Being a parent of a small child, I have to say she’s missing the mark in her harsh assessment of what “games” can bring to her son. My daughter who is 2 1/2 years old has a leapster hand held. Even though its above her age category she’s gotten the hang of it and plays most of the games. I’m sure it has everything to do with the way its presented. I doubt anyone could get a 2.5 year old to sit still and learn what she’s learned through straight teaching. Because she plays while she learns she picks it up. I work in the industry doing some of the most technical work a person can find. I challange her to attempt it if she thinks we’re all morons. I make games that encourage girls to think. She needs to have a talk with our President (#5 on the list of most influential women in games) if this mom thinks games rot your brain. If it wasn’t for my tech loving father, making “games” on our Tandy that helped me with math, I would have probably not taken an interest in science and computers. I would probably be working some slack jaw job in a factory just waiting for the day when I grab my chest and double over for the last time…
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Being a parent of a small child, I have to … [From Comments] 05 January 2010 at 4:04 pm by
+ My kids are game addicts… and I’m ok with … [From Comments] By 18 December 2009 at 8:22 pm and have No Comments
My kids are game addicts… and I’m ok with that. Perhaps I never should have been a parent because I’m the kind of parent most parents HATE. When my kids were 2 months old I started putting a little cereal in their bottle at night so they would sleep through the night (and they did). At 3 months old I fed them baby food. As soon as they got their first teeth I was feeding them Rice and Beans. I think my oldest had her first slice of Pizza before she turned 1. This attitude spread to other things as they got older. I actively encouraged my kids to watch TV. Barney, The Rugrats, Dora the Explorer, and everything in between on PBS and Nickelodeon as they got older then they added Cartoon Network. I always heard people saying you shouldn’t let your kids watch TV when they are little, and you should read to them every night and blah blah blah. But me, I don’t listen, I let them watch TV, LOTS of TV. My oldest daughter is now 10. When she was 1 she would talk your ear off telling you stories. When she was 2 she would tell EVERYONE she ran into stories (including embarassing ones about grandma needing to go potty, but thats a story for later). One day I was ina a waiting room and my daughter was walking around yapping to anyone and another mom leans over and asks me how old she is. I tell her a little over 2. She looks at me with surprise and says “my goodness, she speaks so well and in full sentences! My daughter is the same age and only says a few basic words like ‘ball’ ‘mama’ and ‘cookie’. I don’t know what the problem is I NEVER let her watch TV and I read to her all the time. How did you teach your daughter so much so fast” I looked at her and said “TV. She watches LOTS of TV.” The mom gave me a tight smile and and then turned away and didn’t speak to me again. What does this have to do with games? I’m getting there. When I was a kid my dad got me a Colecovision followed by an Atari 2600. I played a little here and there but I was more into books and barbie dolls. Eventually my dad bought me an NES and a Sega master System. I still didn’t really care, I was still into barbies and books. When I was 17 I bought myself a gameboy, mostly out of curiousity. I fell in love with Link’s Awakening and Stargate. But It was something I played once ina blue moon, then I forgot about it. When I was 20 I played the N64 for the first time and I finished Mario64 and bought Ocarina of Time when it came out. I tore through Ocarina of Time and bought Majora’s Mask. I hataed it and as quickly as I had started playing I stopped. Life went on, Games came and went, I didn’t care. Then the gamecube came out and new Zelda games. I remembered how much I loved my GB and N64 Zelda games and asked my husband for a Gamecube for Christmas. He had asked me for a PS2 for Christmas. Before meeting me my husband was into playing Resident Evil and Mortal Kombat and football games. So that Christmas He got his PS2 and I got my Gamecube, I was happy with my gamecube and he was happy with his PS2 and neither one touched the others console. Then I saw Prince of Persia Sands of Time. I bought it for the PS2 and the first time I put it in the console, that console became mine…all mine. Games became a huge part of my life, I fell in love and I started collecting and playing A LOT. Being a hoarder I still had every console I had ever owned and their games so I went back and played some old stuff as well. Now I’m 32, I own tons of consoles and hand helds. I collect games and action figures, I write game reviews for the library system’s Teen Blog in my town. And I encourage game play in my family. A few years back Vtech came out with a console for kids, the V-Smile. Gaming and education, sounded good to me. I bought my kids one for christmas and they loved it, they would play for hours. The next Christmas, I got them the V-Flash, it was another learning console, a step up from the V-smile, a sort of educational starter Playstation. By the time I got it though my girls had moved on to PS2 and Gamecube, but my son Loved playing the V-Tech consoles. By the time birthdays rolled around they all wanted GBAs. And there we go. I had turned my kids into gamers. I was so proud! My husband was sort of amused by my glee. I swore up and down that gaming was good for them, he just smiled at me and shook his head slowly. From Gameboys they graduated to DSs and borrowing my PSP. Each one has a clear gaming identity as well. My oldest daughter likes Girly games. makeup, animals, dress up and she also likes JRPGs. My middle child, an 8 year old girl is a bit harder to place. She can play the dress up thing and she loves cooking mama and animal games but she’s not above a little Zombie shooting in House of the Dead. My son…My son… Before I talk about him let me just throw in that I even got my mom into games. She loves Wii sports and good lord you should hear her smack talk while playing Soul Calibur. (Her favorite is SC 3 because she likes the character creation. She has a shirtless Ninja she named Jackie Chan) ok back to my son. My son is a 5 year old MAN. The boy LOVES girls and cars. So I started him with Racing games. (by the way he is quite proficient at Midnight Club 3, except he needs a stack of books to reach the pedals.) From Racing games he moved on to Mario games and His favorite “Drawn to Life Spongebob edition”. Recently Scribblenauts came out and I got it for the girls and myself. I didn’t bother getting it for my son because at 5 he really can’t read very well…actually he’s having a lot of trouble at school. I got their progress reports right before thanksgiving and besides having a fan club of girls, he also likes to throw things at people who annoy him and ignore the teacher, he also has trouble with reading and writing. I have been stressed and worried about it for days. Then it happened…. we were watching Tv and he was a scribblenauts commercial. He said “I wanna play that” I said, “but sweetie you can’t read” He looked so dejected so I figured what the heck, let him try and I’ll help him along. Its been 2 days since he started playing, He’s already learned to spell about 10 words. The first night we sat together and he would tell me what he wanted, I would spell it for him, he’d type it and then he would squeal with glee when his items appeared on screen. Of course, as much as I enjoyed playing it with him, I can’t sit all day doing it so I decided to make hima “cheat sheet” I wrote out in all caps the things he had asked to make the most and I gave it to him. I read each word to him and told him if he needed more words then he could come to me and I’d add them to the list. I started with about 10 words and now I’m on page 2 and he’s spelling words on his own! He doesn’t actually play the game he just stays at the beginning screen making things and seeing what happens when they interact. Brain Age, Style Savvy, Scribblenauts and so many other games are teaching my kids so many things, helping them learn without them even realizing it. Heck even the JRPGs have helped my daughter immensely. Unlike me, my daughter has never cared for reading, what she doesn’t realize is that while playing JRPGs she’s reading so much text her reading has improved immensely and she’s enjoying it. Like me, my kids carry their DSs wherever they go, they play every chance they get. When they aren’t playing DS they’re playing any of the other consoles we own. We play Guitar Hero together and Singstar. We play Champions of Norrath and we teach them how to cooperate, how to share the spoils they pick up, how much money they need for an item, and which weapon is better between the weapon with a high attack and one with a lower attack but +20 Lightning Damage. I encourage their gameplay, I buy them as many games as I can afford. I tech them how to play mine or sit in and watch. Recently my 10yr old started to play Oblivion…I’m so Proud. I don’t know if I’m a good parent or not. I know a lot of people wouldn’t approve of how much TV they watch and Games they play. Maybe they’re right, I don’t know. All I know is that my daughters are both straight A/B students. They have a huge vocabulary, and know Cloud is overrated as a Hero. All three of them also know all the words to “Still Alive” Oh and in the time it took em to type this, I’m on page 3 of words for my son. I think any game can be educational to a certain extent if you talk about it to your kids and encourage them to ask questions (and you answer them honestly). Perceptions and Misconceptions about games runs rampant but slowly people are realizing the good they can do. East Side High in New York has discovered that Beaterator is a wonderful digital music tool and will be implementing it in their music program. The Japanese already use DSs in the classroom and my son is learning to read and spell thanks to Scribblenauts and learning faster than he has learned anything since school started. So my kids game A LOT and I am damn proud of that. The media and people at large attack gaming constantly. It teaches Violence, it makes kids lazy and unhealthy, it causes addiction. I say it teaches hand eye coordination, cooperation, sometimes a touch of history, math, reading, encourages artistic expression, relieves stress and is just plain fun. By the textbook definition I guess they are addicts, sometimes gaming for most of the day. However, I have yet to find how this has impacted them negatively. #speakout
+ HELL YEAH … [From Comments] By 26 November 2009 at 4:57 pm and have No Comments
+ Here’s my plan. … [From Comments] By 19 November 2009 at 9:51 am and have No Comments
+ Evony Ads Go From Bad To Worse To Awesome [PC] By 18 November 2009 at 1:00 am and have No Comments
You live on the internet, so we know you’ve seen them: ads for Evony, pathetic attempts at enticing people to play an online game run by shady types by using boobs. Least, they were pathetic. Now, they’re hilarious.
I rock Adblocker, so I actually haven’t seen these in a while. Which is a pity. If ever an ad was going to make me reach for the “disable” button, it would be these more recent Evony ones, what began as an attempt to cash in on Lord of the Rings having obviously become a rush to secure the services of girls appearing on porn movie box art from the 1990’s.
And no, I didn’t make that last bit up.
LazyGamer have posted a great gallery (recently updated to encapsulate the game’s recent offerings) charting the “turn” of Evony’s ads, from their humble beginnings in the Tower of Gondor to the boobs smorgasbord they offer today. Sad/fun reading awaits.
A History of Evony Ads – The insanity continues [Updated-Again] pLazyGamer, via JeffGreen]
+ For The Discerning Art Collector/Halo Fan [Halo] By 18 November 2009 at 12:00 am and have No Comments
Perhaps in an effort to appeal to a more up-market clientèle than Halo merchandise currently allows, Microsoft have commissioned a series of framed prints depicting art from Halo 3: ODST.
These aren’t the kind of things you’d get as a pre-order gift thrown in a cheap plastic frame. No, these are the kind of things that are limited to 100 of each, and will cost you $175.
There are three different prints, and each measures 13×19 inches.


+ Phoenix Wright Pleads WiiWare [Wiiware] By 17 November 2009 at 11:30 pm and have No Comments
Not that the Unterhaltungssoftware Selbstkontrolle are ever wrong when it comes to leaking game news early, but still, it’s nice to get confirmation (via the latest issue of Famitsu) that Phoenix Wright is on its way to the Wii.
The series will be released on Nintendo’s WiiWare service, with Ace Attorney out in Japan on December 15 (and going for 900 Points). It’ll be followed by Justice for All (January 26) and Trials and Tribulations (February 23), both of which will cost a little more at 1200 points.
Finally, on March 16, the fifth case of Ace Attorney – which can only be found in the DS version of the game – will be released separately, for 300 Points. And if it’s being released separately, guess that means these are ports of the PC version. Which makes sense.
No word yet, obviously, on a Western release. Stay tuned.
+ Tony Hawk Devs Working On New Board Peripheral Game? [Tony Hawk] By 17 November 2009 at 9:20 pm and have No Comments
Activision may be sending Tony Hawk: Ride out to die at retail, but the mega-publisher at least sees a little more potential in the game’s skateboard peripheral if comments from Robomodo boss David Michicich are anything to go by.
Speaking with Develop, Michicich was asked whether Robomodo – the developers behind Tony Hawk: Ride – had any other ideas for games using the board. To which Michicich replied “That’s really difficult to answer because we’re kind of, ah, [pause], we’re kind of, [pause], we’re doing a game with Activision and we’re not allowed to talk about it right now”.
That’s a yes, then.
The obvious answer is “snowboard game”, but we’re hoping for “hoverboard game” instead.
Tony Hawk Ride team hint at boarding other genres [Develop]
+ Microsoft Kindasmashes Natal Launch Rumor [Natal] By 17 November 2009 at 8:00 pm and have No Comments
Microsoft’s U.K. boss dismissed a report last week that Natal will be ready to go in November 2010, saying claims of pricing and available shipments were based on inaccurate rumors.
Neil Thompson, the U.K.chief, told GamesIndustry.biz that “We’re still very much in the baking on Natal and there’s a lot of things to get decided on it.” That goes for word that the unit would be either £50 (about $80) or even as low as £30 ($50), with as many as 14 titles available at launch and 5 million units shipped. In the face of such specifics, which were said to come from Microsoft visits with developers, Thompson basically offered a general, “nuh-uh.”
“No. They weren’t accurate, they were rumours,” Thompson said of MCV’s report. “I’ve got nothing more to say about it. We’re still very much in the baking on Natal and there’s a lot of things to get decided on it.”
GamesIndustry.biz says it will later have further in-depth interviews with both Thompson and Microsoft Europe boss Chris Lewis, but it doesn’t sound like either are going much further on this subject.
Microsoft Dismisses Natal Launch Rumours [GamesIndustry.biz via GamersReports]
+ Xbox Going Down [Note] By 17 November 2009 at 6:40 pm and have No Comments
To: Luke
From: Crecente
My consoles are working overtime these days as I work to review games, play games for judging and sneak in a bit of relaxation gaming on the side. Today my Xbox 360 started to show signs of wear, locking up four times in about two hours. Three of those times was while I was playing LEGO Indiana Jones 2, but one was when I was trying to test Twitter.
Not a good sign.
What you missed:
Win Ryu in LEGO
Sports Authority Fitness Retailer Inks Deal to Sell Wii
Assassin’s Creed II Review: A Season For Masterpieces
What Left 4 Dead 2 Boycotters Are Playing
The Sports Authority Gets Its Wii On
Confirmed: EA Closes Pandemic Studios, Says Brand Will Live On
EA Talks Command & Conquer’s “New Digital Model,” Medal of Honor “Re-invention”
Frankenreview: Left 4 Dead 2
Nintendo Dissatisfied With Sales Of Some Games, Dates Vitality Sensor Showcase
Testing Ubisoft’s “Frequent Flyer” Rewards Program With Assassin’s Creed II
Reviewer: Opportunity To Review New Tony Hawk Early Limited To Three Hours On A Saturday

