OK. I've seen the stories all over the game sites on Nolan Bushnell's comments on video games, and I can only come to one conclusion. He is a very bitter, bitter old man. I know he's kind of retracted some of his statements from earlier, but it still comes off the same to me. The industry has passed him by. One of his quotes, "Video games today are a race to the bottom", describing them generally as "pure, unadulterated trash" that made him "sad", makes him sound like a more sane Jack Thompson. The one quote that had me chuckling to myself was, "What I have consistently been concerned about is sort of the repetition and the lack of innovation," he explained. "Innovation is one of those things that I value very highly, and I just find that as much as I applaud the beautiful, fantastic production guys of Halo 3, it's really Doom 1 in different clothing."
OK. Let's see here. Wasn't Doom 1 just Castle Wolfenstien 2.0? Really now. It is innovation when you come up with a new way of doing an old idea. At least that's what I always thought. When you saw Tetris, you knew that it was fundamentally different than anything you’d seen before(duh!!!).
The Sims was innovative (2nd duh, but arent' there about 427 different expansion packs and versions of the same innovative? I digress).
When you climb up to Dance Dance Revolution and use your whole body, that’s innovation. (anyone remember the various power pads for all the systems?)
When you play air guitar with Guitar Hero, that’s an innovation. (Uhmm. every pattern match game that has ever been out there, except you play with an overpriced 5 button controller?)
/rant off
Read the interview on Gametap
Showing posts with label bitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bitter. Show all posts
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Monday, June 18, 2007
The iGod: Has Steve Jobs Peaked?

Love him or Hate em' you have to read this article about Apple's Steve Jobs. He is featured in New York Magazine, and it wonders whether or not the iPhone is set to be a success or a case of "imperial overreach."
It's not nice!
It's written by John Heilemann, associated with Wired , formerly of The New Yorker and The Economist.
It's likely the deepest unofficial magazine piece you'll find on the iPhone and Apple.
This is a must read after the jump. [New York Magazine]
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