Archive for the 'Games' Category

Child’s Play!

Nov 12, 2008 in Books, Education, Games, Geek, Personal

As the holiday season fast approaches (Seriously, stores?  Christmas decorations already?), it’s a time when one’s mind turns to good will towards others, at least when not scoping out the latest pre-Black Friday sales.  I just last night saw that this year’s Child’s Play charity is now active.  

Since 2003, over 100,000 gamers worldwide have banded together through Child’s Play, a community based charity grown and nurtured from the game culture and industry. Over two million dollars in donations of toys, games, books and cash for sick kids in children’s hospitals across North America and the world have been collected since our inception.

I have been proud to donate in the past, and am proud to contribute yet again.  Last year they added my local Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. This year the children over there will see the following books from me:

So if you have it in your hearts and wallets, I encourage you to donate even a small amount to this great charity that really contributes to better quality of life for children stuck in hospitals.

*Spore* Little Bronty

Jun 17, 2008 in Games, None

Video games destroy young lives! Or not.

May 09, 2008 in Education, Games

In a delightful study by Harvard psychologists, they note the following things:

  • BOYS who don’t play videogames at all are at greater risk of getting into trouble than those who play violent games occasionally
  • The violent crime rate has gone down as video game play has gone up
  • There is a correlation between playing M-rated games and aggressive behavior, but that does not mean causation.  More aggressive children could just be drawn to those games

These are all bits and pieces of info floating around in Grand Theft Childhood: The Surprising Truth About Violent Video Games and What Parents Can Do.

In related news, It’s getting a lot harder for kids to get their hands on M-rated games.  In 2000, 85% of kids were able to get adult games.  This year, FTC Secret Shoppers found that only 20% were able to access them.  The video game business is the best content industry when it comes to shutting kids down from getting at adult content.

This Week in Media Consumption

May 03, 2008 in Comics, Games, Movies, TV

Comics:

  • Blue Beetle #26 – A nearly all Spanish issue, and a delightful story that I (mostly) was able to understand
  • DCU #0 – a decent introduction to the DC universe as of RIGHT NOW before things go crazy in Final Crisis
  • Immortal Iron Fist #14 – if they ever get around to making that Iron Fist movie, it should be just like this.
  • New Avengers #40 – Rewind to past events we glimpsed or had some ideas about from before and get a clearer picture of how the Secret Invasion started
  • Thor Ages of Thunder – this book was beautiful and touched my mythology nerd core in all the right places
  • American Way – I bought this trade at New York Comic Con for cheap based on vaguely remembering some internet recommendations, and I was not disappointed.  It’s a real world approach to superheroes, placing them in the midst of the civil rights upheavals of the sixties.
  • Iron Man: Demon in a Bottle – I was at Borders and saw a copy of this opened on the shelf, so I took the opportunity to sit down and read it before the movie came out this week.  It’s a 30 year old story, and it’s great.  It was also pretty shocking at one point.

TV:

  • How I Met Your Mother – some decent fallout from last week which could lead to some shift in the characters
  • House – Nice joke played on the peons this week.

Movies:

  • Iron Man – Awesome.  Great summer popcorn flick.

Games:

  • Just Cause – I wrapped this game up.  It was actually a pretty cool ending that made use of the stunt system nicely.  As I said before, a decent enough $15 game, but not much more than that.  Clocked time, 25 hours or so, but you could do all of the story missions in under 5 hours easily if you don’t run around liberating villages, finding collectibles, and doing sidemissions.
  • Mario Kart Wii – I’m really liking this so far.  Beth also enjoys it.  She plays with the steering wheel, while I prefer the wiimote + nunchuck.