This is derived from a work we read in class once about History,
is History Art or Science? While this is highly debatable, and we never truly
reached an agreement on what exactly History in the 21st century is it inspired
me to write about the current state of video games, what are they,
entertainment and a time drainer, a great experiment on pushing and testing
technology to the breaking point (and there are plenty of examples here) or is
it art, a new field in which we can express ourselves without limit?
Games as Entertainment for Generations:
It is true that games are entertainment but they can be
informative and educational while keeping us hooked, the earliest memory I have
of such a game would be Super Solvers Math Adventure in which I had to learn how
to do proper math in order to progress through the game, truth be told I
learned and enjoyed the game, Oregon Trail is another good example but I only
found it later during my adult life and I can understand why those who played
have fond memories of it (also why the dysentery part). On the other hand we
can find games that will suck us in for days, weeks or months, Doom,
Wolfenstein 3D and Commander Keen where some of the earliest examples I can
think of which I would play at computer lab back in 1994, our professor was a
hell of a cool guy to have those games installed but on the other hand putting
us through such an experience during 2nd grade really made an impact on me,
even today when I play the original Doom or Doom II back I still feel anxious when
opening doors or going through dark areas, this effect has lasted for more than
24 years!
I could keep dropping names here, everything from the original
NES, SNES, Sega Genesis, N64, PlayStation, XBOX and PC throughout the 90s and
2000s, some I am not as fond of and I could care less about such as most
Nintendo games, my nostalgia has not driven me back that hard so that I want to
play those games, I would probably enjoy them no doubt as Nintendo had some
quality stuff back in the day but not enough to drive me back to either find
the console and the original games or get an emulator to play them again.
Entertainment, in my opinion, is something that sucks your time, gives you fond
memories, makes you return for more and even years later you find yourself
sitting back on your favorite chair and giving it a try, even passing it on to
future generations,
Games as the Technology pusher:
Some games have really pushed technology to evolve rapidly to
keep up with demand, hardware can hardly cope with the ever-growing needs of
software, while this could be blamed on bad programming practices or bloated
code this can also be blamed on ambition to provide a better product (and this
is valid). Notable examples that come to mind would be Doom III (the specs back
in the day shocked us, the video and RAM requirements demanded a monster
of a machine which if curiosity strikes the mind was a single core Pentium 4
1.5GHz processor, between 256 to 512MB of RAM and a video card with 64MB of
RAM). The next big jump came in the form of Crysis, even today it's still a
joke between gamers to say, "but can it run Crysis?" to which most
modern systems should say yes, yes I can run it, but, back in the day the
question on everyone's head was "who has 2GB of RAM on their machine, a
dual-core? Wow, you need a video card with 512MB of RAM, what?". These
specs required you not only to upgrade your hardware but, in most cases, it was
also demanding that you upgraded your operating system (when Crysis era the
migration to Windows Vista had started after having Windows XP in the wild for
some 6 or 7 years, this was a weird time thinking about it). Personally, I have
never changed computers to play games of the current generation, I wait a
couple of years to get some cheap hardware and pump it up as high as I can to
get the most out of it, be it desktop or laptop, as I don't feel the need to
change computers or upgrade every year, better do it every three to five years.
Games as a method of expression and possibly the ultimate type
of Art:
Video games have pushed technology so that they can push
something new (or at least that's what I would like to think) to us, better
storytelling, quality cutscenes, from linear to multiple endings/options (which
have shown great results such as Chrono Trigger and horrendous backlash such as
Mass Effect 3), presenting worlds that at one point could have only been shown
in a table-top environment (Dungeons and Dragons or Shadowrun), but reality
also tells us that great visuals and music that brings us deep down into this
world through the avatar designated by the developers will not always result in
a great experience, throwing more money at it does not always fix the issue,
sometimes it's a matter of taste, a strong player base and reaching
expectations (which is not always the case, you can't satisfy everyone but
checking the opinion/commentary of your player base through social media could,
potentially, maybe, save your product from falling through the cracks and end
up unnoticed).
Video games have been part of my life since my very early years,
for whatever reason my dad had an Atari with a printer, I remember this because
I at one point remember bringing some type of homework or piece to school when
I was in elementary, this was way back in 1993 probably.
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