Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Tag: video games (Page 6 of 16)

Day 207: call me a hypocrite

…but I’m thinking of getting a PS3.

I know, I know.  Where was that man of just three weeks ago that detailed his list of reasons why a PS3 Slim held no interest for him?  Did I happen upon some Sony Kool-Aid while in Portland and take a swig?  Did I win one in some kind of online Google puzzle contest?

Well, no.  All that happened was that I found out that I can apply for a Sony credit card, order a PS3, and get a $100 credit back.  My net cost for a new PS3 would then only be $200, which makes it much more compelling for me.

Why?  I’m not exactly sure why the $100 makes such a big difference.  Maybe because it feels like a $200 price drop on a new slimmer system?  I haven’t quite figured out why my mind reacted so differently to thinking about a $200 PS3 compared to a $300 one.  The truth is, I could afford either.  But, at $200, it really feels like a deal; at $300, it still feels like it’s a bit overvalued.

The hassle, of course, is that I end up having to deal with a new credit card that I’ll probably never use for anything else (unless I buy other things from Sony for more rewards points) and the credit is more like a mail-in rebate because it’s not an immediate discount.  So I still truly send $300 on the system and then on the next credit card statement, get a $100 credit.

Also, all my arguments still hold some worth: will this push me to purchase more Blu-Rays, which I don’t need?  Will this be the start of a slippery slope of impulse PS3 game purchases that will put an even bigger dent into our pocketbook?  These are all things I’ll have to consider.

But I’m sorely tempted to apply for the card and get a PS3 Slim in my hands within the week.

Day 205: AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAAaAAAAA!!!

This story begins with a game called Scribblenauts that I talked about earlier this year.  I’m excited for the game Scribblenauts to come out.  I was so excited that I made a Scribblenauts image the background wallpaper of my computer monitors at work.

I work in an open pit setup, where one my co-workers (Brice) sits right behind me.  Every once in a while, Brice would turn around and ask about my Scribblenauts wallpaper.  I would reply that I was excited about the game.  He would ask if it was out yet, and I would reply that it wasn’t coming out until September (which, now, has finally arrived).  He would say something to the effect of, that’s so long!, and appear to be frustrated.

I like Brice and didn’t want him to be frustrated.  So I started something new: I started changing my desktop wallpaper to be about a game that was coming out that very week.  This way, when Brice asked me about it, I could get him excited by letting him know that the game was coming out in a matter of days (or, later in the week, that it was out right now)!

This past Monday, I was scanning this week’s releases when I came upon an indie game about falling called AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAAaAAAAA!!! – A Reckless Disregard for Gravity.  I made it my wallpaper and proceeded about my day.

Because it was a PC game, I downloaded a demo of it later that day.  I played the demo.  I loved it.  The sensation of speed and danger when falling, the quick gameplay, the overly clever level titles, the overall indie feel that it exuded without weighing the gameplay down with any pretention.  It was delicious.

So, I bought it.  I had discovered it looking for a cool wallpaper based on a joke that had come about because of Brice’s impatience on the release of a DS game I’m excited about.  I don’t think I ever would have found it otherwise.  I’m very glad I did.

Odd how that works.

Day 204: morality system

Video games make morality so simple sometimes.

Choose to do one thing and your character becomes better.  Choose another and your character becomes worse.

Life is full of these choices, of course.  The simple fact of the matter is that most of us automatically choose one path or the other every time, without really thinking about it.  Most small choices have an obviously morally correct choice, which is something we chose instinctively.

The big questions don’t really come up.  Should I save the life of my enemy?  Should I lie to someone rich for my slight monetary gain?  These questions are certainly a bit more probing, but they’re not situations we often run into in real life.

Because most of us in the slightly positive area, there are few moral choices that actually come up in our lives that truly test our resolve and determine the life path we take.  And, more often than not, those choices have no real effect on our lives past the event.

You get the bill at a restaurant and the waiter’s forgotten to put on a drink.  It’s a tiny charge ($2, say), but the simple fact is that the bill is wrong and in your favor.  Do you bring it up?  Do you pretend to not notice?  The morally correct thing to do is to bring the error to the attention of the restaurant, but in all practical terms, your choice won’t really matter.

Someone you’d rather not hang out with asks if you have plans.  You’re fairly certain they’ll invite themselves along if you mention that you’re doing a group activity and you’d rather they didn’t.  Do you lie?  Is the better social choice different from the correct moral choice?

And in the end, does it matter?  Of course it does.  Society has laws and standards that punish those that make the wrong choices.  But it also matters most of all to ourselves.  We, more than any other person or establishment, face the consequences for any active choice we make.  We’re forced to live with it the rest of our lives.

Like a simple video game system, our subconscious is keeping track, making marks every time we make a decision.  None of us are perfect moral beings and none of us are totally corrupt moral demons, but we all have a pretty solid idea of where we think we stand on the spectrum.

Day 202: dvRRRRRR!!

I’ve spent most of tonight trying to fix our DVR, which started to record things without sound a few weeks ago.

So far, I haven’t had too much luck.  The fixes are getting slightly more and more harsh, and I fear that I am just about to reach the line where I wipe the machine and start over, losing those precious Gossip Girl recordings that I haven’t quite caught up on.

Also, I played a demo of the game AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAAaAAAAA!!! – A Reckless Disregard for Gravity today and I loved it.  Yes, that’s the actual title.

Lastly, Katie and I just bought one of those little USB video camera things so we can catch every adorable baby moment as it happens and get it up on Youtube faster than two shakes of a walrus’s tail.

It looks like this:

OK, time to go see how the DVR OS reinstall is going.

And perhaps indulge in a fudge bar.

Fudge bars can make any unproductive night satisfying.

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