E3: Epic, US Army Develop Games as Recruitment Tool 820
securitas writes "Reuters and AP tell us that Epic Games and the US Army have announced the America's Army series of games, jointly developed by the Department of Defense and Epic. The first two-part game in the five-year project includes an RPG called Soldier and a first-person shooter called Operations. The game will be free of charge and available for download in July or August, with 1.2 million CDs simultaneously released, attached to gaming magazines. Does this remind anyone else of the war-room scene from Toys or Ender's Game?" Future installments will include Sim Mess Duty, Sim Standing Guard in the Rain, Sim Blister, and Sim Invading Iraq to Keep Approval Ratings High.
I just hope the games kick ass... (Score:3, Funny)
On a serious note, I'd only have a problem with this if it didn't show what military life was really like. For example, I hope their sims version shows you the excitement of cleaning bathrooms and that you can level up in rock painting. Both of these skills are extremely important to the US Military.
Re:I just hope the games kick ass... (Score:5, Funny)
YES! Fear me mighty urinal!
Missing the point yet again (Score:3, Insightful)
Speaking as a hardcore gamer myself, I could care less about who makes a game. I couldn't care less about how it's distributed. I couldn't care less about how it's "brainwashing people" or how it's "like Toys!". It all comes down to one thing: Is the game fun? From what Penny Arcade [penny-arcade.com] tells me, it is going to be fun. That's all I care about.
This is what separates the average geek crowd from the true gamers among us. The average geeks don't understand what it really means to be a hardcore gamer. All they care about is how many polys a model has, how good it looks, or how the breasts are modeled ("She kicks high"). Hell, I'm 23 and I'll be playing Mario, Zelda, and dozens of other "kiddie" games the day they're released, and I don't care.
This is why I hate mainstream media coverage of games. Leave it to the professionals, please.
Re:Missing the point yet again (Score:2)
Re:Missing the point yet again (Score:4, Funny)
> with advertisements for the military, such as
> tons of "Join NOW!" buttons, and pop-ups
> displaying the US Army website?
You know what would be funny?
I'm assuming the game runs on Windows. With the Bush Administration working so much with Microsoft-- you know, getting rid of th pesky lawsuit and trying to get Passport made a type of nationwide ID [nwsource.com].
So imagine you're playing the game on Windows XP with all your Passport stuff filled in, like a good End User. You finish a really hard level, and suddenly a dialog box pops up and asks, "Do you wish to continue?". When you click yes, you get signed up for the army!
ABSA-FRICKIN-POSI-LUTELY!! (Score:2)
I'm totally in agreement with what a "true hard-core gamer" enjoys. Things like NES emulators were made for the "true hardcore gamer," cause you can still have a fun game in just 8-bit graphics!
But, as I've written before, "realism" has to be balanced with "fun." Having complete realism usually takes away from the fun. This is why I think the game will fail...
Waiting for the alternate (Score:4, Funny)
Army?? Blah blah blah?!? Uncle Sam??
Blah blah blah games GOOD! blah blah patriotic blah blah blah defeat evil blah blah blah WTC Guliani Let's Roll FDNY et al....
Re:Missing the point yet again (Score:2, Insightful)
Hey, if you want realism who would know better? (Score:2)
It is also possible that they may run afoul of Congress, after all all that violence has got to be bad. Figure some Congressional Democrats will scream about it and the anti-2nd Amendment crowd will be there soon.
Re:Hey, if you want realism who would know better? (Score:2, Interesting)
You know, this isn't necessarily a gaffe. Although a bullet has lots of kinetic energy, because of its low mass it doesn't have a high momentum. Also, bullets tend to pass through people rather than lodging in them so they may not transfer all their momentum.
The direction someone falls is determined more by physiology than physics.
If you shoot someone with a rifle bullet, they will collapse, but this is thought to be due to blunt trauma of the spinal cord [firearmstactical.com] (see bottom of page) rather than the momentum of the bullet per se.
With a pistol round, if they fall, it's likely to be due to blood loss or surprise at being hit.
In either case, there's no particular reason for them to fall away from the side they were hit on.
Re:Hey, if you want realism who would know better? (Score:2, Funny)
Army of One (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Army of One (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Army of One (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Army of One (Score:2)
Frankly I'd like those people to have a firm understanding of how the "regular" military units and people operate.
Re:Army of One (Score:2)
Re:Army of One (Score:4, Interesting)
Total agreement there. We have had that problem in Aviation since about 1983, when the branch was formed and immediately started training Aviation Officers within the branch from day one.
In the past, one had to work in another branch, at least through their Basic Course, before going to flight school and then they were still maanaged by their primary branch. We (I was Armor and Air Defense before going Aviation) had a much better understanding and appreciation of the "ground guys" than these newer folks seem to have.
On another note, they could add Sim bust-your-knuckles-repairing-track and Sim bang-the-crap-out-of-your-head-inside-the-tank, Sim fall-off-the-speed-rope, i.e., "you can get hurt without being shot" games.
Re:Army of One (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Army of One (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Army of One (Score:2)
Re:Army of One (Score:3, Insightful)
That, and trying to convince a generation that at least *thinks * they are individualistic that they really want to join up.
Re:Army of One (Score:2)
I mean, that guy's a whole army all by his lonesome... why would they possibly want my help?
--
Damn the Emperor!
Don't Foget This One... (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't forget the final game in the series: "Risking Their Lives to Protect Your Right to Make Stupid Jokes."
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:2)
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:2, Insightful)
Oh right. Could you please point me to the latest bill/law/act voted that actually Protect Your Right To Whatever ?
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:2)
The fact that you got modded up as insightful proved that moderation doesn't work.
graspee
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, that's your opinion and you're entitled to it, of course, but I disagree. Anyone who joins into a branch of the military expecting to be all action and intrigue and excitement is going to be disappointed, if what my friends in the service have told me is true. Sure, there certainly is some more "glamorous" things that happen, but unless I'm mistaken, you can also expect a hell of a lot of boredom. Again, if you feel that he was belittling the armed services, that's your perogative, but it's also my right to disagree with you. I didn't find anything at all insulting in the jokes, and I stand by that opinion.
As to your dig at moderation, does that mean that you have absolute control over what other people consider insightful, or interesting? If I find a post interesting and moderate it so, but you disagree, does that mean that the system doesn't work? If you're going to get pissed off about it, just wait until you've got some mod points of your own and then mod it down. That's the beauty of it - YOU control moderation as much as the next guy, so what are you complaining about?
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:4, Flamebait)
I was in the Army, and I assure you there was plenty of standing around, lots of blister-raising marches, and more pointless missions in foreign countries than were really needed.
Somehow I doubt that the game is going to dwell much on the sheer stupidity of making sure your socks are all rolled "just so" before a barracks inspection.
There's a line from one of the little ditties (called "jodies") we sang while we marched along, raising blisters, that goes, "Oh woe woe we, my recruiter lied to me."
This game is a recruiting tool. Recruiters lie. Therefore this game will sugarcoat the Army and make it look lots more exciting than it really is.
I'm not saying you shouldn't join the Army (or, if you have mental problems, the Marines or even one of the lesser branches*), just that you should go in with your eyes open after talking to people who've been in, not because of a video game.
- Robin
* Veterans of other service branches are free to disagree with my belief that the Army is not only the Senior Service but also the finest one. Non-veterans are allowed to join this discussion only if they buy drinks for all the veterans, and even then their opinions don't really count
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:3, Insightful)
In the Marine Corps, you ALL go in to fight.
Rank and job make no difference. You may all be pulled from regular duties to to go kick booty.
At least, that's what they always TOLD me.
(Good point though... hadn't thought about that before.)
I almost take offense at Roblimo referring to other services as inferior... but I won't. (You know, that's ALMOST a troll. And a good one at that.) I mean, he's an Army dog for chrissakes. He probably doesn't know any better.
Hell, I thought fellow Marines were the arrogant ones!
Anyway, remember, we've all got our purpose and things we're good at. We all save each other's asses all the time.
Want something bombed? A lot? Air Force.
Want the skies cleared? Air Force.
Need something moved fast? Air Force.
Need troops moved fast? Air Force.
Need an embargo or blockade? Navy.
Want the ocean safe? Navy.
Want an major intimidating display? Navy.
Need a LOT of stuff moved? Navy.
Need a LOT of troops moved? Navy.
Need a mobile base with some air power? Navy.
Need lots of guys with big guns? Army
Need tanks and artillery? Army.
Need to march in and take the place? Army.
Need a massive invasion? Army. (Marine assist.)
Need airborne gunships? Army.
Gonna be in the area for a while? Army.
Need a fine-combed search and destroy? Army.
-- whoops... I mean "sweep and clear".
Need a security team? Marines.
Need to distract attention from your main force? Marines.
Need an invasion? Marines. (Follow with Army.)
Need direct air support for ground troops? Marines.
Need everything everyone else has, but need it there RIGHT NOW? Marines.
Need everything, but on a smaller scale? Marines.
Have very specific needs? All have special forces units for special jobs of varying types. Pick your poison.
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:2, Flamebait)
They deserve respect, not ridiclue.
Now, I know what I'm about to say is really going to upset some people, but I don't think that should stop me saying it.
When your friends, family and your fellow countrymen are directly threatened by a foreign force, then putting your life at risk to protect them is a brave and noble thing that demands respect.
But when there's a conflict very far away, between people you don't know and of whom you know very little, and you risk your life because some politician has decided it is in the economic or political interests of the country, then you're a fool, and I'm afraid you'll get no respect from me. I may be glad that you do it, but that doesn't stop me thinking you must be pretty unintelligent. And I have to say that most of the USA's military actions overseas fall into the latter category, not the former.
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree, I spent 4 years in the Marines as well (like an idiot I joined the Infantry, because I wanted action). I was in Somalia for 3 months, other than the time in Somalia life pretty much sucked. Some of the training is fun, but it gets old pretty quick. Especially when you're out in the field in Feb practicing the same thing over and over again.
It was a great experience, I would have never traveled the world and done a lot of things I did, but the job itself isn't all it's cracked up to be.
Re:Don't Foget This One... (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Israel gets about 3 billion/year from the US. Most of this is actually a hidden subsidy for the defense industry in the US, as the money is spent buying US-made weaponry. The actual percentage of the Israeli budget that's composed of foreign aid from the US is something like 3%.
2. Egypt gets 2 billion/year from the US. But a Jew-hater like yourself doesn't care about that detail.
3. Israel has been trying to give back the West Bank and Gaza since it was captured in 1967. Problem is that the losers (the Arabs) keep on trying to dictate terms to the winners (the Israelis). When the "favorable" terms proposed by Saudi Arabia are "we'll make peace with you if you let 4 million people who hate you into your country of 6 million people", it's hard to take them seriously.
4. Bin Laden's chief complaint against the US has been the fact that US troops are in Saudi Arabia, protecting it from Iraq. This is a fit of pique; he offered to protect Saudi Arabia in 1990, and the royal family laughed at him and instead begged the US for help. So now he wants to overthrow the Saudi government and destroy the US. This is a spoiled, pathetic baby, not someone with a legitimate complaint.
He's also mad at the US about the way the British and French carved up the Ottoman Empire. Yes, I'm serious.
5. The per-capita GNP of Israel is roughly that of the UK. This isn't due to money from the US, any more than Taiwan's success is due to money from the US. It's due to hard work and dedication. Amazing, isn't it, that a country with virtually no natural resources (Israel seems to be the only spot in the MidEast where you CAN'T find oil or gas) is the richest country in a region swimming in oil. Arabs are jealous of Israel's success and can't stand the fact that Israel is prospering while they're mired in crap. So they want to destroy it.
It seems pretty obvious to me why someone as misinformed as you isn't taken seriously. Try to actually know something about the topics on which you have an opinion. Otherwise, just keep quiet.
-jon
See US training (Score:2, Interesting)
PK's (Score:2)
friendly fire (Score:3, Funny)
and the difference is? (Score:2, Funny)
"Hey, did you know that these violent games that you love to shoot people in are based on real life? In the next level, there are no extra lives - join the Army!"
Re:and the difference is? (Score:2)
Navy games? (Score:5, Funny)
I have seen this (Score:5, Informative)
so basically, if you're the type of FPS player that gets' wildly mad at campers, you will hate it.
Re:I have seen this (Score:2)
Camping? Simulated camping? Gosh! Sounds great fun! I'll have to get that game!
Re:I have seen this (Score:2)
Re:I have seen this (Score:5, Insightful)
Lets look at some popular games:
CounterStrike: Most people would say this is as "real" as it gets, when you die, your gone. But you can get hit in the leg, stamper for a second, then are back running full speed again. You can get shot in the arm, but still fire back. This game has a lot of realism, but it still balances it out with a 'fun factor.'
Age Of Empires: The designers of AoE always talk about how stuff like Catapults had to be changed. Originally, you needed someone to fire and move them, but it lead to too many problems, so they just made them self useable, and movable. Upon doing this, they felt the game flowed better, and the testers had more fun with the game.
I could go on, but I think "true realism" isn't what the gaming community wants. Games are a time when you can do stuff you normally wouldn't do...
Re:I have seen this (Score:2)
Re:I have seen this (Score:2)
Speaking from experience... (Score:3, Insightful)
Nor were power-ups of any sort available, unless you count caffiene.
It was certainly real-time, though much of the real-time was spent waiting.
other possible Sims: (Score:2)
Sim KP, Sim Boot Camp, Sim Freeze-Your-Ass-Off-While-Marching, etc...
God Bless our sons and daughters in harm's way!What about these? (Score:2)
Sim Don't Ask Don't Tell
or everybody's cult favorite...
Sim Seargent Pile
Way to go (Score:2, Insightful)
Nice way to belittle the work and sacrifices that I and millions of other people throughout the world have given in protecting YOUR rights. Yes, guard and mess duty sucks, but it's a part of military life. So does PT, first call at zero-dark-thirty, inspections, shining boots, cleaning weapons, endless makework, etc.. but it's all a necessary part of military life in order to keep discipline.
As for "Sim Invading Iraq to Keep Approval Ratings High", that's an issue with the leadership, not the men and women who go when given the order. It's easy to criticize and ridicule from the safety of one's Aeron office chair. It's another thing entirely to raise your hand and swear to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. Don't knock it until you've tried it.
Re:Way to go (Score:2)
You seem to not be one of those people. And that's okay. But no need to get defensive. I doubt he has anything particularly against you, TheCabal, or the military.
People make fun of things. Things get made fun of. The army isn't special in this. And they shouldn't be one of the exceptions. If we make them a group that you "can't" make fun of, then
we lose some of that precious freedom that you are trying to protect.
So, either laugh with them, or just ignore them, but no need to berade the man for having a sense of humor.
Justin Dubs
Re:Way to go (Score:2)
Personally, I only found the last one tasteless. The other fictional titles were funny, but it's all a matter of personal taste. Instead of letting TheCabal express his/her opinion on the matter and leave it at that you have to berate him/her and basically flat-out try to stifle free speach by saying "just ignore them" [and don't say anything]. I don't think The Cabal was saying that michael didn't have the right to make tasteless jokes, just pointing out that one (or more depending on your personal view) was tasteless. If you give it more than five seconds of thought you'll see that there is quite a distinction between the two.
Seriously, though.... (Score:2)
Re:Way to go (Score:2)
I dunno, it didn't look all that hard when I watched President Dubya do it on TV. And judging by his example, you can swear to protect and uphold the constitution of the US and piss on it at the same time. Imagine that!
first call at zero-dark-thirty (Score:2)
Re:Way to go (Score:2, Interesting)
"All that is required for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing"
So, you accept orders unquestioningly, yet realise that by not standing up to the wrongs of others you are complicit in their evil? Interesting.
This is going to suck (Score:2, Funny)
"Will there be guys tearing off arms and using them for clubs? No. Because the Army would never do that."
They just lost their target audience - if I can't use somebody's arm as a club, I ain't interested. Career goals? Fsck that.
Please Explain....... (Score:3, Insightful)
You speak a very eloquent truth. (Score:2, Troll)
Re:You speak a very eloquent truth. (Score:2)
* My parents are going on 70, and are certainly not hippies
* My Dad served in the Navy for 23 years, plus one of my five brothers, and one of my three sisters. None had shattering experiences.
* Being one of nine children, I wasn't given anything and earned everything I now have, which is probably quite more than the "tech-elite teens and twenty-somethings" that were given everything.
Re:You speak a very eloquent truth. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:You speak a very eloquent truth. (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, and possibly number 5: First Person Shooters. Once you've seen yourself go down in two seconds among a hail of enemy fire, you start to laugh at the idea of entering a similar situation in real life, only with one hit point instead of one hundred.
Re:Please Explain....... (Score:4, Insightful)
Not that I'm particularly knocking the Army's training methods. I just think I'm very poorly suited to being a soldier.
Re:Please Explain....... (Score:3, Informative)
Several of the people involved in bringing you Slashdot, including the author who posted this story, have previously been in the U.S. armed forces.
And -- Hey... I may be sullen, and I may be directionless, but... uh what was that other thing you said?
Re:Please Explain....... (Score:4, Funny)
EULA (Score:5, Funny)
Iraq (Score:4, Informative)
2) He ejected U.N. inspectors who were making sure he complied with the peace terms stating he wouldn't continue to develop WMDs including the Iraqi nuclear program.
3) He has launched strikes on civilian populations in Israel during the Gulf War even though Israel was not part of the military coalition. He did this in the hopes invoking an Israeli response which would gain him the support of other Arab nations.
Now because you obviously didn't know this or understand the implications I will state it slowly:
If allowed to develope a nuke, he's likely to use it against a civilian target. Possibly in a pre-emptive strike.
Where is it going to happen? Who knows. Will it be trucked in or on top of a missle? Not sure. A strike against him is necessary to make sure that this doesn't happen.
Sidenote: Informative opposing opinions != Troll, a point often lost on the moderators of this "news source".
Re:Iraq (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Iraq (Score:3, Insightful)
And why just attack Iraq? Iran and North Korea both have nuke programs. They're the Axis of Evil you know.
-B
Sim Army (Score:2)
1) Running around and around for hours.
2) Getting bored playing cards.
3) Spending hours cleaning your kit.
4) Getting shouted at and humiliated by someone you hate.
5) Sitting on your bunk, waiting.
6) Cleaning your kit again.
7) Going in to town on Saturday night and getting completely drunk and throwing up
8) Letching at women and the desperate machismo of oversexed young men who don't know how to communicate with the opposite sex.
9) Institionalized racism and sexism.
10) Cleaning your kit again.
12) Unquestioningly following dumb orders.
13) Being a guiniepig for experimental drugs with horrible side effects. Or is it going to be all fast action shooting and strategic planning, just like real life in the army?
America's Army is by the MOVES Institute (Score:5, Informative)
Michael Zyda
Sure to succeed (Score:4, Insightful)
Looking around, all the people of my generation have one of a few careers:
* Alien-attacker, particularly where you have three bases to hide behind
* Ever-hungry giant mouth eating never-ending supply of pellets
* Race car driver on tracks with a lot of popup
* Professional princess rescuer, particularly when you can jump on a lot of mushrooms
* Cubical worker
That last one is the least suprising. I remember as a kid, me and my friends would never stop playing "Cubical Worker!" It was the most popular game in America at the time, which is why everyone seems to have grown up to do it for a living.
> The Army expects by September to spent about $7.5 million on the program
Whew! I'm glad we're spending $7.5 million on this project. With this new Republican leadership manning the purse strings, we've got so much money, I was worried there was no way we'd be able to spend it all. This is a great example of how to get rid of it.
What was that? A $100 billion dollar deficit [salon.com]?
Wait... which party was for big government and likes to waste money?
Re:Sure to succeed (Score:2, Interesting)
That means the Army spends $25k in marketing and advertising for *each* recruit they get.
I wonder what would happen to enlistment if they gave up the high-profile dramatic ads in lieu of a much more simple campaign, modestly marketed in 5-10 second spots and in simple type in newspapers, magazines, and high-school posters:
"Join the Army. $20,000 signing bonus. Paid cash"
Your Tax Money At Work!! (Score:2)
Second, the US Army needs to take a lesson from my father, when he taught me this when I was 16. When you budget your money, you get out a piece of paper and make two columns. Mark the first "NEEDS", the other "WANTS."
Where do you think the game will go?
Also, how can they dare compete in an industry where tried-by-fire veteran game designers can fail miserably (ie - Diakatana)??
Mark this one down as the year's dumbest use of money... (Don't get me wrong, I'm a big gamer, I just think the US Military could use the money elsewhere).
Yvan Eth Nioj (Score:5, Funny)
Army Game (Score:2, Interesting)
Simulation? (Score:2, Insightful)
I hope it comes with training on crimes of war [crimesofwar.org], international law [uwa.edu.au], and the Geneva Conventions [irct.org].
Submarine Sim (Score:5, Funny)
HOW TO SIMULATE SUBMARINE LIFE AT HOME
Surround yourself with a few people you don't like. Close all windows and doors tightly, close curtains. Seal any openings to the outside world with a proper vault. Unplug all radios and TV sets to cut yourself off completely from news, football games, Saturday Night Live, the Muppet Show, etc.
Hourly monitor all operating home appliances, if not in use, log as secured. If using the bathroom, do not flush toilet for first two days to simulate smell of blowing sanitaries and venting inboard. Then flush daily.
Wear only approved FBM coveralls, or proper Navy uniforms. No hats, special T-shirts, etc. Cut your hair once a week ensuring that you make it look like hell. Work 18-hour day intervals to ensure your body really gets confused. Listen to the same cassette over and over until you can't stand it anymore, and then put in one that you can't even listen to without acute nausea setting in. Set your alarm to go off just as you fall asleep, with alarm set at loud, or buy a special alarm clock with various settings, (i.e., "Man Battle Stations, Fire, Flooding in the Basement").
Prepare food with a blindfold on to simulate what real submarine cooks do. Then take the blindfold off and try to get your dog to eat it. Then break out a can of tuna and/or peanut butter.
Cut your bed in half, and enclose all but one side using the dimensions of a small casket as a reference. When not in bed, make up blankets properly so no one will see or care.
Periodically, for want of excitement, open main power breaker and run around yelling, "Reactor Scram", until you are sweating profusely, then restore power. Buy yourself a snorkel and mask, and again, periodically, just for want of nothing else to do, put it on and pretend you're in a smoke filled room with no way out. For added variety, hook up the garden hose and pressurize it.
To enable yourself to handle anything, constantly study wiring diagrams and operating instructions for various home appliances (stove, refrigerator, can opener). For no reason at all, at specified intervals (monthly, weekly, etc.) tear one item apart, just in case it was going to break down.
Paint everything around you gray (Navy FSN gray, no substitutes) or off-white. To be sure you are living in a clean and happy environment, every Friday, set alarm on loud for a short but hated drill sound, then get up and manned with only a bucket and sponge and greeny, clean one area over and over, even if it was already spotless. Then make out a discrepancy list.
Once a day, after normal programming hours, plug in TV and watch one movie being careful that it is (a) at least five years old, (b) made long enough prior to showing to be sure that you've seen it at least once before, or (c) be so bad you have to install a seatbelt in your chair to keep you there until it is over.
Since no doctor will be available, stockpile Band-Aids, aspirin, and Actifed as these are proven cure-alls. Practice if necessary on your dog (surgery, dentistry, or death).
When commencing this test simulation, lock your family, friends, and anything that means anything to you outside. Tests will run for at least two months with no end in sight.
Screenshots (Score:2, Informative)
That new Unreal engine is just amazing, I can't wait to see all the modded games people make with it.
Invading Iraq to Keep Approval Rating High (Score:4, Insightful)
Iraq has a murderous dictator in charge who has waged genocide against his own people and is developing weapons of mass destruction. If we really were a country that believed in freedom and good will towards men, we would have bombed the shit out of Iraq years ago instead of letting millions die at the hands of Sadam.
Since people tend to believe in hollywood so much, just look back to Spider-man and the message that everyone was touting as being so grand, "Great power comes with great responsibility." We sure as hell have the power but we're just sitting around on our lazy asses so that we only have to pay $1.25 a galloon to drive the
Site for the download. (Score:2, Informative)
Didn't we learn this lesson yet? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The real thing? (Score:2)
Re:Gimme a break (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Gimme a break (Score:3, Insightful)
Get off your high horse. Yes, they died for our freedom but that also includes the freedom to say what we want about them and criticize the government when we feel it's necessary. Pull your head out of your ass and smell reality for a change.
If Bush invades Iraq it certainly won't be the first time that a politician has picked a fight to boost his approval ratings. What I find to be truly disgusting is the way that the Bush-Cheney gang have used and are still using the events of September 11th as an excuse to grab more power for themselves and then keep the American people and congress in the dark by claiming "national security". This also isn't the first time that a politician has done this either.
Re:Gimme a break (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:You shut up. (Score:3, Insightful)
I only hope this comment was done in sarcasm, but this elitist attitude I so often see from people who served in the military that bothers me. You tell me that I don't understand the meaning of the military or service, yet every day I drive by dozens of memorials to those who have died in the past, and am reminded of their sacrifice. I am thankful that there were people like them to protect our nation.
Then I drive by lots of real tall buildings, and I am reminding of the what they were fighting to protect. Which is more important, the fight, or that which is being protected? I am grateful forpeople serve our military; my grandfather was in Korea, and my father served during the Vietnam Era.
Still, that which is protected bears greater significance than the protectors. Our freedoms, liberties, our constitution, all are much more important than the soldier that died in an attempt to preserve them.
The fight to preserve our liberties is no longer being fought on foreign battlefields, but in our legal system. I think we had a better chance when it had to do with who lasted the longest out there than we do putting faith in judges, juries, and politicians.
But please, do not ever tell me I don't understand the military, or have no right to make light of it. If it really was protecting my rights, then I can say anything I want to about them, now can't I? =]
Re:at last! (Score:2)
operation flashpoint.
One thing that adds to the realism (besides the damage when being hit) is that you can walk or drive over whole islands with several small towns on them.
These areas (the whole game takes place on three islands) are enourmous - several kms diameter.
Re:Ender's Game? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
As for training, no they will not be using this particular game for that. In fact, the US Army has been working with the people behind Operation Flashpoint [flashpoint1985.com] to produce a better training tool than the version of Doom the Marines have used over the years.
The US Army's use of modified off-the-shelf games dates back to the 80's with a version of the original vector graphics game Battlezone modified for use as a battle tank simulator.
I applaud the Army for trying out creative marketting techniques, it's not as if the game will beam subliminal messages into your head, and with it being Unreal based, there's the possibility of it being modified for Linux use as well.
Hell, as long as the game is good, it will be as effective a positive mindshare tool as any saturday morning cartoon is at getting you to buy action figures.
Re:Is this news or editorial? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:More liberal bullshit (Score:2)
Re:Government-subsidized violent games? (Score:2)
It's also interesting that the whole "escapist fantasy" argument loses its teeth. Even games that're touted as being realistic can generally argue that they're not intended to be acted out. But in this case, the government actually wants the players to eventually do the things they see in the game. Admittedly, it only wants the players to do these things under very specific circumstances (following orders while enrolled in the U.S. Military), but that statement is a significantly weaker defense compared to, say, Rockstar being able to flat-out state that they don't want you to act out any of the crimes in Grand Theft Auto 3, period.
Re:"Sim Invading Iraq to Keep Approval Ratings Hig (Score:2)
Should have seen this coming... (Score:2)
*SMACK*
And for good measure,
*SMACK*
Re:global thermonuclear war! (Score:2)
As much as the fantasy books you read would like you to believe that the great military commanders are all brilliant chess and go players, the fact is that chessmasters are no better at non-chess strategy than anyone else.
Funny? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Funny? (Score:2)
Oh, and when I mess up, my company loses money. When people's lives are at stake you need to think a little harder about why those Al-Qaeda terrorists have maple leaves on their packs.
Re:Approval Ratings High? (Score:2)
Sure it will. The current Bush administration has had a hard-on for Hussein since they first came to power. The last thing that Dubby wants is to be known as the second generation of Bush presidents who "failed to get the job done." Have you been watching the news lately? Have you been listening to Cheney during his almost weekly visits to "Meet the Press" where he talks about the evils of Iraq? It's going to happen, it's just simply a matter of timing now. Bush is just waiting for an excuse (liked failed negotiations on weapons inspectors).