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Independent Games Festival Free Play

Posted by Zonk on Thu Feb 23, 2006 07:20 PM
from the games-for-free dept.
Sune Nielsen writes "The Independent Games Festival main competition has a lot of great games from independent developers, who will all be presenting their games in the IGF booth at the Game Developers Conference in San Jose. The IGF has an Audience Award, and has just opened voting. Demos are available for most of the contestants. You need a Gamespot login (free) to vote, but not to try the demos. The award ceremony will take place on March 22nd at the GDC." Free demos, folks, of some of the most out-there games you're likely to play this year. I'm rooting for Darwinia and Dad n' Me.
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    • Congratulations! Your application for the popular Karma-To-Burn(TM) program for aspiring netizens* has been accepted. Please stay tuned for further updates! They will likely come in the form of slashdot headlines.

      Thank you.

      *is this word even used anymore? I can't remember the last time I actually saw it employed...

        • I think by "Karma-to-Burn" he was making a joke. The moderation system [slashdot.org] here lets people rate comments higher or lower based on how much they add to the conversation. Your "first post" comment probably got moderated down for that reason.

          Overall, the more negative moderation you get, the lower your Slashdot karma and the less likely you are to get picked to moderate in the future. On the other hand, comments that add a lot can bump you up into a higher Slash-karmic plane.

          I wouldn't worry about it too much.
      • I think all of the netizens became digirati.

        And he is definitely a trolliratus.

        Or maybe we are all SlashBotirati.

      • offtopic!? (Score:2, Insightful)

        whatever happened to a sense of humor on slashdot?
    • by Anonymous Coward
      1: That's not true. We just enjoy it (I'm smiling right now). It provides the opportunity for maximum humiliation of your conversational opponent.
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      3b: Yes it is, because English is boring.
      4: Who quotes text nowadays? Nerds use hyperlinks. And quoting some text would have made your ideas more plausible... mine too but I doubt you'd click.

      Summary: wrong.
  • My vote goes to... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Zitchas (713512) on Thursday February 23 2006, @07:49PM (#14789435) Journal
    Darwinia. From everything I've read about it, it looks to be one of the more intresting (read: different, unique, and quite possibly fun) games to hit the market recently. Not much chance of getting to try any of them out in the near future, though. On a related note, has anyone bult that time transporter yet? Or any way to add a couple hours to my own personall time frame without changing the rest of the world's time? (so I can get in a couple hours extra on everyone else)
    • I've played Darwinia and it is one of the best new(ish) games. Sadly though, I can't see it ever making it mainstream, especially with the simple graphics. To the average game player, realistic graphics are important.
    • And I've just put a requisition order in for a Cannon Fodder box art image macro, friend.
    • How can you vote for something you haven't played before?
      • By knowing something of it.

        1)I know the company that's putting it out, and they have a pretty good reputation. Everything of AmbrosiaSW's I've played, I liked.

        2)I've read all the official releases, and descriptions, and many of the reviews, and possibly more importantly, I've also read a fair bit of commentary from people who have played it, listened to their descriptions of how it works, and their own views of it's strengths and weaknesses.

        3)I've looked at all the screenshots I could find, and watche

  • A lot of the games are pretty fun (i personally like Rumble Box). The one i really want to play, however, is Braid. But they have no website or demo. How the hell do i vote on that?
    • Darwinia is *way* cooler than Rumble Box. When you play Darwinia you can tell it has been crafted by people who care about games. The interface just feels right in a way that no real-time strategy game ever has before. In other RTS games I feel crippled, peering through a tiny little porthole, scrolling madly, spending 80% of my time simply managing which units I have selected. Darwinia fixes all of that. You have complete 3D control of the camera at all times, and yet somehow camera management is seco
    • Where can I find that game?
  • I thought a whole point of demo was to enable me to test before I buy? Why such emphasis on status of something that is by definition free?
  • Darwinia+Dad 'n' Me (Score:3, Informative)

    by Premo_Maggot (864012) <nessnoop@gmail.com> on Thursday February 23 2006, @11:54PM (#14790496) Homepage
    The Darwinia demo is available to all steam users for free and Dad 'n' Me (the full version) can be played on newgrounds http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/254456 [newgrounds.com]
  • Darwinia was an amazing game. I unfortunatly have steam installed..(as i play alot of DOD and CSS) so i was there for the actuall release. Darwinia is a great game. havn't tried any of the others, i'll give them a try. If you havn't at least played a demo you should, Darwinia is a pretty fun and interesting little game that came from nowhere.