Revisionist History in Age of Empires 93
The fact that Microsoft Game Studios picked and chose from the past in order to make Age of Empires fun is understandable. While recognizing that, the Wonderland Blog brings up the (dubiously laudable but) important role Age of Empires has in educating young people. Alice asks if such a game, helpful to the teaching of the young, should futz with the past the way it does. The Guardian Blog follows up on her commentary by discussing the game and the issue in the context of Serious Games. From the article: "With the snowballing of interest in Serious Games and governmental support for the development of games in the classroom, should this be an issue that is seriously debated in development houses?"
Civilization 2 (Score:2, Interesting)
In the age of blogging (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm sure someone will provide an analysis of the game comparing it's story to accepted historical theory. Blogging isn't just for geeks, you know.
Idoits (Score:2, Interesting)
NO.
Not with a game that is CLEARLY designed and marketed as ENTERTAINMENT.
If a child's primary source of learning history and historical content if a freakin' computer game, that child is already hopelessly borked.
Who ARE these IDIOTS who demand or even suggest that the entertainment industry shoulder the burden for rearing everyone's children?
Re:Idoits (Score:2, Interesting)