RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘gaming’

Game for it

By Richard Taylor
Editor, BBC Click

Gaming character Harry Potter

The duties of Hollywood stars these days extend well beyond simply acting and publicising their latest blockbuster movie.

Actors are now taking a more active role in bringing to life their characters in video game spin-offs.

Harry Potter is one franchise in which the wunderkind has been busy sprinkling his magic beyond books and the silver screen.

Most actors lend their voices to avatars to preserve authenticity, and possibly to fulfil the terms of their own contracts.

But five years ago, the original title Grand Theft Auto: Vice City managed to get Hollywood’s Ray Liotta to voice the protagonist.

Another game with no film legacy – but which benefited from a celebrity’s touch – is the latest instalment of the Call of Duty franchise.

A so-called "first-person shooter"game released last year saw Kiefer Sutherland voice the part of an army commander, while actor Gary Oldman took on another character.

This growing trend is a sign that the world of video gaming is starting to enter the mainstream.

"Videogames have almost become acceptable and cool for grown ups – not for people who are just in their teens"

Actress Eliza Dushku

This success is partly down to the popularity of games consoles such as Nintendo Wii which have all sorts of people waving their arms around.

Jesse Divinch, a research analyst at Electronic Entertainment Design and Research (Eedar), said the gaming industry has grown up over the last couple of years.

"Now we’re reaching a mass critical point where video games are just a device for males aged 18 to 35, he said, "video games are now for everybody".

But gaming for actors now means a chance to play their part at the vanguard of popular entertainment.

Rogue Warrior, a forthcoming first-person shooter, stars Oscar nominee Mickey Rourke playing the potty-mouthed Navy Seal Dick Marcinko.

But Mickey Rourke believes movies and games are still two distinct genres.

"I don’t really think people yet are comparing the two, insofar as somebody’s performance in a videogame as opposed to a feature film," he explained.

But film star Eliza Dushku, who plays Rubi Malone in the upcoming game Wet, believes it is de rigueur to be in with the gaming fraternity.

Actor Mickey Rourke

"Videogames have almost become acceptable and cool for grown ups – not for people who are just in their teens," she said.

She added that gaming was now accepted as a hobby.

"I know so many people – friends, actors, directors – who are older and used to maybe play in private, but who can now say it loud and proud."

There is also some kudos for actors playing a cool video game character, as gaming research analyst Michael Pachter explained.

"Actors play games and it’s almost bragging rights to say to their friends ‘I was voice in that game’," he said.

Another attraction for the likes of Beyonce is the fact that marketing men can offer good financial rewards thanks to individual titles selling more than ever.

The public can also identify with celebrities, and seeing them playing games acts as an influence, according to Mr Divinch.

"These are people that we follow; we know their likes, we know their dislikes," he said, "so when we see them play these games, they do have an influence over us in the very same sense that our peers have influence over us."

But in the grand scheme of Tinseltown, the involvement of A-listers in games is still fairly small.

As Mickey Rourke put it, "The fact is when I go out and see another actor we’re not going to talk about video games."


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Price warfare: Gamers outraged at new Call of Duty’s £55 price tag

Gaming fans are unhappy after the makers of one of the year’s most hyped video games, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, revealed they’d be charging an extra £10 for it.

King.com joins the migration to iPhone

King.com, which focuses on skill-based games for prizes, is migrating its web-based casual games into iPhone version. Its Amazon Survival game, which is also developed into iPhone version, is a puzzle game where you should save the Amazon jungle.
Launched in August 2003, King.com website has more than 150 games which are played by 17.5 million [...]

Dear developers, sell your iPhone game under $2

If you are developing new iPhone games now, please consider the price wisely. The cheaper is better, according to a recent study about top selling App Store games. At least, if you had plan to increase the game’s sales volume.

In a study of the top 100 iPhone games, PocketGamer.biz has discovered something that really isn’t [...]

Videos: iPhone 3GS running gpSPhone, gpx4iPhone emulators

ZoDDt has published two videos from the upcoming gpSPhone and psx4iPhone emulators new versions running on iPhone 3Gs. A good news for iPhone gaming.

The result is shown in the video below where you can see gpSPhone running at a minimum 150 FPS and maxing out at about 225 FPS, with sound and 0 frameskip! This [...]

Project Natal

Some fanboy stuff for Friday – cutting edge video games, this does have some real world application too.
About 6 months ago I was wondering if anybody was ever going to come up with an answer to the Wii. Yes, it’s revolutionary, but it’s just a wireless controller, you’d think that in over a year somebody [...]

Mp Tells Of Young Nephew’s Video Game Addiction

Leong Wee Keat
weekeat@mediacorp.com.sg

A 12-YEAR-OLD nephew’s addiction to cyber and gaming cafes led Member of
Parliament Ellen Lee (Sembawang GRC), to table similar questions to three
different ministries in Parliament yesterday.

According to Ms Lee, her nephew’s addiction had led to his incurring a
debt. She asked if there were sufficient controls and measures against the
proliferation of cyber gaming cafes, especially in the heartlands and
close to schools.

In reply, Senior Minister of State for Home Affairs, Associate Professor
Ho Peng Kee, said the police do not allow computer gaming establishments
to be set up in Housing and Development Board (HDB) residential zones
where most schools are located.

Such establishments are only allowed in shopping, recreational or
commercial centres, he said. HDB town centres, however, were classified as
part commercial and part residential and could allow gaming establishments
to operate. But he assured the House that the police assess the location’s
suitability before granting licences.

Ms Lee also asked about steps taken by schools and communities to minimise
obsession or addiction by children and youths to cyber gaming.

In response, Minister of State for Education Gan Kim Yong said schools
adopt a “holistic approach” to the problem. Besides actively advising
students against frequenting computer games centres or cyber cafes, they
also do counselling. Ang Mo Kio Secondary School, for example, has
included topics such as blogging, Internet gaming and cyber bullying in
the school’s Civics and Moral Education module. The Education Ministry is
also preparing a cyber-wellness resource kit to complement the schools’
efforts.

Mr Teo Ser Luck, Parliamentary Secretary of the Ministry of Community
Development, Youth and Sports, added that his ministry is working with
community partners such as the National Youth Council, and the National
Committee on Youth Guidance and Rehabilitation, to promote cyber-wellness
among youths.

Meanwhile, the police raided three Internet cafes – believed to be
providing illegal online gambling – in Geylang last Friday and arrested 15
men and three women, and seized 84 computers, 21 fruit machines and more
than $20,000 in cash.