Morning Discussion
by Alice O'Connor, Feb 23, 2010 5:00am PSTChris is jetting off to Mothership GameFly this morning to teach Brian the secret handshake, the Shackshake, leaving me in charge around here for a while.
To the Shackcave!
Wargame: Airland Battle trailer details dynamic campaign
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Halo 'Bootcamp' confirmed by Microsoft
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Game Dev Tycoon studio outlines future plans
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Baldur's Gate 2 Enhanced already has 350,000 words of new content
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11Chris is jetting off to Mothership GameFly this morning to teach Brian the secret handshake, the Shackshake, leaving me in charge around here for a while.
To the Shackcave!
NPR's Bob Siegel talks with Jeff Bakalar from CNet on what underlies that famous ESRB quip "Game Experience May Change During Online Play". Nothing we haven't covered here before, but it's new to Siegel and NPR, so they ran a story on it after their story on ESRB ratings and parents trying to control what games their kids play ( http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=123971771 ).
Mr. BAKALAR: Unfortunately, the online experience is not always as benign and friendly as you might imagine. There's actually a lot of instances of homophobia, racism and misogynistic attitudes going on online. And unfortunately, it isn't as discussed as much as the actual game ratings themselves.
SIEGEL: You're not talking about what comes from the game. You're talking about what the players say as they are playing the game.
Mr. BAKALAR: Exactly, it's all about the actual online interaction of players in this virtual world.
SIEGEL: But it almost seems to me that what you're describing is an atmosphere that gives rise to, let's say the verbal equivalent of a bar fight without any physical risk. People start getting abusive and insulting in their disappointment of what's happened in the game. And on the other hand the person they're insulting could be 5,000 miles away.
Mr. BAKALAR: Exactly, I think, that's a great analogy. There's no physical consequence when you are sitting on a couch talking into a headset and the person that you could be offending or verbally assaulting could be thousands of miles away.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 100 replies.
And the whole point of this discussion is that votekick is insufficient. The culture of online games is fundamentally broken because of anonymity and a lack of consequences. Being votekicked out of a server is not punishment. It amuses these people. Then they move on to the next and ruin someone else's fun, potentially yours again on another server (or after changing names/IPs and rejoining)
In a soccer league I don't act like that because you don't say things like that to people face to face. I guarantee a lot of the people doing this online never would act like that in an in person competition. But there're also consequences if they do.
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