Weekend Confirmed Episode 53
by Garnett Lee, Mar 25, 2011 11:00am PDTThe Nintendo 3DS arrives in Europe and North America over the weekend but Jeff and Garnett have already been playing with the new handheld for a week. Their impressions of the hardware and some of the launch games fill most of the opening Whatcha Been Playin? section but there's much more to come includine Crysis 2, Shogun 2, Mortal Kombat, and Patapon 3. Shacknews's own Jeff Mattas and good friend of the show Christian Spicer round out the cast this week and brought their A game for the Warning where the group covers game criticism, behaviorism as applied to discovery in games, and more. All that, plus this week's videogame news in the Front Page and Finishing Moves make this a can't miss show.
Weekend Confirmed Ep. 53: 03/25/2011
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If you're viewing this in the GameCenter application, you can play Weekend Confirmed Episode 52 directly.
Weekend Confirmed comes in four segments to make it easy to listen to in segments or all at once. Here's the timing for this week's episode:
- Whatcha' Been Playin Part 1: Start: 00:00:00 End: 00:29:52
- Whatcha' Been Playin Part 2: Start: 00:30:40 End: 01:01:34
- The Warning: Start: 01:02:40 End: 01:34:46
- Featured Music "All My Life" by David RuffinJr.: 01:34:36 End: 01:38:02
- Front Page news: Start: 01:38:02 End: 02:13:11
This week's Featured Music comes from the supremely talented David Ruffin Jr. In the past years, highly touted music publications such as Rolling Stone, The Source, and Rap Pages have labeled David Jr. as "talented and is up-and-coming". However, perhaps his most thrilling moment in music came when he heard a world wide, multi-platinum song, called...Gin & Juice. A Hip-Hop Classic now! A song that Dr. Dre, T-Green, Snoop, and he collaborated on and recorded together. David Jr. recently relocated to Los Angeles in an attempt to get some recognition for his latest creations. David credits his father, along with current soloist, Joe and 80s crooners, Alexander ONeal, James D-Train Williams, and the great Marvin Gaye as the major influences on his style of singing.
Pick up a copy of his new CD "All My Life" at CD Baby. You will not be disappointed. And keep up with the latest and greatest from David Ruffin Jr. on ReverbNation, facebook, and twitter.
Original music in the show by Del Rio. Get his latest Album, The Wait is Over on iTunes. Check out more, including the Super Mega Worm mix and other mash-ups on his ReverbNation page or Facebook page, and follow him on twitter
Jeff can also be seen on The Totally Rad Show. They've gone daily so there's a new segment to watch every day of the week!
Remember to join the Official Facebook Weekend Confirmed Page and add us to your Facebook routine. We'll be keeping you up with the latest on the show there as well.
Epic Mickey 2 for Vita coming June 18
Poker Night 2 antes up on iOS
Warhammer Quest hitting iOS May 30
Super Stardust dev making 'spiritual successor' for PS4
Dungeons & Dragons: Chronicles of Mystara preview: classic arcade revival




Comments
Videogames find themselves in a very interesting place. They are the first intersection between media - typically used to express ideas or pass on stories, and games - typically used for entertainment.
Think about games outside the videogame industry. How many of them even attempt to push towards 'art'? Board games have been around forever, and none of them are considered art. The people that mae them and the people that play them aren't artists.
Games like Football, Hockey, Basketball, and their ilk are considered sport. Not art. They don't aim for anything other than to provide those to play them an watch them with entertainment.
Adding media - the video in videogames - into the equation adds the possibility for the expression of ideas, themes, stories and visions into the act of playing games. They can add rule-sets and systems that help bring the player into a role or a world.
I don't consider this crossroad a problem. I consider it a boon. I welcome games that seek nothing more than sport - to entertain those who play or (one day) watch the best play. I also welcome those games that seek to use the medium to present ideas, and use it's unique strengths go pass on messages and themes.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 14 replies.
Think about chess, the game is completely independent of any physical pieces. By knowing the rules assigned to all the pieces and the size of the grid I can play the game keeping track of it all in my head and calling out piece movements. The board and pieces simply exist as a way to keep track of what is going on in the game. In this sense they are nothing like a videogame because it is impossible to remove a rule-set from the rest of a video-game and play it independently.
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