US Spies Use Custom Video Games for Training 148
Wired reports that the US Defense Intelligence Agency has just acquired three PC-based video games which they will use to train the next wave of analysts. The games are short, but they have branching story lines that change depending on how a trainee reacts to various problems. Quoting:
"'It is clear that our new workforce is very comfortable with this approach,' says Bruce Bennett, chief of the analysis-training branch at the DIA's Joint Military Intelligence Training Center. Wired.com had an opportunity to play all three games, Rapid Onset, Vital Passage and Sudden Thrust. The titles may conjure images of blitzkrieg, but the games themselves are actually a surprisingly clever and occasionally surreal blend of education, humor and intellectual challenge, aimed at teaching the player how to think."
And in these games... (Score:5, Funny)
Names (Score:5, Funny)
>
Sounds more like pr0n.
Seriously, video games are a simulation environment. Makes sense to use them as training tools. This is news, why?
Re:Names (Score:5, Funny)
Didn't last very long. The honeymoon, I mean. The marriage is still going as of 7:38am, April 24, 2008. I have a feeling death is my only way out now, since my immigrant wife (Eastern Europe,now a citizen) found out about our Second Amendment and RFID technology.
Now, what were we talking about?
Start game (Score:5, Funny)
Neat! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Start game (Score:5, Funny)
Torrent please? (Score:2, Funny)
Because I don't suppose it's coming up on Steam anytime soon...
Re:Names (Score:5, Funny)
>>
> Sounds more like pr0n.
Or titles for upcoming Jean-Claude Van Damme or Steven Seagal movies.
Re:thinking about it... (Score:4, Funny)
Centurion: Understand? Now, write it out a hundred times.
Brian: Yes sir. Thank you, sir. Hail Caesar, sir!
Centurion: Hail Caesar! And if it's not done by sunrise, I'll cut your balls off.
Next James Bond movie (Score:1, Funny)
Oh that's great... (Score:5, Funny)
Unimaginative Militarist Morons (Score:3, Funny)
Rapid Onset, Vital Passage and Sudden Thrust
good Grief - they sound like titles to REALLY BAD MOVIES, the kind with some violent dork like Steven Seagal or Chuck Norris in it.
Those kinds of titles are so lame, my friends and I no longer use them as they are utterly generic, so we call them "Adjective/Noun Movies".
RS: "What did you do this weekend?"
OldFriend: "Saw a movie."
RS: "which one?"
OF: "Adjective Noun with Steven Seagal."
RS: "Oh. How bad was it?"
OF: "OK. Lots of shit blowed up. The Ingenue had a really nice rack. Oh, and a bad guy's head exploded after he picked his nose. That was funny. And the ingenue had a REALLY nice rack."
RS: sounds terrible.
OF: It was. nice rack, though.
Whenever I see a modifier noun title, I get VERY suspicious, and if the words suggest some kind of violence or suddeness, then it's sure to be a stinker. I mean, when would we EVER see some violent POS called "Fluffy Tufts"?
RS
Re:2 games that make you a super spy: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Oh that's great... (Score:1, Funny)
>Go North
It's very dark. You are in danger of being eaten by a grue.
>Preemptive Strike
In Soviet Russia, you eat a grue!
I don't know, for just 400kilo-dollars more, they should just crank out a counter-intelligence mmo instead.
Re:How to Think (Score:3, Funny)