A Brief History of Social Games 33
Tarinth writes "Social games (such as FarmVille, etc.) are hardly new, because games have been part of recorded history for thousands of years. An infographic has integrated many of the key games from history (starting with Egypt's Senet game from 3100 BC), showing major milestones along the way, such as play-by-mail, Dungeons and Dragons, and Magic: the Gathering. Today's cultural phenomenon of social games, which might better be better called 'social network games,' is the confluence of several trends ranging from asynchronous gameplay, social play, and virtual economies — all of which are shown within the infographic."
Chess All (Score:2)
Please see subject... That is All.
Re: (Score:2)
You win this round, Anonymous Coward!! [shakes fist vehemently]
News for nerds? (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Nerds (and/or geeks) all around the world play games like Dungeons and Dragons and Magic the Gathering to obtain all sorts of social contact... Just because said social interaction occurs in places with names like "Guard Tower" or within one's basement doesn't make it any less social. ;)
Re: (Score:2)
Claire Standish: So academic clubs aren't the same as other kinds of clubs.
John Bender: Ah... but to dorks like him, they are. What do you guys do in your club?
Brian Johnson: Well, in physics we... we talk about physics, properties of physics.
John Bender: So it's sorta social, demented and sad, but social. Right?
Game! (Score:2)
What, no mention of Game! [wittyrpg.com]?
VGA Planets (Score:3, Interesting)
Good times. A privateer gorby, some cloaked ships towing in victims. So much fun. I remember picking up copies of Computer Shopper to get phone numbers for local bbs's that hosted games and even a meet up with other players from one of them. I think it was the first PC game I played with human opponents.
Re: (Score:2)
Good times for the novice web surfer and gamer!
Kings of Chaos? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Excellent manufactured blog post (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
What is obvious to you (the social nature of games), however, isn't particularly obvious to most people.
Do you really think "most people" are that dimwitted?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
The topic is far too idiotic for me to actually spend those five minutes.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, I read the infographic and the subjective stuff is terrible and hard to ignore. The objective stuff is often just wrong, implying connections that weren't there, and missing other very important ones. The history and chronology was all off, and the examples used frequently not even representative of the trend he's trying to illustrate.
A historical approach may have needed to be ten times as long, but it also would have been actually worth reading.
Social RPGS ... Mafia Wars? Really? That's the best
Infographic (Score:1, Insightful)
-n. --An "informative" picture composed of words, lines, bubbles, arrows, colors, clouds, or kittens. Used like a chart, graph, timeline, or illustration yet requires none of the forethought. Also useful for creating arbitrary links between random points of data.
Social -adj. --When added to a noun, such as "media", "networking", or "gaming", implies potential for making money on the Internet.
WTF? (Score:3, Insightful)
"Infographic?" Really?
"Diagram" or "Flowchart" or even fucking "Image" weren't pretentious enough, you had to hit us with fucking "Infographic?"
Strip Dungeons and Dragon FTW! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
By the way... what exactly is the right kind of sausage party?
I survived 3 weeks of Farmville... (Score:2, Interesting)
!Interesting. (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
P.S. Why is settlers of catan so popular?!
I hear settlers of catan is a "gateway" game leading newbies to more complex RPG games, and allows for a combination of cards, competitive strategy and if you like, roleplaying. I haven't played it yet, but there are podcasts out there that mention it, like "Fear the Boot." The point is that it's like playing a light RPG but at a family/friends level without the stigmas of multi-day campaigns and basement dueling.
Interative-wiki-map-thingy-idea (Score:2)
Won't someone with more free time than I have code an HTML-5 -based association-node-map-thingy that you can interactively browse and edit in wiki-style?
It would be nice to see how different things relate to each other and how. I'd love to browse around the history of gaming, with games linking each other based on whatever criteria makes sense. HTML-5 would make this doable without flash. :)
There's some DB project working on this kind of associative mapping too, but the name escapes me.