Jenova Chen and thatgamecompany have created a delightful videogame-meets-art title. After playing Flower to completion on the PS3, we can confirm that they have given us another game to talk about, puzzle over, and enjoy.
The media, hungry for stories, is way too quick to link gaming with violent crimes. But the data indicate that, if anything, the opposite is true: Crime has gone down during the recent explosion in videogames. Of course, none of this stops the press from piling on, and the gaming press from piling on the pile-on.
It has become popular to say that the gaming industry has become recession-proof, simply because the overall sales for 2008 are up year over year…but those numbers only tell part of the story. Other sources are starting to report some troubling trends in gaming sales; not the least of which is the plummeting price of used games. These trends could lead to some troubling times for gaming in 2009.
Jack Thompson is a master of self-promotion. The Florida resident has made a career out of talking to anyone who will listen about the evils of video gaming, the violent ideas and passions that gaming puts into the minds and hearts of children, and the soulless industry that cranks out these terrible games.
The Sony Video Store on the PlayStation Network is filled with a good selection of movies, and you can’t beat the convenience of renting or even buying movies from your couch and watching them on your big screen with your PlayStation 3. Renting movies is a joy on the system–although it would be nice to have longer than 24 hours to watch the content–but what happens when you buy a movie?
Spore, after more than 10 years of development time, is finally available for the PC and Mac. The game comes from the mind of the talented Will Wright, the man who gave us The Sims and the original SimCity titles.
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