Vu 1: A Nightmare Comes True, 8485
Dejouany, Guy, 206
delinquency, 286
Dell (company), 80, 122
Delphine Software (company), 241
Deluxe Baseball, 40
DeMaria, Rusel, xiii
demo genre, 26061, 265
Demonstration Cartridge, 265
Demons World, 95
demoscene, 252
Denki Onyko (company) , 44
Index
Dirk the Daring, 128
Discman, 181
Discs of Tron, 95
disk operating system (DOS), 7879, 84
dismount games, 198
Disney, 141
Disney characters, 297
Dissolution of Eternity, 192
Doctor (pirated system), 214
Doctor V64, 215
Dodge Em, 44, 266
Dodgem, 44
dodging games, 266
Dog Patch, 43
Dogz, 262
Domark (company), 204
Domino Man, 95
Dominos, 41
Donkey Kong, xviii, 58, 81, 9293, 11213, 115,
194, 213, 216, 262, 270, 298
Donkey Kong 3, 95
Donkey Kong 64, xx
Donkey Kong Country, xix, 246, 298
Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddys Kong Quest, xix
Donkey Kong Jr., 6, 15, 94, 270
Don Quijote, 208
Doom, xix, 11, 129, 139, 156, 184, 187, 191
92, 248, 26869, 272, 278, 285
Doom (film), 296
Doom II: Hell on Earth, 192
Doom 3, 19293
door games, 155
Double Donkey Kong, 142
Double Dragon, xix, 96, 295
Double Play, 41
Double Switch, 131
Douchuuki, Yokai, xix
Dovey, Jon, 225
Dragon Ball, 297
Dragon Lore 2, 272
Dragon Quest, 214
Dragons Gate, 174
Dragons Lair, 81, 94, 100, 102, 105, 125, 128
30, 133, 249, 251, 262, 268, 313, 331 n.7
ch.15
Dragons Lair II: Time Warp, 1012, 139
Dragons Lair clones, 129
Dragon Warrior series, 112
Dream Arena portal, 149
Dreamcast, xx, 121, 147, 149, 16567, 179,
201, 214, 249, 254
DreamCatcher Interactive, 193
Dream Soccer 94, 139
351
352
Index
Electra (company), 3840
Electric Dreams Software, 204
electromechanical games, 35, 149
Electronic Arts (company), 89, 132, 162, 175,
193, 2056, 254, 256, 290, 293
Electronic Entertainment Exhibition (E3), 164
Electronic Games magazine, 100
Electronic Gaming Monthly magazine, 56, 133
Electronic Pinball, 269
Electronics Boutique, 164
Electronic Table Soccer!, 273
Electro Sport (company), 93, 99
Elektronorgtechnica (Elorg), 207
Elepong, 36
Elevator Action, 66
Elimination, 36
Eliminator, 69, 93
Elite, 189, 204
Eliza, 31, 78
ELSPA (Entertainment and Leisure Software
Publishers Association), 208
ELSPA (European Leisure Software Publishers
Association), 208
Empire Earth, 206
Empire of Kilrathi, 132
The Empire Strikes Back (arcade game), 71
emulators, 16, 22, 71, 102, 142, 170, 194, 252,
3123
England, 207
enhanced graphics adaptor (EGA), 84
ENIAC, 76
Enix (company), 112, 295
EnterTech, 306
Enter the Matrix, xx, 61, 300, 304
Environmental Detectives, 306
Epic Games (company), 193
Epic MegaGames (company), 15657
epileptic seizures, 278
Epyx (company), 146
Erics Ultimate Solitaire, 262, 264
ESA (Entertainment Software Association), 281
Escape from the Devils Doom, 6
Escape from Woomera, 223, 225
Escape from Woomera Project Team, 223, 225
escape games, 260, 267
Eshs Aurunmilla, 100101
ESPN, 89
ESRB (Entertainment Software Ratings Board),
131, 27881
Essex University, 173
Ethernet, 166, 169
ethics. See moral and ethical dimension of video
games
Index
Feinstein, Keith, 4, 142
Fighting Fantasy books, 204
fighting games, 98, 125, 130, 13536, 13940,
15657, 164, 200, 211, 267, 289, 295
Fighting Street, 123
filled-polygon graphics, 71, 94, 97, 135, 138
39, 24648
film, 21, 28, 125, 136, 195, 221, 232, 235, 241,
250, 255, 259, 262, 268, 281, 28385, 287,
291, 29394, 294, 296, 298, 299, 300, 303,
304
film history, 200
film scoring, 255
Film Victoria Digital Media Fund, 224
Final Fantasy, xix, 23, 112, 17980, 211, 214,
221, 295
Final Fantasy 3, 253
Final Fantasy VII, 123, 18081, 246
Final Fantasy XI, 168
Final Fantasy Tactics, 180
Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, 246, 295
Final Furlong, 14, 137
Final Lap 2, 137
Final Test Cartridge, 266
Finland, 208
Firebird Software, 189, 204
Firefox, 12, 100, 243, 313
Fireman Fireman, 6
Fire One!, 41
Fire Power, 39
Fire Truck, 42
first-person perspective, 43, 68, 74, 83, 97, 129,
132, 140, 17576, 190, 193, 195, 208, 246,
249, 272, 289. See also first-person shooter
(FPS)
first-person shooter (FPS), 78, 156, 18793,
195, 237, 250, 256, 260, 278, 296
Fishing Derby, 264, 272
Fiske, John, 221
Flash, 197
Flashback. See Atari Flashback
Flashback 2. See Atari Flashback 2
Flash-based games, 201
Flickr, 197
flight simulators, 78, 97, 137, 189
Flight Unlimited, 267, 274
Flip-Out, 39
Flipper Game, 269
Flowers, Tommy, 33
Fluegelman, Andrew, 152
flying games, 152, 267
Flying Shark, 40
FM Towns computer, 12223
353
354
Index
Galaxy Ranger, 100
Galaxy Rescue, 44
Gallaghers Gallery, 102
gallium arsenide phosphide, 313
Gamasutra, 280, 301
gambling games, 213, 22021, 26768
game (as a term), 3
Game and Watch, 216
Game Boy, xix-xx, 56, 10, 15, 60, 66, 107, 113,
11718, 14447, 168, 178, 21617, 314
Game Boy Advance, 107, 113, 14546, 201,
216, 224, 297
Game Boy Advance SP, 145
Game Boy Color, xx, 10, 15, 107, 113, 145,
216, 314
Game Boy Light, 113, 145
Game Boy Micro, xx, 113, 145
Game Boy Pocket, 113, 145
game centers, 135, 14041, 159, 21213, 220
game.com, 14647, 206
game.com Pocket Pro, 147
GameCube, xx, 113, 121, 16869, 171, 197,
249, 252, 254
Game Cultures: Computer Games as New Media,
225
Game Developer magazine, 233
Game Developers Association of Australia, 224
Game Developers Conference, xx, 167
game engines, 192, 245, 24849
Game Gear. See Sega Game Gear
gameindustry.biz, 301
Game Innovation Lab, 89
gameline, 65
Game of Life, 33
Game Room (company), 140
GameRoom Magazine, 142
Games and Culture, 22
gamespot.com, 142
gamespy.com, 142, 248
Games-to-Teach, 286, 306
Game Studies, 22
Games Workshop, 204
gametunnel.com, 197
GameWorks, xx, 141
Gans, Christophe, 296
garage rock, 201
Gard, Toby, 18384, 205
Gardner, Martin, 33
Garriot, Richard, 83, 190
GAT (company), 95
Gate (computer language), 32
Gates, Bill, 77, 129, 167
Gates of Thunder, 123
Gauntlet, 95
gbadev.org, 201
GCE/Cinematronics, 70
GCE/Milton Bradley, 70
GCE/Milton Bradley Vectrex. See Vectrex
G-Darius, 142
GDG format, 167
GD-ROMs, 121, 166
GE 255 system, 33
Gemstone II, 107
General Computer Corporation, 117
General midi, 253
generations of home video game consoles, 161
Genesis. See Sega Genesis
genre, 229, 234, 249, 256, 25961
Gerasimov, Vadim, 207
German-style board games, 207
Germany, 4749, 114, 2067, 209210, 279
Gestalt, 313
Get Bass, 137
Ghost in the Shell, 297
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, 297
Ghost Recon, 206
Ghosts N Goblins, 95, 112
Gibson, William, 190
gigabyte (defined), 313
gigadiscs, 166
GI (General Instruments) (company), xvii, 51,
55, 104
Gilbert, Christine, 290
Gilbert, Ron, 84
Gizmondo, xx
global localization, 214
Global VR (company), 137
glocalization, 215
Goal IV, 37
Goal to Go, 100, 128
god games, 2045
Godzilla, 19
Gold Coast, 226
Goldman, Gary, 128
gold master version of video games, 234
Gold Medal With Bruce Jenner, 100
Golem, 185
Golf, 272
Golly! Ghost!, 140
Gopher, 26364
Gordonstoun Boarding School, 183
Gotcha, 36
Gothic, 207
Gottlieb, xviii, 19, 35, 93, 95, 97, 128
GP World, 100, 128
Graduation, 218
Index
Graetz, J. Martin, 13, 19, 33
graffiti, 22627
Grammy awards, 254
Grand (company), 137
Grand Theft Auto, xx, 90, 179, 27880
Grand Theft Auto III, 249, 279
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, 226, 254, 279
80
Gran Trak 10, 3637
Gran Trak 20, 37
Gran Turismo series, 179
graphical user interfaces, 79, 174
graphics, 67, 24, 37, 39, 43, 47, 63, 67, 7071,
73, 7879, 8388, 91, 9398, 102, 105, 114,
11819, 122, 124, 129 , 13536, 13839,
143, 156, 161, 164, 17476, 18788, 191,
193, 198, 200, 202, 214, 229, 23950, 256,
268, 284, 288, 291, 298, 304, 307, 315. See
also 3-D graphics; raster graphics; sprites;
vector graphics
Gravitar, 6970
Great Britain, 210
The Great Escape, 204
The Great Wall Street Fortune Hunt, 5, 263
The Great White Buffalo Hunt, 40
Greece, 209
Greek law number 3037, 209
Greenberg, Arnold, 55
Gremlin (company), 69, 124
gremlins, 39, 277
Gridiron, 41
Griffeth, Simone, 277
Griffiths, M.D., 286
Grim Fandango, 293
Ground Control, 206
Ground Zero, 192
The Grudge (Ju-On), 295
Grusin, Richard, 244
GT Interactive (company), 193, 206
GUI (graphic user interface), 79, 174
Guided Missile, 41
Guillemot, Yves, 206
GuitarFreaks, xx, 138, 271
Guitar Jam, 138
Gun Fight, xvii, 39, 73, 277
Gunman, 40
Gunning, Tom, 127
Gun-O-Tronic, 48
Gypsy Juggler, 43
Gyromite, 112
Gyruss, 246
Habitat, 174
hackers, 76
hacks, 195, 201
Ha do ken, 212
Halcyon home laserdisc game system, xviii, 15,
101, 105, 139, 331 n.7 ch.15
Half-Life, xx, 16, 187, 193, 198, 225, 236
Half-Life 2, 193, 249, 255
Hall, Laurie, 280
Halo, 187, 193, 293, 296
Halo 2, xx, 257
Halo: Combat Evolved, xx, 250
Hamill, Mark, 132
Hamilton, Mark, 152
Hamlet on the Holodeck: The Future of Narrative
in Cyberspace, 299
Hammurabi, 34
Hanafuda playing cards, 113
handheld games, 15, 91, 107, 113, 118, 14348,
201, 21112, 21517, 221, 224, 313
Hangman, 26263, 269
Hangman from the 25th Century, 269
Hang Pilot, 137
Hanna-Barbera, 298
Hanseatic League, 207
happenings, 19
haptic feedback, 313
Hard Drivin, xix, 97, 139
Hard Drivins Airborne, 139
Hard Dunk, 137
hard-edge painting style, 19
Hard Hat Mack, 89
Harley Davidson & L.A.Riders, 137
Hasbro Interactive, 61, 206
Hatris, 136
Haunted House (Atari 2600), 82, 262, 265, 267
Hawkes Manor, 131
Hawkins, Trip, 89, 162
HDTV, 17071, 181, 333 n.3
Head On, 44
Head-to-Head series, 144
Heavy Traffic (arcade game), 39
Heavyweight Champ, 40, 68, 97
Heiankyo Alien, 44
Hellboy, 224
hentai style, 279
Heretic, 192
Herman, Leonard, xiii
Herzog Zewei, 213
Hewlett-Packard, 34
Hewson Consultants, 204
Hex, 31
Hicken, Wendell, 153
hidden room, 64
355
356
Index
high-score table, 44
High Velocity, 271
Higinbotham, William, xvii, 32
Hilton, New York284
Hitachi SH4 processor, 166
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, 274
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (text
adventure game), 270
Hitman, 205
Hitman: Codename 47, 208
Hit Me, 40
Hi-Way, 37
Hobbit (Soviet computer), 204
The Hobbit (text adventure game), 223
hobbyists, 46, 77, 15153, 155, 201, 279
Hochberg, Joel, 112
Hoff, Marcian E., 18
Hoffman, Judi, 261
Hogans Alley, 109, 116
Hole Hunter, 264
Holland, Todd, 294
Hollywood Pictures, 295
Holmes, Sherlock, 131
holodeck, 190
Holosseum, 139
homebrew communities, 2012
Homebrew Computer Club, 77, 201
home computer games, 22021, 261, 275, 281,
306, 315
home computers, 7580, 97, 103, 105, 107,
11516, 122, 136, 139, 142, 151, 157, 162,
166, 18990, 194, 231, 240, 24950, 251
54, 3035
home console games, 4558, 9697, 101, 103,
107, 118, 12021, 125, 133, 13536, 138
40, 149, 159, 16171, 178, 18081, 190,
201, 21113, 215, 218, 22021, 231, 240,
248, 25154, 26162, 275, 281, 287, 298
99, 304, 312, 331 n.7 ch.15
Home Finance, 274
Home of the Underdogs, 198
Home T.V. Game, 4647, 49
Hong Kong, 146, 201, 21120
Horizons, 176
horror movies, 295
Hoskins, Bob, 295
Hot Circuits: A Video Arcade (exhibition),
142
hot coffee incident, 27980
hot-rodding, 201
Hot Shots Tennis, 262, 272
House of the Dead, 296
Hovertank 3D, 191
HuCard, 12122
Hudsonsoft (company), 123
Hugo the TV Troll, 208
Human Cannonball, 27273
Hungary, 118
Hunt, N., 268
Hunt & Score, 64
Huntington Computer Project, 33
Hunt the Wumpus, 78
Hurt, John, 130
Hustle, 41
Hutspiel, 32
Hyberbole Studios, 132
hybrid redemption/video games, 140
Hyperchase, 70
Hyper Movie, 129
Hyper Pac-Man, 140
IBM (company), 3132, 76, 166, 275
IBM/Motorola PowerPC 603e processor, 166
IBM PC, 79, 122, 15152, 15657
IBM PC XT, 251
Ice Hockey, 112, 272
Iceland, 208
Icewind Dale, 23
ICOM Simulations, Inc. (company), 84, 124,
131
iconography, 188, 25960
ICRA (Internet Content Rating Association),
281
I.C. Squared Institute, 286, 306
idea conceptualization, 232, 237
ideology in video games, 22327, 28081
id Software (company) , xix, 156, 19093, 209,
248
IEEE Spectrum, 64
iGames, 141
IGDA (International Game Developers
Association), 22
iMacs, 75
Imagic (company), 65, 103
Imagine Software (company), 204
Imaginet, 153
imaging technologies, 912, 23940
Imax theater, 304
imitation game, 31
IMSAI PDP computer, 191
iMUSE system, 256
Incentive Software (company), 247
independent games, 153, 157, 197202
Independent Games Festival, xx
India, 309
Indiana Jones (character), 184, 205
Index
Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, 124
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (game), 86
indie games. See independent games
indie physics games, 198, 200
Indigo Prophecy, 207, 250
industry earnings, 275
Indy 500, 41, 266, 271
Indy 800, xvii, 3738
influence and cause, 28384
Infogenius French Language Translator, 274
Infogrames Inc. (company), 61, 2056, 224,
300
Infogrames Interactive, 61
in-game advertisements, 294
Initial D series, 212
Inky. See Bashful
instances, 176
integrated circuit (IC), 76
Intel Corporation, 18
Intellivision, 29, 5758, 65, 1045, 252, 298
Intels 8008 computer on a chip, 76
interactive fiction, 8283
interactive movies, 100, 12733, 245, 250, 262,
268, 304
interactive music, 255
interactivity, 2427, 86, 127, 133, 136, 139,
173, 175, 190, 195, 208, 227, 233, 245, 249
51, 25556, 25974, 285, 304
interface, 22, 24, 37, 79, 83, 86, 107, 13538,
140, 159, 176, 185, 193, 235, 256, 313
International Arcade Museum, 142
Internet cafes, 209
Interplay (company), 132, 156
Interstate 76, 272
Interstellar Laser Fantasy, 100101
Interton Video 2000, 4749
In the First Degree, 132
Invaders 2000, 139
Invaders of the Mummys Tomb, 6
inventory box, 84, 88
IO Interactive (company), 205, 207
Ion Storm (company), 205
iPods, 74, 194
Irata, 93
Ireland, 114
Irem (company), 9495, 139
IR Gurus Interactive (company), 22324
I, Robot, xviii, 11, 71, 94, 97, 138, 24647
irreversibility, 26
The Irritating Maze, 138
ISFE (Interactive Software Federation of
Europe), 281
Ishar, 124
357
358
Index
Joust, 94, 152
Jovovich, Milla, 296
Joyboard (by Amiga), 65
Jr. Pac-Man, 74, 95
JT Storage (JTS), 61
Judd, Donald, 19
Jumping Groove, 138
Jumpman (character), 93, 298
Jungle Hunt, 269
Juul, Jesper, 210
JVC Musical Industries, 114
Kai, Toshio, 251
Kanal 34 clone, 45
Kaneko (company), 136, 140
Kaprow, Allan, 19
karaoke, 119
Karateco, 92
Karateka, 242
Kasparov, Garry, 32
Katamari Damacy, 200
Kauffman, Pete, 277
KB Toys, 165
K.C. Munchkin, 269
Kee Games, xvii, 3637, 3940, 82, 92, 137,
241
Keenan, Joe, 36
Kelly, Ellsworth, 19
Kemeny, John, 33
Kemp, Ron, 225
Kennedy, Helen, 225
Kennedy, John F., 280
Kent, Steven, xiii, 67, 110, 12930, 179
Kentucky, 82
Ken Uston Blackjack/Poker, 262, 264
Keystone Kapers, 26364
Kick It!, 137
Kid Icarus, 112
Killer List of Videogames (KLOV), xiv, 22, 136,
142, 247
Killing Zoe, 296
kill-or-be-killed mentality, 268
kilobyte (defined), 313
kilohertz (defined), 313
Kinder, Marsha, 299
King, Geoff, 225
Kingdom of Kroz, 156
King Features Syndicate, 298
King Kong, 298
King of Chicago, 241, 243
The King of Fighters, 21112, 221, 295
Kings Quest (also known as Kings Quest I),
84, 86
Index
The Legend of Zelda series, 86, 113, 179, 202
Legend of Zelda 64, 215
Leisure Suit Larry V, 86
Leisure Suit Larry in the Land of the Lounge
Lizards, 8687, 206, 279
Leland (company), 136
Leland Interactive (company), 101
Lennon, John, 190
Leonetti, John R., 295
Lerner Research (company), 247
Les Tuniques Bleues, 206
levelization of gaming, 192
Levy, Jim, 65
Lewitt, Sol, 19
Liberman, Alexander, 19
Library of Congress Moving Imagery GenreForm Guide, 261
Lieberman, Joseph, 131, 278
Light Bringer, 139
light-emitting diode (LED), 56, 10, 143, 313
light guns, 101
The Lighthouse, 90
lightmaps, 248
light pen, 70
LINC, 76
Lincoln, Howard, 109, 118
Lineage II, 176
Lionhead Studios, 205, 280
liquid crystal display (LCD), 56, 10, 14547,
166, 216, 31314
Lisberger, Steven, 294
The Little Computer People, 262
Livingstone, Ian, 2045
LJN (subsidiary of Acclaim), 110
Llamabooost, 202
local area network (LAN), 16168, 191
Lock N Chase, 93
Loco-Motion, 93
Lode Runner, 95, 15152, 199, 26870
Loew, Rabbi185
logic circuits, 314
The Longest Journey, 208
Looking Glass Studios (company), 193, 205
Looking Glass Technologies, 190
Loom, 123, 242
looping formal structures, 195. See also
circularity
Lost Luggage, 264
love hotel, 113
LSI Logic (company), 181
Lucas, George, 24546, 293
LucasArts, xix, 12325, 253, 256, 293
Lucasfilm, 70, 242, 341 n.27
359
360
Index
The Manhole, xix, 86, 12223
Manhunt, 226
Maniac Mansion, 8485, 88, 111
Maniac-1, 32
Manic Miner, 204
Manx TT Superbike Twin, 137
Marathon, 193
Marathon 2: Durendal, 193
Marathon Infinity, 193
Marbella Vice, 101
Marble Madness, 261, 316
Marc Eckos Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure,
223, 22627
Mario (character), 162, 168, 179, 295, 298
Mario Bros., 95, 113, 211, 213, 216, 221, 298
Mario Kart 64, xx, 271
Marios Cement Factory, 15
Marios Early Years: Fun With Numbers, 266
Mario series, 179
Mario Teaches Typing, 4, 260, 266, 274, 306
Mark III (console system), 115, 117
Marks, Aaron, 254
Marksman/Trapshooting, 273
Martian Memorandum, 131, 244
Marvel Comics, 29697
M*A*S*H, 260
The Masked Rider: Kamen Rider ZO, 128
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT),
13, 17, 31, 33, 67, 286, 306
massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs),
155
massively multiplayer online role-playing games
(MMORPGs), xx, 23, 26, 90, 174176, 190,
208, 224, 300, 308
Math Grand Prix, 266, 271
The Matrix (film), 208
Matrix Comics, 300
The Matrix films, 299, 304
The Matrix Online, 300
The Matrix: Path of Neo, 300
The Matrix Reloaded, 300
The Matrix Revolutions, 300
Mattel Electronics (company), 5759, 65, 103
5, 14344
Mattel Electronics Baseball, 144
Mattel Electronics Basketball, 6, 144
Mattel Electronics Football, 143
Maxis Software, xx, 4
Max Payne, 157, 208
Mayer, Steve, 6364
Mayra, Frans, 210
Maze Craze, 26769
maze games, 44, 73, 93, 18991, 260, 26869
Mazewar, 19192
McAndrew, Nell, 184
McCartney, Paul, 190
McDaniel, Scott, 290
McDowell, Malcolm, 132
McGame, 207
McMahan, Alison, 249
Meadows Games, 3941, 43
Meadows Lanes, 41
Mean Streets, 8485, 241, 244
Mechner, J., 242, 244
Mecstron, 47
Medal of Honor, 89, 187, 193, 293
Media I, 210
Media II, 210
media convergence, 294, 299300
Media Plus, 210
Media programmes, 20910
Media 2007, 210
Med Systems, 189
megabyte (defined), 314
Mega Corp, 6
Mega Drive. See Sega Mega Drive
megahertz (defined), 314
Mega Man 8, 180
Megaman series, 112
Mega Man X4, 180
Mega Man X5, 180
MegaRace, 125
Mega Tech System, 96
Melbourne House, 224
Melody Master, 70
Meridian 59, 175
Merlin, 6
Merovingian, 300
Metal Gear series, 180
Metal Gear Solid, 180, 29697
Metaverse, 190
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), 181, 206
Metroid, 11213, 202, 253
Mexico, 114
Michael Ninns Latex, 279
microchip (defined), 314
Microcosm, 125
Microforte (company), 22324
MicroProse Software (company), 61, 206
Microsoft (company), 79, 101, 113, 122, 129,
148, 16771, 180, 215, 220, 252, 254, 256,
288, 293, 306
Microsoft Flight Simulator, 247
Microsoft Windows, 304
Microsphere, 204
Microvision, 56, 10, 15, 14445, 314
Index
Middle-Earth, 308
Midi (Musical Instrument Digital Interface)
format, 25354, 256
Midi Manufacturers Association, 25354
Midnight Magic, 269
Midway Games, xvii
Midway Games West, 60
Midway Manufacturing, 35, 37, 3941, 43, 69,
73, 9293, 95, 130, 136, 211, 243, 278, 295
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, 128
Mike Tysons Punch-Out!!, 112
Milestone (company), 208
Millennium Games, 101
Miller, Chuck, 173
Miller, Rand, 8688, 190
Miller, Robyn, 8688, 190
Miller, Scott, 156
Milles Bornes, 264
Millipede, 94, 272
Milner, Ron, 63
Milton Bradley, 61, 65, 103, 144, 314
Milton Bradley Microvision. See Microvision
Mindlink (by Atari), 65
Mind Magazine, 31
Mines of Moria (game), 173
Minestorm, 70
Minesweeper, 303
Miniature Golf, 272
MiniDisc format, 181
Minor, Jay, 63
Mirage (company), 299
Mirco Games (company), 39
Mirrorsoft (company), 118, 207
Mirrorworld, 174
Missile Command (Atari 2600 version), 59, 64
Missile Command 2, 94, 61, 79, 92, 272, 316
Missile Defense 3-D, 272
Missile Radar, 36
Missile-X, 41
Mission Impossible, 205
Mitra, Rhona, 184
MITS (company), 77
Miyamoto, Shigeru, 298
MMC1 chip, 112
MMC2 chip, 112
MMOGs. See massively multiplayer online
games
MMORPGs. See massively multiplayer online
role-playing games
MOA (Music Operators of America), 144
mobile phones, 218
Mobile Suit Gundam, 297
MobyGames, 297, 341 n.22
361
362
Index
Muppet Treasure Island (video game), 262
Murphy, Tex, 132
Murray, Janet, 299
Muse Software (company), 191
Music Box Demo, 265, 274
Mylstar (company), 100, 105, 128
Myst, xix-xx, 4, 11, 8788, 124, 129, 139, 190,
246, 260, 262, 26870, 27475, 28586,
289, 291
Myst III: Exile, 88, 90
Myst IV: Revelation, 90
Myst V: End of Ages, 90
Myst Island, 88, 90
Myst series, 309
Myst: Trilogy, 206
Mystery Disc 1: Murder, Anyone?, 101
Mystery Disc 2: Many Roads To Murder, 101
Mystery House, 83
Mystique (company), 110, 278, 284
N (video game), 199
Nakimura, Grace, 133
Namco (company), xviii, 4344, 60, 73, 91, 93
94, 97, 101, 110, 117, 13640, 142, 153,
21112, 251
Namco Classic Collection Volume 1, 142
Namco Classic Collection Volume 2, 142
Namco Museum 50th Anniversary, 194
Name That Tune, 271
NAND gate, 314
Napoleon III, 206
NARC, xix
NASCAR, 89
NASDAQ, 206
National Academy of Arts and Sciences, 254
National Academy of Digital, Interactive
Entertainment, 210
National Semiconductor, 104
Naughty Dog (company), 179
Nebulus, 202
NEC (company), 11819, 122, 161, 166,
177
NEC Turbografx-CD. See Turbografx-CD
Need for Speed, 89, 179
Nelsonic, 6
NeoGeo, xix, 11920, 147
NeoGeo MVS, 96
NeoGeo Pocket, xx, 147
NeoGeo Pocket Color, 147
Neon Genesis Evangelion, 297, 299
NES 2, 110
NES Game Standards Policy, 110
Netherlands, 114, 210
Index
Nintendo 64DD, 165
Nintendo Ultra 64. See Nintendo 64
Nintendo Virtual Boy, xix, 56, 10, 14, 313
Nintendo Wii, xx, 114 , 17071, 215
Niven, Larry, 193
NMAB (New Media Arts Board), 225
Nokia, xx
Noll, A. Michael, 33
Nomad. See Sega Nomad
nondiegetic sound, 25455
non-player character (NPC), 314
non-player killer (NPK) server, 288
NOR gate, 314
normal mapping, 248
Norrath, 309
North and South, 2056
Northern Lights, 272
Northwestern University, 68, 189
Norway, 114, 208
Noughts and Crosses, 269
Nova Games (company), 101
NSF (National Science Foundation), 33
NTSC (National Television System
Committee), 314
NTSC standard, 314
Nulty, Peter, 1045
Number Games, 266, 274
Nutting, Bill, 35
Nutting Associates, 19, 3537, 59
oblique perspective, 139
obstacle course games, 269
Ocean Software, 204
Oda Nobunaga, 219
Oda Nobunagas Den, 218
Odyssee, 45
Odyssey. See Magnavox Odyssey
off-screen events, 92
Olympic Home T.V. Game, 47
Olympic Tennis, 36
Olympic TV Football, 36
Olympic TV Hockey, 36
Olympics, 92
Omega, 270
Omega Race, 69
Omikron: The Nomad Soul, 207
One Must Fall: 2097, 15657
online games, 90, 107, 149, 155, 159, 166, 168,
171, 17376, 201, 21112, 22021, 28485,
287, 290, 3046, 308, 314. See also
MMORPGs
Orelec (company), 49
Oriental Daily, 219
363
364
Index
Paradox (company), 208
Paragraphs on Conceptual Art, 19
Parallax (company), 156
parallax scrolling, 11, 241, 314
parallel imports, 217
Paramount Studios, 70
PaRappa the Rapper, 179, 237, 271
Parasite Eve, 214
Parker Brothers, 61, 103, 264
Parlour Games, 273
particle systems, 248
Passengers on the Wind, 2056
Password, 262
Patel, Amit, 155
The Patrician, 207
Pavlovian stimulus-response training, 285
Pavlovsky, Dmitry, 207
PCB. See printed circuit board
PC-Engine, 118, 122, 177
PC-File, 152
PC Futbol series, 208
PC-Talk, 152
PC-Write, 152
PDP-1, 13, 33
PDP-8, 76
PDP-10, 34
PDP-10 system, 173
Pedestrian, 277
pencil-and-paper games, 269
Pendulo Studios, 208
Pengo, 94
People Can Fly (company), 193
Periscope, 18, 35, 149
PernMUSH, 272
Perry, Telka S., 133
persistent worlds, 287, 308
personal digital assistants (PDAs), 15, 14748,
194, 304
Persons, Dan, 100
Petaco S.A. (company), 43
Peterson, Mark, 174
Phantasmagoria, 132, 279
Phantasmagoria II: A Puzzle of Flesh, 133
Phantasy Star, 97, 272
Phantasy Star Online, 166
phase-alternating line (PAL), 314
Philips CD-i, xix, 122, 129, 131, 162, 333 n.6
Philips Electronics (company), xix, 49, 115, 121,
16263, 177, 254, 333 n.6
Philips Interactive Media, 13132
Philips/Magnavox, 263
Philips Videopac, 5
Philko (company), 136
PhillyClassic, 66
Phoenix, 92
photo-sticker machines, 212
physics games. See indie physics games
Pierce, David, 206
Pigeon-Shooting, 49
Pikachu, 21516
Pikachu (character), 297
Pilot Wings, 165
pinball and video game hybrid, 93
Pinball Challenge, 269
Pinball Construction Set, 89
Pinball Dreams, 269
Pinball Fantasies, 269
pinball games, 1819, 21, 35, 140, 26970,
279
pinball industry, 36
Pinball Jam, 269
Pinball Quest, 269
Pinball Wizard, 26970
Ping-O-Tronic, 46, 48
Pinkett-Smith, Jada, 300
Pinky. See Speedy
Pin-Pong, 37
Pioneer Corporation, 101
Pioneer LaserActive CLD-A100, xix
Pioneer LaserActive home laserdisc game system,
101
Pipe Dream, 136, 261, 285
pipelining of content, 236
piracy, 11112, 180, 201, 204, 21316, 219
21, 275, 315
Piranha Bytes (company), 207
The Pit, 155
Pitfall!, 81, 241, 262, 264, 269
Pitfall II: The Lost Caverns, 95
Pixar, 297
pixels, 6, 248, 284
pizza, 73
Planet, 68
Planetfall, 274
plastic overlays, 50, 70
platform games, 92, 95, 113, 123, 125, 156,
180, 270
Plato, Dana, 130
PLATO system, 17374, 189
PLAY!, 339 n.21
playable memory cards, 14748
PlayChoice system, 96
player-characters. See avatars
player-versus-player (PvP), 17576, 224,
28788
Playing with Power, 299
Index
Play Meter Magazine, 91
Playschool Math, 266
Play Station (two words), 16264, 17778
PlayStation, xix, 11, 16, 61, 111, 113, 123,
125, 140, 14749, 159, 16466, 17782,
21415, 217, 237, 246, 248, 254, 275, 307,
335 n.5
PlayStation 2 (PS2), xx, 102, 121, 138, 14849,
16670, 178, 181, 194, 197, 215, 220, 249,
252, 254, 297, 335 n.5
PlayStation 3 (PS3), xx, 125, 17071, 181, 213,
215
PlayStation Portable (PSP), xx, 148, 181, 194,
201, 21617, 296
Pocket Billiards!, 273
Pocket Pikachu, 216
PocketStation, 148
POD, 206
point of view, 184, 187, 24546, 24849, 289.
See also first-person perspective
Point Of View (game), 130
Pokemon, 216, 221, 297
Pokemon (character), 168
Pokey (nicknamed Clyde), 74
Poland, 209
polarizers, 313
Pole Position, 11, 70, 94, 189, 194, 207, 266,
271
Pole Position (Atari 2600 version), 59
Pole Position II, 95
Police Trainer, 274
political side of video games, 22327
polygonally-based graphics, 315. See also filledpolygon graphics
Polygonet Commanders, 139
Pomeroy, John, 128
PONG (arcade game), xvii, 18, 29, 36, 5051,
59, 61, 6364, 91, 128, 211, 239, 251, 262,
272, 273, 275, 277, 309
PONG (home console system), 15, 5455, 63,
143
PONG clones, 45, 48
PONG Doubles, 36, 45, 136
Pong Tron, 36
Pong Tron II, 36
Poole, Steven, 23940
Popeye (arcade game), 94, 298
Popeye (character), 298
Popn Music, 271
Popular Electronics, 104
Populous, 89, 204
pornography, 112, 226, 279, 284
Porrasturvat (Stair Dismount), 19899
365
366
Index
puzzle games, 136, 188, 19091, 199, 202, 216,
260, 270, 279, 306
PvP. See player-versus-player
Pyro Studios (company), 205, 2089
Q*bert, xviii, 95, 261
Q*bert (character), 95
Q*bert watch, 6
Qix, 93, 261, 26465
Quadrapong, 36, 37, 43
Quake, 156, 187, 192, 248
Quake II, 192
Quake III: Arena, 16, 192
Quake 4, 192
Quaker Oats, 103
Quantic Dream, 207, 249
Quantum, 69, 94, 264
Quantum Computer Services, 175
Quantum Gate, 132
Quarter Horse, 93, 99
Queau, Philippe, 246
Queensland Local Government Association,
226
Quest for the Rings, 5, 263
Quest of Mordor, 174
Quiki-Mart, 87
Quinn, Tom, 55
quiz games, 27071, 306
Quiz Show, 40
Qwak!, 37
race (biological), 95
Racer, 37
racing games, 37, 39, 41, 9294, 100, 125, 128,
137, 140, 189, 2078, 212, 216, 271
Radar Scope, 93
Radio Shack, 77
Rad Racer series, 112
Rad Rally, 137
Raging Boll, 296
Raiders of the Lost Ark (Atari 2600 game), 8384,
262, 271
Raiders Vs. Chargers, 101
Railroad Tycoon, 268
Rally, 36
Rally-X, 92
RAM (defined), 315
Rambo, 213
Rampage, 96
Ramtek, xvii, 36, 40, 43
Rand Air Defense Lab, 31
RAND Corporation, 31
random scan, 9
Index
Reuters, 113
Rez, xx, 307
RGB color, xviii, 43, 91, 315
Rhem, 4, 90
Rhys-Davies, John, 132
rhythm and dance games, 138, 179, 271
Riana Rouge, 279
ride-on games, 107
Ridge Racer 2, 140
Ridge Racer Full Scale, 140
Ridge Racer series, 214
RiftMUSH, 272
The Ring (Ringu), 295
ringtones, 25657
Ringworld, 193
Rip Off, 68, 70
Ripper, 124, 132
Rise of the Triad, 192
Riven, xx, 4, 1112, 16, 23, 88, 90, 270, 285,
289
Rivers of MUD, 272
Road Avenger, 101
Road Blaster, 101
Road Burners, 137
R.O.B. (Robotic Operating Buddy), 109,
11617
Roberts, Chris, 132
Robertson, Roland, 214
Robinett, Warren, 64, 82, 312
roboprobes, 69
Robot Battle, 270
Robot Bowl, 41
Robotron: 2084, 94, 202, 272
The Rock (wrestler), 296
rock-paper-scissors, 202
Rockstar Games (company), xx, 254, 27980
Rockstar North (studio of Rockstar Games),
226, 249
Rogue, 83, 15152, 156, 274
Roland (company), 253
role-playing games (RPGs), 16, 34, 12324,
155, 17376, 180, 190, 193, 202, 2045,
207, 237, 246, 256, 27172, 275, 28485,
287, 29091, 295, 305, 31415. See also
MMORPGs
Rollercoaster (film), 99
Rollercoaster Tycoon, 205
Rolling Blaster, 101
Rolling Crash, 44
ROM (defined), 315
Romero, John, 190, 192
Rosen Enterprises, 149
Rosenthal, Larry, 67
367
368
Index
Sears, 5455
Sea Wolf, 39, 277
SECAM [Sequentiel couleur a` memoire
(sequential color and memory)] format, 315
Second Life, 176
second-person narration, 289, 304
The Secret of Monkey Island, 86, 123, 293
The Secret of NIMH, 128
Seeburg (company), 128
See-Fun, 36
See It Now, 17
Sega, xviii-xx, 35, 3841, 58, 6870, 86, 89, 93
97, 99102, 110, 113, 11520, 122, 12425,
128, 13031, 13641, 14647, 149, 156,
16167, 169, 171, 177, 17980, 201, 211
14, 216, 220, 246, 248, 25354, 275, 281,
294, 316
Sega-AM2, 249
Sega CD, 16263, 178, 254, 278
Sega Classic Collection, 194
Sega Dreamcast. See Dreamcast
Sega Game Gear, xix, 6, 107, 146, 216
Sega Genesis, xix, 89, 11921, 146, 149, 161
63, 171, 17778, 200, 21314, 253, 275, 294
Sega/Gremlin, 41, 44
Sega Internet Service, 149
Sega Marine Fishing, 137
Sega Master System (SMS), xviii, 97, 110, 117,
11920, 146, 149, 213, 253, 294
Sega Mega Drive, 122, 149, 177
SegaNet, 166
Sega Nomad, 146
Sega Rally Championship, 248
Sega Saturn, xix, 11, 61, 123, 140, 149, 159,
16366, 17880, 214, 254
Sega Super GT, 137
Sega 32X, 122, 149, 163
Sega TruVideo Productions, 128, 130
Seleco, 46, 48
Selenetic Age, 90, 269
Semicom (company), 136, 140
sequels, 9495
Serious Sam, 193
Service Games (company). See Sega
Seta (company), 139
The Settlers II, 207
Sewer Shark, 125, 130
Sex Trivia, 271
sexual content, 220, 27880
SG-1000 (console system), 115
Shadel, Derrick, 152
shaders, 248
Shadow (nicknamed Blinky), 74
Shadowbane, 176
Shadowlands, 208
The Shadow of Yserbius, 175
Shadow Warrior, 193
Shannon, Claude, 31
shareware, 197
shareware games, 107, 15157, 264
Shark, 39
Shark Attack, 93
Shark Jaws, 39
Shaw, J.C., 32
Sheff, David, xiv
Shelley, Maureen, 226
Shenmue, 90, 149
Shenmue II, 249
Sheppard, Mare, 199
Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective, 124,
131
Shining Force, 219
Shirow, Masamune, 297
shoot em up games. See shooting games
shooters. See shooting games
Shooting Gallery, 273
shooting games, 39, 40, 44, 70, 9192, 94, 98,
100, 101, 109, 123, 125, 12830, 13536,
139, 156, 184, 18793, 200, 202, 208, 212,
216, 260, 272, 283, 289, 291. See also firstperson shooter
Shootout At Old Tucson, 102
Shrek Smash N Crash Racing, 224
Shuffleboard, 43
Sidam (company), 92
Side Track, 44
Sid Meiers Civilization, 268
Sierra Network, 175
Sierra On-Line, 124, 132, 242
Sierra Studios, xx, 193, 279
Silent Hill series, 179, 296
Silicon Graphics (company), 178
Silicon Graphics workstations, 246
Silicon Knights (company), 205
Silmarils (company), 124
SimAnt, 268
SimCity, 4, 268, 287, 305
SimEarth, 305
SimFarm, 268
SimGolf, 273
Simon, 144
Simon, Herbert, 32
Simon clones, 144
Simon Says, 144
The Simpsons, 297
The Simpsons (game), 262
Index
The Sims, xx, 89, 185, 234, 237, 263, 275, 287,
291, 305
The Sims 2, 254
Sim series, 305
Sims Online, xx
SimTower, 268
simulation games, 3233, 189, 217, 224, 237,
260, 272, 287. See also flight simulators
simulations, 274, 283, 286, 303, 305
Simutek, 100
Sinclair, Sir Clive, 2034
Sinclair Computers (company), 2034
Sinclair Research Ltd. (company), 203
Sinclair User (magazine), 203
Singapore, 21120
Singe the Evil Dragon, 128
The Single Wing Turquoise Bird, 19
Sinistar, 251
sit-in games, 44, 107
Skee-ball, 140
Skeet Shoot, 27273
Sketchpad, 17
Ski, 39
Ski Champ, 137
Sky Diver, 43, 273
Sky Kid, 153
Sky Raider, 42
Skywalker, Luke, 132
Slam City with Scottie Pippen, 130
Slick Shot, 137
Slot Machine, 268
slot machines, 149
Slot Racers, 271
SMASH, 55
Smilebit (company), 226
Smith, Adrian, 184
Smith, David, 253
Smith, E.E., 19
Smith, Jay, 144
Smith, Tony, 19
Smith Engineering (company), 70, 144
Smithsonian Institution, 128
Smokey Joe, 42
Snelling, Michael, 225
SNK (company), xix, 44, 96, 11920, 136, 139,
147, 212, 219, 295
SNK/Saurus, 138
Snoopy Pong, 36
Snow Crash, 190
social elements of video games, 28485, 287
88. See also networked games; online games
Software Etc., 164
Software Publishing Association, 122
369
370
Index
Space Invaders DX, 136
Space Invaders 95, 136
Space Panic, 92
Space Pirates, 102, 129
Space Quest I, 86
Space Quest IV, 86
Space Race, 36
Space War, 40, 67
Spacewar!, xvii, 13, 1819, 33, 35, 40, 67, 69
Spaceward Ho!, 260, 268, 273
Space Wars, 40, 67, 70
Spain, 47, 4950, 181, 208
SPC-700 processor, 177
Special Break, 40
Spectrum Holobyte (company), 118, 207
Spectrum ZX, 157
Speed Freak, 43, 6768, 189
Speed Race, 37
Speed Reading, 274
Speedy (nicknamed Pinky), 74
Spelling Games, 266, 274
Sphere (company), 247
Spiderman (Atari 2600), 262, 270
Spider-Man (character), 297
Spielberg, Steven, 39, 293
Spike, 3637
Spinball, 270
Splinter Cell, 296
Sport Fishing, 137
Sport Fishing 2, 137
sports games, 9192, 100, 112, 128, 137,
153, 169, 171, 208, 212, 26162,
27273
Spout, 199
Springboard, 41
Sprint 4, 41
Sprint 8, 41
sprites, 11, 40, 71, 94, 9798, 112, 114, 135,
139, 24143, 248, 315
Spycraft, 132
Spyro, 206
Spy Vs Spy, 262, 265, 269
Square-Enix, 256
Square Pictures (Squaresofts movie division),
295
Squaresoft (company), xix, 112, 123, 17980,
246, 25354, 295
SSD Company Limited, 169
SSG (Strategic Studies Group) (company),
22324
SSI (company), 175
Stallone, Sylvester, 277
stamp, xx
Index
Stratego, 263
strategy games, 43, 204, 234, 273
Stratovox, 92
Street Burners, 37
Street Fighter, 96, 21113, 221, 295
Street Fighter II, xix, 219, 278, 295
Street Fighter II Champion Edition, 136
Street Fighter II Hyper Fighting, 136
Street Fighter II Rainbow Edition, 136
Street Fighter II The New Challengers, 136
Street Fighter II The World Warrior, 136
Street Racer, 261, 264, 266, 271
Street Viper, 101
Stricor (company), 137
Strike Mission, 101
S.T.U.N. Runner, xix, 97, 139
Stunt Cycle, 39, 66
Stunt Cycle (console), 57, 63
subcreation, 303, 3089
Subelectro (company), 41, 43
Sub Hunter, 41
Submarine, 215
Subroc-3D, 94
Subs, 41
suicide batteries, 96, 31516
Sullivan, George, xiii
Summer Games, 272
Sundance, 44, 68
Sunflower, 272
Sunflowers Interactive Entertainment
(company), 207
SUNY, 33
Super Bowl, 41
Super Breakout, 261
Super Breakout (Atari 2600 version), 59
Super Bug, xviii, 40, 82, 92, 241, 315
Supercharged, 306
Supercharger (by Starpath), 65
Super Controller Test Cartridge, 266
Super Crash, 41
Super Don Quixote, 100
Super Famicom. See Super Nintendo
Entertainment System
Super Flipper, 39
Super Galaxians, 43
Super GT, 271
Super Hang-On, 137
Super High-Way, 41
Super Knockout, 41
Superman (Atari 2600 version), 82, 262, 26465
Superman (character), 297
Superman module, 47
Super Mario Bros., xviii, 95, 116, 253, 270, 275
371
372
Index
table-top games, 39, 26162, 273
Tac/Scan, 6970
Tail Gunner, 44, 68
Tail Gunner II, 68
Taito, xvii-xviii, 3637, 3941, 4344, 9293,
9697, 100101, 110, 128, 13637, 13940,
142, 211, 251
Taiwan, 21121
Takashimaya Department Store, 217
Take the Money and Run (video game), 264,
269
Take-Two Interactive (company), 124, 132
A Tale in the Desert, 291
Talking Typewriter, 33
Tamagotchi, xx, 21718
Tamahonam, 217
Tamsoft (company), 248
Tanaka, Hirokazu Hip, 253
Tandy Corporation, 7778
Tank, xvii, 3637, 6364
Tank II, 37
Tank III, 39
Tank 8, 39
Tankers, 39
Tantalus Interactive (company), 22324
target games, 273
Target Renegade, 204
Taskete, 92
Taves, Brian, 261
Tecmo, 112
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, 112, 262, 299
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Arcade
Game, 299
Tekken 3, 140
Tekken series, 136, 140, 179, 214, 267
Telegenesis modem, 119
Tele-Spiel ES-2201, 49
TeleTenis, 47, 49
television, 17, 21, 28, 136, 143, 195, 208, 209,
22021, 241, 262, 277, 28385, 291, 293
94, 29798, 303, 311, 312, 315
television interface adapter (TIA), 63
Television Magazine, 46
Telstar, 55
Telstar Arcade, 57
Telstar Combat, 57
Tempest, xviii, 10, 6869, 93, 189, 261, 316,
331 n.3 ch.16
Tempest (Atari 2600 unreleased prototype), 93
Tempest 2000, 61
Temple Island, 90
Temple of Elemental Evil, 206
Tender Loving Care, 130
Index
Tomb Raider, 23, 90, 179, 183, 185, 205, 262
Tomb Raider: Anniversary, 205
Tomb Raider: Legend, 184
Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life, 295
Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life (film), 183
Tomb Raiders & Space Invaders: Videogames
Forms & Contexts, 225
Tomcat, 70
Tomcat Alley, 125
Tony Hawks Pro Skater, xx, 179
Toontown Online, 176
Top Cow Productions, 183
Top Gear, 100
Top Gunner, 71
Top Landing, 97
Top Skater, xx, 14, 137
Tornado Baseball, 40
Torus Games (company), 22324
Total Overdose, 208
Touch Me, 144
Touch Typing, 274
Tournament Table, 43
Toys R Us, 164, 217
Track & Field, 272
trackball, 14, 79, 316
Trade Wars 2002, 155
The Tragical Historie of Rodion and Rosalind,
202
training simulation games, 274
Trainz series, 224
trak-ball. See trackball
Tramiel, Jack, 58, 6061, 117
Trampoline, 43
transistor radios, 181
transmedia storytelling, 299300
Trash-80, 77
Trick Shot, 273
Trilobyte, 86, 124, 12930, 246
Triple Hunt, 40
Trivia, 40
Trivial Pursuit (video game), 271
Trivia Whiz, 271
Triv-Quiz, 271
Tron (arcade game), 94, 26264
Tron (film), 294
Tron 2.0, 307
Tropico, 305
TRS-80 computer, 7778, 189
Trubshaw, Roy, 173
True Pinball, 270
Truth in Video Gaming Act (S.3935), 281
TSR, Inc. (company), 175, 206
Tsuppori Sumo Wrestling, 273
T.T. Block, 41
TUMIKI Fighters, 199200
Tunnel Runner, 269
Tunnels of Doom, 269
TurboChip, 12122
Turbo Duo, 122
Turbografx, 161
Turbografx-CD, 86, 12324, 129, 177
Turbografx-16, 86, 11922, 163, 171, 177
Turing, Alan, 31
TV Basketball, xvii
TV Flipper, 39
TV Goalee, 37
TV Hockey, 36
TV Pinball, 37
TV Pin Game, 36
TV Ping Pong, 36
T.V. Tennis, 36
Twin Eagle II, 139
Twin Peaks, 129
Twisted Metal series, 179
Two-Bit Score (company), 142
The Typing of the Dead, 138
Tyrian, 156
Ty the Tasmanian Tiger series, 224
U2 (band), 183
Ubisoft (company), 2056, 249
Uematsu, Nobuo, 253
UFO Chase, 39
Ulam, Stanisaw, 32
Ultima III: Exodus, 271, 289
Ultima IV: The Quest for the Avatar, 287
Ultima Online (UO), xx, 16, 159, 17576, 284
85, 288, 308, 309, 314
Ultima Online: Kingdom Reborn, 175
Ultima series, 4, 83, 92, 190, 262, 272, 315
Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3, 136
Ultimate Play the Game (company), 204
Ultima Underworld, 190
Ultra Games (subsidiary of Konami), 110
Umi Yakuba, 101
Um Jammer Lammy, 138, 271
Unabhangige Selbstkontrolle (Independent SelfControl), 209
U.N. Command, 40
Under a Killing Moon, 124, 131, 244
UniSystem, 96
United Kingdom, 114, 174, 2034, 206, 209,
27980
Universal (company), 43, 92
universal media disc (UMD), 148, 216, 296
Universal Pictures, 206
373
374
Index
Universal Studios, xx, 100, 141, 294
University of Illinois, 173
University of Southern California, 89
University of Texas at Austin, 306
Unreal, 157, 187, 193
Unreal Tournament, 16, 285
Unsafe Haven, 272
UPL (company), 4041, 43
upright cabinet, 316
Uru: Ages Beyond Myst, 88, 90
US Billiards, 3639
user-supported software, 157
U.S. Gold (company), 184
Us Vs. Them, 100, 12829
Utah, 64
utility genre, 26061, 274
uWink Media Bistro, 141
Valuation Matrices for Learning/Educational
Content in Popular Games, 306
Valve Software (company), 193, 225, 249, 255
Vapor TRX, 137
VAPS (Video Arcade Preservation Society), 141
VAX, 76
VCDs, 221
Vectorbeam (company) , xviii, 40, 43, 44, 67
68, 189
Vectorbeam monitor, 67
vector games, 40, 42, 44, 6771, 93, 95, 316
vector graphics, 911, 67, 91, 189, 246
vector scan, 316
Vectrex, 5, 10, 14, 70
The Veldt (short story), 190
Vending Times, 135
Venture (arcade version), 93
Venture (Atari 2600 version), 83, 262
Venture Line, 91
Veolia Environnement, 206
Verant Interactive (company), 176
verisimilitude, 239
Vertigo, 71
VHS videotape, 120
Viacom, 141
Vib-Ribbon, 271
Vickers, Brett, 174
video (as a term), 45
Video Checkers, 263
Video Chess, 263
Video8 format, 181
Video Entertainment System, 104
video game (as a term), 37
Video Game Decency Act (H.R.6120), 281
video game lounges, 140
Index
Voyeur, 131, 333 n.6
Voyeur II, 131
VR8 (company), 13839
VRC (Videogame Rating Council), 131, 281
Vs. System, 96
Wabbit, 273
Wachowski Brothers, 299300
Wagner, Larry, 64
Walden, William, 32
Walkman, 145, 181
walkthroughs, 81
Wallace, Bob, 152
The Wall Street Journal, 141
Wal-Mart, 165
Warcraft, xix, 176, 204, 206
Warcraft II, xix
Warhammer Fantasy Battle, 204
Warhammer 40,000, 204
Warhammer: Dark Omen, 204
Warhammer: Mark of Chaos, 204
Warhammer Online: Age of Reckoning, 204
Warhammer: Shadow of the Horned Rat, 204
Warioland, 11, 270
The Warlock on Fire-Top Mountain, 204
Warlords (arcade version), 93, 265
Warlords (Atari 2600 version), 59, 93
Warner Communications, 5961, 64, 66, 104,
117
Warrior, xviii, 5, 44, 68
Watara (company), 146
Watara Supervision (system), 146
Watergate Caper, 36
Watson, Dr., 131
Wave Runner, 137
WAV files, 254
wavetable (sample) synthesis, 253
Way Of The Warrior, 102
WaywardXS Entertainment, 208
Web Picmatic (company), 101
Weizenbaum, Joseph, 31
Weller, Lara, 184
Wells, Mark, 32
West, Simon, 295
Western Bar, 215
Western Gun, 39
Westwood Studios, 12324, 129
whatisthematrix.warnerbros.com, 300
Wheeler, David, 130
Wheel of Fortune, 262
Wheels, 37
Wheels II, 37
Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?, 278
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Index
World Cup, 40
world of video game (diegesis), 28, 81, 88, 90,
123, 125, 127, 138, 17376, 188, 19192,
198, 235, 241, 24546, 249, 254, 262, 273,
28689, 3034, 3089
World of Warcraft (WoW), xx, 159, 176, 190,
204, 206, 275, 285, 287, 314
World Series Baseball 98, 273
Worlds First Soccer, 218
worldviews in video games, 305, 308. See also
moral and ethical dimension of video games
World War I, 152
World War II, 156, 193
Worms franchise, 155
Wozniak, Steve, 77
Wrestle War, 267
wrestling games, 92
Wright, Will, 234, 237, 305
WWF Smackdown series, 179
XA Mode 2, 181
Xatrix (company), 125
Xavix Baseball, 169
Xavix Bowling, 169
Xavix Golf, 169
XaviXPORT, 169, 171
Xbox, xx, 121, 141, 16768, 170, 193, 215,
22021, 24950, 252, 254
Xbox 360, xx, 16971, 194, 215
Xbox Live, xx, 16869
XE Game System (XEGS), 60
XE series of computers, 60
Xevious, 241
Xevious 3D/G, 142
The X-Files, 184
The X-Files Game, 132
X-Men, 137, 262
X-Men (characters), 297
Xpiral (company, originally named Effecto
Caos), 208
Xtrek, 107
Xybots, 97, 139
DAVID H. AHL is the author of 22 how-to books, including Basic Computer Games (the
first million-selling computer book), Dads Lessons for Living, and Dodge M37 Restoration
Guide. In 1974, he founded Creative Computing magazine, the worlds first personal
computing magazine. In 1967, he devised the first computer model for forecasting the
success of new consumer products. He is also the author of more than 500 articles on
technology, automotive restoration, marketing, logic puzzles, travel, market research,
financial planning, and investment analysis. He created Lunar Lander, Subway Scavenger,
Orient Express, and 50 other computer games. Ahl holds an MBA from CarnegieMellon and an MS and BS in electrical engineering from Cornell University.
THOMAS H. APPERLEY submitted his PhD dissertation in May 2007. His topic
focuses on the role of the quotidian in contextualizing the experience of video game play.
During his research on this topic he conducted ethnographies, in Venezuela, Australia,
and online. He has worked as a sessional lecturer in the Media and Communications
Program at the University of Melbourne since 2006.
DOMINIC ARSENAULT is a PhD student at the University of Montreal working on the
history and evolution of video game genres. He has published a number of papers and
written his masters thesis on the issues of narrative in the video game medium.
KELLY BOUDREAU has written an MA thesis in Sociology at Concordia University in
Montreal that worked towards defining the process of identity construction and maintenance in massively multiplayer online games. Her current research focuses on forms of
mediated sociality ranging from the dynamics of social identification in online computer
games and virtual worlds to the fusion of Internet activity and everyday life.
BRETT CAMPER is interested in the history and practice of independent media production and distribution, with an emphasis on video games. He has spent the past nine years
working with digital media both academically and commercially. He is currently a senior
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product manager at eMusic, the leading Internet download service for independent music.
Formerly, he was the research manager at MITs Education Arcade group, where he served
as a designer and technical lead for the multiplayer history role-playing game Revolution.
Before coming to MIT, he was a program manager for the e-commerce platform of
Internet media pioneer RealNetworks. An independent developer himself, he has created
games for the PC, Nintendos Game Boy Advance handheld platform, and Macromedia
Flash. He holds an M.S. in Comparative Media Studies from MIT.
LEONARD HERMAN, a.k.a. The Game Scholar, fell in love with video games the first
time he played PONG at a local bowling alley in 1972. He began collecting video games
in 1979 after he purchased his first Atari VCS. A programmer and technical writer by
trade, Herman founded Rolenta Press in 1994 to publish his book, Phoenix: The Fall &
Rise of Home Videogames, the first serious book on video game history. Three editions
have been published between 1994 and 2001 and a fourth edition is planned for 2007.
Herman has written articles about video games for Electronic Gaming Monthly, Videogaming Illustrated, Official US PlayStation, Pocket Games, Classic Gamer Magazine, Manci
Games, Video Game Collector, and Gamespot.com. He also edited Ralph Baers book Videogames: In The Beginning. Herman, who has acted as an advisor for Videotopia and Classic
Gaming Expo, resides in New Jersey with his wife Tamar and their children Ronnie and
Gregory.
LARS KONZACK is currently an Assistant Professor in Multimedia at Aalborg
University in Denmark. He is a game researcher focusing on topics such as ludology,
edutainment, sub-creation, experience design, geek culture, and game criticism.
ALISON MCMAHAN, PhD, is a documentary filmmaker (see www.alisonmcmahan.com)
and the head producer for Homunculus Productions, a company that produces training
films, industrials, and documentaries. Recent films include the training film Living With
Landmines (2005) (see www.LivingwithLandmines.com) and an industrial film and a PSA
for Pensamento Digital, an NGO in Brazil that provides computers and Internet access to
poor communities (see www.HomunculusProds.com). Her latest documentary is Bare
Hands and Wooden Limbs (2006) (see www.FutureofCambodia.com). She is currently in
production on a feature length documentary, The Eight Faces of Jane: The Life and Work of
Jane Chambers (see www.8FacesofJane.com). From 2001 to 2003 she held a Mellon Fellowship in Visual Culture at Vassar College where she built a virtual reality environment with
a biofeedback interface for CAVEs. From 1997 to 2001 she was an associate professor,
teaching film history and theory and new media at the University of Amsterdam. She is
the author of the award-winning book Alice Guy Blache, Lost Cinematic Visionary (2002)
and The Films of Tim Burton: Animating Live Action in Hollywood (2005).
BENJAMIN WAI-MING NG is currently an Associate Professor of Japanese Studies at
the Chinese University of Hong Kong, teaching and researching Japanese popular culture
and Japan-Hong Kong relations. He received his doctorate in East Asian Studies from
Princeton University in 1996 and was an assistant professor in Japanese Studies at the
National University of Singapore from 1996 to 2001. He is working on a research project
on the interaction and collaboration between Japan and Hong Kong in ACG (animecome-game) industry.
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records, and video games. He started collecting old computer parts in the early 1980s
when he was a kid, and old computers and video games in 1994. He then specialized in
early video games, built a large collection of over 800 machines, and met important
people such as Ralph Baer who helped him greatly in his research. After rescuing a large
amount of early video game documents, he realized that the history of early video games
was quite incomplete and contained many mistakes. He is now working on a book about
early video games, which will feature never-seen-before documents.
MARK J. P. WOLF is an Associate Professor in the Communication Department at
Concordia University Wisconsin. He has a PhD from the School of Cinema/Television
at the University of Southern California, and his books include Abstracting Reality: Art,
Communication, and Cognition in the Digital Age (2000), The Medium of the Video Game
(2001), Virtual Morality: Morals, Ethics, and New Media (2003), The Video Game Theory
Reader (co-edited with Bernard Perron) (2003), The World of the Dni: Myst and Riven
(2006), and a novel for which he has begun looking for an agent. He is on the advisory
board of Videotopia and several editorial boards including those of Games and Culture,
The Journal of E-media Studies, and Mechademia: An Annual Forum for Anime, Manga
and The Fan Arts. He lives in Wisconsin with his wife, Diane and his sons, Michael and
Christian.