Pirates! 106
fm6 writes: "Worried that too much computer gaming stunts your social skills? Try Pirates! You simulate a voyage of discovery, trade, and plunder by walking around a physical gaming area carrying a PDA equipped with a proximity sensor. Encounters with other players (including naval battles) happen when the two players actually approach each other. Here's an article on Business 2.0."
Re: (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Two Words. (Score:1)
Two-fold congratulations !
a) First thread i saw without the idiotic FIRST-POST
b) And an excellent one (err, two?) word summary of the game
I think he's right. That doesn't make him a troll (Score:2, Offtopic)
(Or offtopic, for those who dare to continue to discuss it.)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:I think he's right. That doesn't make him a tro (Score:1)
(PS: Extol means to praise, so "extolling the lameness" really makes no sense.)
geekier lazer tag (Score:2, Funny)
oh yes, and we all know how great lazer tag was.
somehow i think making it "geekier" and "tamer" are going to help.
Why not ... (Score:1)
Seriously, is this game really getting any adepts? i'd rather hone my social skills at a weekend long rave and blast the ppl i play with in Counter Strike.
wohoo! (Score:1)
I'm gonna have something like this arranged for my wedding!
Re:wohoo! (Score:1)
Associated Press: "Shortest Marriage Ever"
:)
-Legion
Been there, done that... (Score:5, Funny)
Fuckin' A, man, it's gettin' so you can't run a Carracho server in this town without gettin' bitched at by the self-appointed warez hounds. I tell ya...
Hrm.. (Score:1)
No refrences to how much that's gonna cost ya, or where you can pick one up.
Arr! (Score:5, Funny)
Upon arriving at an island, a player might find something valuable, such as tobacco.
I get the feeling that the people who will be playing this game might need something more valuable...soap!
Re:Arr! (Score:1)
Historically, that's probably true of the actual pirates too. Or maybe the way they smelled was part of their game plan, i.e. "Full speed ahead mateys! They'll be killed by our stench before we're in range of their cannons!"
Productivity (Score:1)
Re:Productivity (Score:2, Funny)
and o.. btw.. Can I have a raise?
Arrrg, shiver me timbers (Score:1)
How ironic will this be when... (Score:2, Funny)
Quit whining... (Score:2)
Trash? (Score:1)
but because the rivals are standing right next to each other, they can talk trash
I've been on the net for quite some time, but I've never known proximity being a relevant factor in any visitors ability to talk trash. If there was some sort of factor inducing an inability to talk trash, now that would cheer me! Though I fear, that for some people that may result in an inability to talk at all, but that wouldn't bother me overmuch.
Stefan.
"low-range" radio data (Score:3, Informative)
Seriously, I think there is an interesting new genre of games that integrate PDAs and real world locations and/or real world people. Its nice to see others working in this direction.
Re:"low-range" radio data (Score:1)
Something the pokemon and giga- pets never had.
(Darn thing too....If they had internet capability, I wouldn't have had to see so many of the obscene things in public.)
They can't use bluetooth (Score:2)
Another game based on mobile positioning (Score:4, Informative)
There is another game based on mobile positioning called BotFighters [botfighters.com] in action since a couple of months in Sweden. Basically, a player may shoot at another player or attempt to take his/her weapons, but only if they are close enough to eachother.
Anyone with an ordinary mobile phone can play the game, as it uses the positioning information available form the cellular network. Using WAP or text messages may not really be as exciting as having a full-screen PDA in a wireless LAN, though.
Re:Another game based on mobile positioning (Score:1)
fun, but... (Score:1)
I'm still waiting for the Laser Tag infrared mod for my Palm.
Re:fun, but... (Score:1)
If I were to carry two PDAs, could I then go Yosemite Sam style with my PDA lasers?
Come on you guys, (Score:1)
Pirates are people with eyepatches who plunder on the high seas, not people with PDAs who simply beam information to each other.
I can't stand it when people use the term "Pirate" to refer to such innocent folk. Just because it's in the dictionary doesn't make it right! Stand up for what you believe in!
Dlugar
Didn't they already make this game? (Score:1, Offtopic)
What crap (Score:2, Funny)
I'm feeling generous, so here are some suggestions, free of charge:
Re:What crap (Score:2)
Re:What crap (Score:1)
Privacy? (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyone know the technical details on this stuff wrt 3rd parties getting hold of your location information?
The problem with this idea is (Score:3, Insightful)
Somehow I suspect that interacting with the kind of people who would play this game would just further stunt
Pirates! (Score:4, Funny)
A fun game in which players are given PDA's with infrared transmitters, and MP3 copies of five popular songs, chosen randomly out of 100. Each person has to convince others to share copies of their songs, and whoever collects all 100 first, wins the game!
Sounds easy, right? But watch out! Hillary ®osen and her crack gang of ©opyright police are out in full force, posing as regular players, and whenever you try and share with them, they take all your songs and you have to start over!
It's loads of fun! And remember, sharing is stealing!
Re:Pirates! (Score:1)
Re:Pirates! (Score:2)
> And remember, sharing is stealing!
Sharing something that doesn't belong to you is stealing.
That's pretty much the definition of stealing.
I played this game briefly (Score:4, Informative)
That said, the game's physical game area supposedly took place all over the "emerging technologies" showcase, with low-power, short-range (1 meter or so) 802.11 access points that represented "islands". At each island, there were several "?" scattered about, which you could explore. Each "?" was like drawing a card--a random even could wipe out some of your men, or you might strike gold, for example.
It was well done, although it didn't strike me as any more interesting than those Japanese gadgets that supposedly light up when someone "compatible" is in range. A year ago, these guys would have probably tried to promote this as the next hip party game, tried to go public, and flopped like the rest of 'em.
Waste of Bandwidth . . . (Score:2)
To walk up to a live person so you can interact moderated by a computer screen is the lamest, silliest idea possible. The human-human bandwidth is not for talking trash, but for making a real and dynamic story-telling occur -- let humans do what humans do well -- and get the machine out of the way as soon as the game mechanics permits.
I definitely think that there is much that can be done to enhance RTRSRPG using technology, but the trick is not to take a high-bandwidth situtation (human-human interaction) and cripple it to be mere color for the low-bandwidth moderated game interaction on a palm.
Nice use of the tools (Disney did this briefly a few years back with GPS-based palm-held machines running Squeak), but so far as I can tell, a lousy game design and story-telling concept.
Piracy (Score:2, Funny)
Microprose game? (Score:2, Funny)
Microprose hasn't sued them yet? (Score:1)
-Erik <erik@smluc.org> [http://math.smsu.edu/~erik/]
Re:Microprose hasn't sued them yet? (Score:1)
That would be so typically american!! "Hey, I patented that name 20 years ago, so you cannot use it even though I don't use it myself.. and now I-am-gon-na-sue-you!"
I liked this game better... (Score:3, Informative)
I know some old school gamers will back me up on this.
Re:I liked this game better... (Score:1)
Re:I liked this game better... (Score:1)
Re:I liked this game better... (Score:1)
Re:I liked this game better... (Score:2, Interesting)
in new games because so much effort goes into making them look pretty, (ohh wow... I can have blood and guts splattering at 80fps... this must be good!!!!!) and the end result is soemthing that is less interesting then a decent game of hearts. Now why would I shell out $50 for that?
Just one more thing,... It bothers me that the copy for the PDA actually copied the name right down to the "!" at the end and didn't give any credit to the origional game. I couldn't even find any mention of the origional on the web page (and no, I didn't read the pdfs, maybe the mention it in there).
Any I'm done ranting... I'm gonna go play a game of cribbage.
-Ben
Re:I liked this game better... (Score:1)
No such luck, as usual...
Perhaps it's time I port the damn thing myself, ofcourse, I would have to release it on FreeNet so I don't break DMCA for reverseengineering amiga code...
Duh! (Score:5, Funny)
Worried that too much computer gaming stunts your social skills? Try Pirates!
Worried that too much computer gaming stunts your social skills? Try socializing!
Pirates Ho! (Score:2, Interesting)
Not as offtopic as the topic I hope
Pox (Score:1)
Its sort of a Pokemon type game that lets kids battle each other via short range Radio Frequency... but it only costs $30, which is a little more accessable than a $300 PDA.
There was recently a NYTimes article [nytimes.com] about it.
Isn't this just Tag? (Score:1)
K.I.S.S. applies in this situation.
Wireless LANs as a GPS? (Score:1)
If the position could be triangulated or something there would be a complete new genre of games for wireless PDAs.
Anti-reality (Score:1)
Microprose Pirates! (Score:1)
Is there going to be a conflict concerning the naming of this game?
The Quest for the Seas! (Score:1)
Hmmm...I guess this isn't the same as this [iarchitect.com] Pirates...
computer LARPing at last (Score:1)
Why can't kids go out and play? (Score:2)
My point is nothing beats learning social skills and eye-hand cordination then going outside and playing or hanging out with friends. Even as an adult I love games like UT or QuakeIII but I still prefer to find a few good buddies and some paint ball guns and head into the woods for a real fight. I also notice parents think the problem is kids have too much free time so they encourage their children to enroll in accelerated classes with hours upon hours of homework a night so they have no social life expect maybe an hour or two of video gaming. THis is bad and is causing more harm then good. For high school students its a little bit different because they are quite mature and might need extra education for college prep. Anyway their is a link between constant video gaming and lower social skills and frontal lobe stimulation and this game is not going to help. I think paint balling or sports with other peers is the only way to increase it. Its also alot more fun.
reminds me of the Microprose game... (Score:1)
Eeeeek!
This is a reminder of the game i have around here called 'Pirates!' (within quotes) from about the mid-1980s, that was released my Microprose (that's right, exclamation mark and all), along with a version of Gunship and Airborne Ranger, of the same vintage.
Ah, the game was rather interesting to start, I mean boot, up. Nice touch for days when HDDs were expensive.
(BTW: There's no references to the old versions of these three games at their support site [ina-support.com], so I suppose I am showing my age. :)
Now, where the heck did I put those 3.5-inch and 5.25-inch original discs? ...and the copy protection code books? Drat! I've lost those! :(
How to get the treasure: (Score:2)