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a forum for the uses of videogames in advertising, politics, education, and other everyday activities, outside the sphere of entertainment
ABOUT About This Site - RSS Feed Ian Bogost (editor) Gonzalo Frasca (editor emeritus) SPONSORS
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Whose Reality Games? November 12, 2004 - by Ian Bogost I flew to the Serious Games Summit DC straight from our Videogames with an Agenda opening in London. As I was stumbling through the Reagan airport after my transatlantic, I remember noticing a very young couple waiting past security, near the escalators. These kids looked barely old enough to be my undergraduate students. They were eerily, perfectly beautiful, she with a long brunette mane and a little too much eye makeup; he with chiseled, square features. I remember them because she was standing behind him as he sat in his wheelchair, missing his right leg from the knee down. She rested her arm across the shoulder of his navy t-shirt, which had emblazoned on it: USMC. Kuma\War has just announced a new segment of their ongoing "ripped from the headlines" newsgame platform, Stories from the Front. It's something like Omaha Beach meets American Idol. Have a read:
In July and August, 2004 Kuma invited military personnel or their friends or family to submit their 'Stories From The Front' and to share their experiences in defense of America with the public they serve. YOU will select one of these stories to be turned in to a playable Kuma\War mission featuring models of the winner and friends. Cast your vote for the mission you'd most like to play!
More disturbingly, Kuma seems to have built this into some kind of Maxim Magazine cross promotion. You know, that's the mens rag that features suggesting pictures of pretty women like the one near the escalator. My brother-in-law recently joined the Marines. We hope to get to see him at Thanksgiving, in between his combat training sessions. No telling if he'll be visiting at Christmastime, or already on a cargo plane to a place like Fallujah. Somehow I'd rather he had played the Kuma\War mission where he would have to steer his wheelchair around the busy terminal of Reagan airport, manage the ongoing phantom pain in his missing leg, and count the other casualties that our Reality Games don't. Comment from Ian Bogost on November 15, 2004
Here's another example of the truly dimented commercialization of the consequences of soldiering, from Automotive News (via Saturation.org):
Scion has paired with aftermarket manufacturer Indpendent Mobility Systems Inc. of Farmington NM, to create 20 units a month of the Scion xB xRamp. Comment from gino on November 29, 2004
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