Another Golden Age of Gaming? 150
An anonymous reader writes "Julian Murdoch over at Gamers With Jobs thinks that this is the best time ever to be a gamer. In his conversation with a (one suspects hypothetical) kid in a library, he engages in a bit of a rant on the topic: 'He's me when I was 16. Everything sucked. But I'm glad I talked to him, because it turns out I needed to hear myself say it all. For all of my daily kvetching, this is the best time ever to be a gamer, because the games are good. We can bitch all we want about console wars, prices, fanboyitis, and those games which do, in fact, suck. But at the end of the day, there are more different games out there than ever before, from the oh-so-pretty Oblivion to Guitar Hero to Dwarf Fortress. From Magic: the Gathering to Pokemon (laugh all you want, it's a good game). From Heroscape to Warhammer 40k.'
So what do you think? In the midst of all the negative campaigning in the console wars, is this another golden age of gaming?"
Steam (Score:5, Interesting)
Not everything I have bought I really liked (Sin Episodes, for example...) but for less money, hassle and installation concerns than traditional games, they have made trying new games out much easier, and increased the total number of good games on the market.
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*Shooter/Bludgeoner/Stabber/Poisoner
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Saw on a forum how 'maybe' this is the organization that G-man belongs to, and the portal guns are not necessary, thus how he gets around. ie: the organization that was 'storing' Gordon for 20 years. Odd. We might find out by Episode 3. Maybe.
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People who bitch about Steam suck. It's by far one of the best things to happen to the gaming industry. Just read hear for more:
Interview with Troika Games [rpgcodex.com]
"Why Steam... the reason Steam is so fantastic, is because the game can be developed and distributed without any publisher involvement. Laidback will get to keep the IP, which means th
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The real beauty of th
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according to the sites stats most of us are on win32 machines at least when we log onto slashdot. So it's relavant for most fo use, at elast for the time we can access slashdot.
People who bitch about Steam suck. (Score:2)
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Not if you're playing offline. A lot of people do that, you know.
In fact, I don't even have a CD Key for any of my Steam games because I bought them online - making it impossible to steal my CD key.
And if something ever happened to the Steam servers to make them shut down or lose your purchase information... oh, well. You can make back-ups, but even they require Steam authentica
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But it's a BITCH when you pay for a game and can't play online because people can't figure out a working system to prevent this. I've thought of several. I wish
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Did you try talking to Customer Support? And I mean, talking, not starting with screaming? Give it a shot.
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And why isn't your computer connected to the Internet? It's not that hard. I mean, you're connected right now, right?
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And yes, I am usually connected to the internet, however, I purchased episode 1 retail with the intent of having something to play when I was dragged off at some godforsaken place where there were no internets for a week under the pretense of a 'vacation' (thinking that I had heard somewhere that it only demands to phone home once a week.) I played through it in a couple of days, and then when wanting to play it some again a co
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http://www.play.com/Games/PC/4-/1125094/The_Ship /Product.html
Kids are Growing Up To Fast (Score:4, Funny)
"I guess. It's getting boring though. I used to play on Xbox live, but there are all these 8-year-olds in Kansas and sh*t that spend all day practicing and they just kick everyone's ass."
How is it that we allow these damn 8 years olds to whoop up on us? We need to quite our jobs now and take back our titles!
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not quite at the top yet (Score:2)
we might be around the same height as the last golden age, but there's great potential to go even higher in the next few months. ps3, wii, wow expansion, all of them have the the ability to raise the bar (or drop it, whichever).
Golden Age? Hah (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is now the cost of making mass market games is so prohibitively expensive that few companies are willing to take a risk and do something different.
Don't get me wrong. There are some good games out now but calling it a Golden Age is a bit much in my opinion.
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Re:Golden Age? Hah (Score:4, Insightful)
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This is exactly the problem with games today. Everyone is playing it safe now...it's Hollywood. Nobody wants to take risks or just make fun and challenging games anymore. There are FAR fewer good games these days. Don't let pretty graphics and sound fool you.
I can't honestly believe that anyone that has been gaming since the 80s can say that this is another golden age and keep a straight face...
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I can go out and buy a game that has better mini-games than anything that was made in the 80's. An easy, if over-used example would be Geometry Wars, which was just a small part of Project Gotham Racing 2.
The on-line gaming space is absolutely fantastic now. Not only are there millions of opportunities for you to get a game going, but the games actually WORK. Just last night I was playing Call of Duty 2 on my Xbox 360. Rooms would fill
Re:Golden Age? Hah (Score:4, Insightful)
I play just as many new games as I did 20 years ago. I appreciate the advances that have been made over the years. You have to realize that even though I obviously don't consider this the best time in gaming, it's certainly not the worst either. From your response it seems that you think I have to love one or the other, but not both.
I just don't feel that the games of today live up to the peak that was hit in the early to mid 90's. Maybe it's nostalgia, but maybe it's because I think games back then had more character.
I'd hardly classify the 80s and 90s and "pushing colored blocks around while sub-midi quality music played repetitively through your speakers".
Maybe I have a greater appreciation for art style than I do for 3D modeling and texturing.
Anyways, I completely respect your views and I'm glad you responded.
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The reason I say maybe on the first person shooters is..can you really compare anything released in the last 3 years to the impact of, first, DOOM, then DukeNukem 3d?
But aside from that...I am SO sick of RTS games.
I know it is because the developers are developing for twitch gamers, and the suckers who buy every console that comes out, as soon as it comes out. (son, looking over my shoulder, says "why did you call me
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I wouldn't call this a golden age, but things certainly aren't as bad as some people make out. Apart from anything else, sequels aren't always a bad thing (Pikmin 2, for example).
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To another poster - yes there have ALWAYS been games tied to licenses (movies, books, etc.) it just seems the percentage of games which are not licensed off of previous content or a sequal to a previous game is EXTREMELY small.
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The game publishing industry is driven mostly by the same people who drive the rest of the entertainment industry (after all, most game publishers are owned by mega-media corporations). This means that the game publishing industry will be stodgily uncomfortable with risk. Risk to
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If 3 consoles at war makes a golden age, then that one cancels itself out since there's been three since the SNES/Megadrive/PCE matchup.
3 Next generation consoles you can buy: Xbox 360, Nintendo Wii, Sony PS3
See above. A new generation does not a "golden age" make.
Large library of very good Indie games to choose from
Where? I've got all 3 last-gen systems, a GBA, and a DS. Where can I find these games and p
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Are you aware games exist on computers?
But what has Valve done that's innovative?
Portal(Portals) / Half Life 2(Zero Point Gravity Gun)
n expansion pack to a GUI to a mediocre MUD is a sign of a golden age? I think your standards may be a bit low.
This is the sign that games that are well known are continuing to be "well k
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Depends on your OS.
Ah, yet new technology, new innovation and over 7 venues for entertainment does: Computers, Xbox, Xbox 360, PS2, PS3, GameCube, DS, PSP, Gameboy Advanced, Cell Phone, PDA Phone, PDAs, Palms.
I think you give them far too much credit. That's 3 venues, tops. Computer, Console, Handheld. Same as we've had for 15 years.
Renaissance. (Score:2)
Whenever some era in history is cited as a Golden Age, it's usually associated with (relatively) very high prosperity. Even if we expand the definition to very high achievement, I don't know what era I would label as a Golden Age, but might be inclined to believe the present day it. Such a label though... very subjective, each era has it's
I'll take what he's smoking (Score:5, Insightful)
By definition, we can't have a Golden Age of Gaming again, any more than we can have a Golden Age of movies. The early days of when gaming hit its stride are long gone. Yes, we fondly remember when the Wizards and Gurus sat down at their keyboards and worked their black magic to do the impossible. It seemed like the sky was the limit, and new concepts for games were coming out every other day. There were pushes into story-driven games, first person perspective games, simulation games, action games, puzzle games, etc. Each magazine or software catalog that came in the mail delivered new surprises and wonders. It was all very new and VERY exciting!
Where we're at today is not a Golden Age. All the basic, conceptual groundwork has been laid. So we instead focus on providing the most immersive experience possible. Many of these games can be fun in their own right, but they simply don't compare to the excitement of seeing Duke Nukem' for the first time, or coaxing Wing Commander to run on your PC. It's nothing like the awe at playing Tetris on a portable system for the first time, or making Mario fly through the clouds on a cape. Those were totally, completely, and unabashingly wonderous things for a wonderous time.
I think Nintendo manages to capture some of that with the Nintendo DS. However, gaming will never be virgin territory again. That's just the way it is.
Re:I'll take what he's smoking (Score:4, Insightful)
That was said in the 70's about computer science,
and in the 60's about artifical intelligence,
and in the 19th century about physics.
In other words, I doubt it.
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Which is true. 90% of CompSci today was developed before they had computers capable of using it. Everything from Data Structures to Computational Theory to 3D Algorithms to Audio Synthesis were all developed starting in the 60's and tapering off in the 80's. Most of today's research builds on those findings.
That doesn't make any sense. Why would Artificial Intelligence be developed before CompSci was? I think you m
Re:I'll take what he's smoking (Score:4, Informative)
Oh yes, very snappy comeback. (*rolls eyes*)
Artificial Intelligence was one of the defining goals of Computer Science. It's been on the table since computers were first developed. Yes, most of the concepts developed alongside CompSci in the 60's and 70's. But to call the 60's the "Golden Age of AI" shows a distinct lack of understanding to what "Golden Age" means in a modern context.
The "Golden Age" is the period of discovery proceding the invention. It's usually offset by a period of time while the concept of the invention is assessed. Using the example of the Telegraph, the invention was the Optical Telegraph in the 18th century, but the "Golden Age" (sometimes referred to as the "Victorian Internet") didn't occur until the electric telegraph caught on in the 19th century. The "Golden Age" ended when the telegraph system became highly automated, thus disbanding the large network of operators. (The telegraph operators were a lot like the BBS users of the 80's and 90's.)
Similarly, videogames as we know them were invented in the early 1970's, but didn't experience their "Golden Age" until the 80's when the concept truly took off.
The second and latter golden ages... (Score:2)
(Oblig Civ4 ref.)
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If you look at historical
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But seriously its a new idea, but I don't know many who have been waiting all this time for it
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You're emphasizing on the etymology of the word (Score:2)
In the case of the article, I believe golden age is right. With the current state of the market, every type of gamer can find their fair share of games. young, teen, adult, senior
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Your interpretation of "Golden Age" leaves something to be desired. Again from Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]:
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How the term supposedly originated, or the qualities of the period it is "often ascribed" to, is not the same as an actual d
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So your point is that we should continue to beg questions rather than raise them, make light of topics that should have light shed on them, and get in cues (for movies?) rather than lining up for a queue.
Words and phrases mean what they mean. There is nothing wrong with attempting to be precise rather than accepting colloquial definitions at face value.
In the case of this art
Well, in that sense you are right. (Score:2)
but i still believe we are in a golden age of gaming - probably more on the end of it.
maybe this decade hasnt seen the birth of gaming but lots of new faces of gaming were born. if golden age simply means the moment of artistic evolution where people just go and let their mind be creative with a medium then we have to talk about all the various faces of gaming. :
bit generations (Score:4, Interesting)
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That said, I do love the occasional marat
The Golden Age or the Revolution? (Score:5, Insightful)
What I mean by that is there are no new genre defining games coming out anymore. Maybe it's because we've reached hardware & software limitations or maybe it's because no one is willing to risk it with so many popularized genres out there to make a buck off of.
This is true and I applaud games like Guitar Hero or even Um Jammer Lammy
One would think (or hope) that with internet connections for consoles and the MMORPG world conquered by World of Warcraft that we would be seeing a lot of innovation. Unfortunately, I'm beginning to see less and less innovation and a whole lot more 'safety' games. Indeed, this is a golden age
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Most games now are based on an equation -- how little money can I put into it and still retain enough of a profit to do it again next game? I've yet to find a game that is truly ground-breaking as of late.
MMOs all follow the same pattern - grind, grind, grind.
FPS' all follow the same pattern - shoot, upgrade, shoot.
RPGs all follow the same pattern - predictable plot twist
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Uhh, honestly, what do you expect? It might be a bit anal here, but:
1) For MMOs, when it comes down to it, subscribers will consume content far far far quicker than you can make, test and deploy it, so MMOs need something repeatable that offers rewards after x repeats to keep people playing. No matter how much innovation you do, youll eventually hit this wall. If you cant keep your players
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Final Fantasy did stagnate for a long time, but now, it seems, every game SE puts out tries some radically different change to the way it plays. It has no recurring characters, aside from moogles, chocobos, and a character named Cid. It just has an epic story in a JRPG format. And FFXII even changes the JRPG format from turn-based to active battles.
Legend of Zelda, while it use
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2003 called, they want you to point this out to them BEFORE they do it.
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I have three letters for you: C D I
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I have to disagree with this. Some people only -have- 1 idea. And it may be great. But that's all they had to give.
Those that have more ideas and the company won't listen... Those people will find or start a new company.
In the mean time, those franchises keep fun games on the market when most 'innovative' games are garbage. We only see the ideas worth spending the mega-$ to make a console game out of them. Without the major series, we'd see fewer big titles and sm
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Madden will die when American Football dies. People clearly want football games: EA only releases every year because people keep buying it. Should EA refuse that profit so that they can make games that don't sell as well?
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Sure, they can stifle creativity, but one can also make an arguement that they also focus creativity as well. It lays the groundwork, and means the designers can spend less time on the very basic aspects of a game (what the genre is, what the basic style will be, etc.), and focus on the more detailed aspects of the game, and subtler things, where I think the real meat of gaming is at. When I
I would tend to agree... (Score:1)
For boardgaming, maybe (Score:3, Informative)
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First is digital distribution will become the prominent way of getting games out. Everyone will get used to it, it'll cut out a lot of the middlemen producers, it's a win/win.
Second, as graphics begin to plateau, the selection of available toolsets and engines will start to catch up and mature, they'll become easier to use, the cost of those tools will drop.
Things have always functioned like this on a small
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I think it'll be less
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I disagree (Score:1)
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Doubt it (Score:3, Insightful)
The wii and ds may provide a mini-renaissance, but that's about it.
Sorry, gaming is all but dead to real gamers. (Score:1, Insightful)
I haven't been interested in a new game for quite some time, because it's all the same garbage. I'd rather go back and play old NES or DOS games, back when gaming was actually fresh and exciting. What's worse is that the so-called "gamers" today turn
Pointless (Score:4, Insightful)
Looking back, things always seem better because you tend to remember the good bits more than the mediocre. There are some really great games out there. Sure, there are lots of sequels and generic FPSs, but you don't have to play them.
Civ (Score:5, Funny)
Pop-Culture and Gaming (Score:1)
Unparalled Ridiculous Power=Golden. (Score:4, Funny)
Arrr! I must get me plug in fer the day o' days before me comments. I hope no scallawag keel-hauls (-1 Mod) me fer me ferver -Yar Har!)
Ye' must be three sheets to the wind, if ye' were to tell me 'twer not an age ye' call "GOLDEN" (Yarrr! GOLD!)
Aye, I can recall back to day I was but a gamin' lubber - Me Atari and me spent many a countless watch ravenging the
Let me take ye' forward a stormy watch or two, and remind ye' of where the ship lies -
Weee've got us photorealism, Multiiii-thread Cooores,
Swashbucklin and Adventurin
An' Lo' Killin. Aye, Killin Galoooore!
An' Now in 5.1 audio, needn't bother with letter's yer Eyes
Have ye seen ye Oblivion?
Have ye seen ye F.E.A.R. - W.O.W. - Ye Console P-Cube-X?
Even now yer belov'd Dungeon-o-Dragons?
Ye scurvey dog, could ye live now without PCI-Express?
Yarr - I fear thar be some dissen't among the ranks,
the ol' buccaneers tend much t' thar ways
Those dogs who worship thar good ol' days, aye, they should walk the plank!
Aye! 'ts ne'r been be'er
te see games as a treasure
Ye'd have te be plum-gone rum insane,
te think the past be'er 'an than a world with
Massive Multiplayer Online Raidin' Pirate Games! YARRR HARRR!!! [puzzlepirates.com]
Not yet, but we're due. (Score:2)
Some time in the late 80s another boom started and ran into the early 90s. This is the rise of PC gaming and the debut of games like Wolfenstein, Doom, X-Wing, X-COM, Command & Conquer, and Warcraft. This golden age stagnated when all the new games seemed to just be clones of what came in the years before.
1998 and 1999 saw some impressive game releases with Half-Life probably being the most notable in the PC world, b
The golden age.. (Score:4, Insightful)
And surely 'twas made all the sweeter when it became easy to find ye massive torrents with all of each system's entire calalogue o' ROMs in a single RARrrr, matey!
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MMORPG's definitely not (Score:2, Insightful)
Except this is the pit. (Score:2, Informative)
For nintendo fans. They are getting EXACTLY what they want and deserve a great console, great games, great controller. But let's look at the other two.
Sony has now forced the market into blu-ray and is now beating the consumer with the price. They have failed in every way possible and the only one who suffers is the consumer. No rumble, a weak and late motion controller, they might have more power but it's significantly harder to progr
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Unless he's a developer - RIGHT NOW - how the fuck is this informative? Or is this more of the Slashdot-Digg devo shit again?
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In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
In other news, dairy farmers throughout the world wish to remind the public of the miraculous health properties of milk and cheese, and potato farmers, noting the potato's abundance of Vitamin C, have also made an announcement that a diet rich in potatoes is a great way to avoid any possibility of scurvy.
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My Definitnion (Score:2, Interesting)
The Golden Age can't be now (not for me anyway) because I have a job, a spouse, kids and a house to attend to. Oh there are plenty of great games I would love to play and really immerse my self in, but I can't really get the time.
Now my so
He's right (Score:2)
But if you keep your eye on the good stuff, it has never been equalled. HL2 (and its episodes), the upcoming Portal and TF2, Oblivion, all the DS's great games, the upcoming Wii, Shadow of Colossus, that painted dog game on PS2 (forget name sorry), Xbox Live, upcoming Mass Effect, MMOGs like EVE
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How insightful.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Julian Murdoch thinks that this is the best time ever to be a gamer
Well of course it is, as time goes by, more and more games are created, more and more consoles are created, more and more emulators are developped, and nothing disappears.
Being a gamer in 2020 > being a gamer in 2010 > being a gamer in 2005 > being a gamer in 2000 > being a gamer in 1995 > being a gamer in 1985 > being a gamer in 1975 > being a gamer in 1930.
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My Golden Age (Score:2)
I love my current gaming just as much, but the days of playing the original Final Fantasy till 4am is still fresh in my mind.
Golden Age is subjective.
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I think it matters a lot on where you are standing (Score:4, Insightful)
For my kids, though, holy cow! For $50 I got a flash cart that can play almost 30 years worth of console games on my son's GBA. He has a library of over a hundred games, and they are all fun for him, no "Yo' Noid" crap. In less than 2 months, my daughter will be waving a contol around like a tennis raquett, or turning like a steering wheel, just like I did with my Atari 2600 joysticks and paddles. But hers will actually control the game! Would you just kill for that back in our "Golden Age" of the 70's and 80's and early 90's?
And yesterday, my youngest asked my daughter a question about ninja's. Her response: "Let's ask the computer." In 2 or 3 minutes, he had color pictures printed and hanging on his door and his question was answered. I remember when Scotty asked the computer questions, now my kids do it
So I think that todays kid's "Golden Age" kicks ass, just like ours did.
what golden age? maybe for consoles but not for PC (Score:2)
good new rts? maybe CoH, but it's too easy and too short. nothing like C&C, populous, starcraft, civilization or other RTS classics have come out in a long time. civ4= civ3 clone with 3d. it's not a "new game."
sports games are no different than the last few years except with new team/stats/player database
recent FPS games: fear, prey. both pretty "been there, done that." maybe portal will be cool. hl2 was a good engine a c
i think the last "golden" age just ended (Score:2)
The Golden age of gaming is... (Score:2)
Steven
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The DS is full of games like this, as was the GBA (the WarioWare games are a great example). The inherent hardware limitations along with the strong portable market pr