I recently read Gabrielle Zevin's Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow, which is a novel about friendship, collaboration, and video game design (among other things).
This book sent me down a bit of a nostalgic/reflective rabbit hole.
I haven't played video games with any regularity since 1993-- when I completed every level of Road Rash on the Sega. Road Rash was a motorcycle racing game, but the twist was that as you raced, you also fought people with chains and clubs and nunchucks and crowbars. Very fun. Once I got through all the levels, I got to this weird bonus level that consisted only of cops-- and cops pull you over and end your ride. So you ride for a moment and then the game just ends. It gets all blocky and fizzles out.
I was kind of disappointed with this finale-- I wanted some kind of digital trophy or a screen with a secret address-- and if you send a postcard to the secret address, then the game designers mail you a special t-shirt that reveals you conquered the game.
Something for the effort.
Anyway, that was pretty much it for me. My wife and I certainly played some Dance Dance Revolution (but we had to give it up when our first child started crawling . . . you don't want to stomp an infant's head while playing DDR, which is certainly possible, because you're jumping around, looking at a screen and meanwhile there's a little kid with a soft skull crawling around your feet and if you kill your firstborn while playing DDR it's obviously tragic but people will still laugh) and I played some MarioKart and Wii with the kids . . . I even tried to play Zelda: Breath of the Wild with my son Alex, but it gave me motion sickness. Mainly, I retired from gaming.
But this novel Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow got me thinking about all the games I missed over the last thirty years. I also read Simon Parkin's Death by Video Game: Danger, Pleasure, and Obsession on the Virtual Frontline and "Dead Space Only Gets Better with Age" by Lewis Gordon. The non-fiction put a lot of what I missed in context.
I get into all of this in the new episode of my podcast: "Tomorrow, I Will Play Video Games, Tomorrow."
It's a good episode-- I'm proud of it. It gets pretty deep.
I'm trying to condense these podcasts down into posts on my newest blogging endeavor . . .
We Defy Augury; Thoughts (Loosely) Based on Literature
We'll see how it goes.
5 comments:
RIP Burt Bacharach
Dave, it's been a privilege to collaborate with you lo these many years.
Don't forget our screenplay collaborations as well!
And it's worth mentioning that we recruited rob to play drums with us after he was fired as our manager. For taking our original tape (one copy, super smart) and accidentally taping over it whilst having a dumb, drunk, 3am conversation with a guy we called Lunchboxhead.
That some "Flight of the Conchords" Murray Hewitt type management.
let me clarify whitney's recollection by noting that...he's pretty much spot on
we really struggled in the management department.
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