user-avatar
Today is Saturday
February 4, 2012

Tag: Jack Thompson

July 6, 2009

Case of the Mondays Cure – Zombie Crossplay, Twitter Givers, and Game Politics

Perhaps you’re looking to get a pick-me-up after that long holiday weekend, or you drank too much and have to deal with a hangover at work. Maybe you just had to see what would happen if you put your hand around that bottle rocket, and you’re paying for it.

Well, Overly Positive is here to cure your Monday blues with another set of sunny goodness and a cup of coffee to jolt you into awareness. Let’s see what’s going on today:

Valve Trying to Allow for L4D1 and 2 Crossplay (via Destructoid): In spite of online revolutionaries still looking to storm the Valve castle over the announcement of Left 4 Dead 2, Valve continues to release tiny details about the game that show the players they get it. Today has a report that crossplay between the first and second Left 4 Dead is trying to be enabled, perhaps allowing everything from choosing from a bigger pool of survivors and sharing maps and sweet melee weaponry. A merging of this nature might take the sting off of those who are feeling a little put off by Valve’s uncharacteristic quick turnaround on a sequel, so keep an eye out, folks.

Twitter Potential for Charities (via TechCrunch): Twitter has become the darling for social media enthusiasts everywhere this past year, but practical use has always been a point of skepticism for some. Reports of non-profits using Twitter for fundraising purposes, however, show that the viral microblogging service might be getting an increase in usefulness. With amounts of $250,000, $10,000, and more being credited to initiatives started on Twitter, the future can only get brighter for everyone’s favorite blue birds.

Sesame Street Thinks Games are Good (via The Escapist): Sure, we’ve heard the video gaming industry take hits from some pretty visible and popular figures, but once in a while, they get some back. A report released by the Joan Ganz Clooney center, the minds behind Sesame Street, shows that video games can be “a force for good”, and that games such as Dance Dance Revolution promote valuable ideas such as physical fitness and perceptive understanding. Who knew that watching all those arrows would be Big Bird‘s cup of tea? Anyway, the full report, detailing several examples of games as well as a call to parents to play with their children, is in the link, but it’s good news for the industry when friends can be found in interesting places.

And finally, speaking of the perception of the video games industry…

Jack Thompson Puts Best Foot Forward at SGC09 (via Game Politics): Even if I weren’t giving my thimble-full of regular readers a shout-out to Game Politics for linking Overly Positive in their article (thanks to reader and friend Slurm for pointing it out to me), the Jack Thompson show rolling onward in a constructive direction is worthy news. Thompson has been no friend to the games industry these past couple of years, but even if this was only for a day, we had a meaningful, rational debate on violence in video games at a gaming convention. If that isn’t progress, I don’t know what is.

Have a good one folks – and remember – Mondays are just a reminder that the weekend will eventually come by to rescue you.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

July 5, 2009

The Cooling of Jack Thompson

Grand Theft Auto IV
Image by Silvio Sousa Cabral via Flickr

Among Jim Sterling of Destructoid‘s reports on the ScrewAttack Gaming Convention this weekend is a curious piece on a debate on video games, violence, and their influence on players (especially children) that involved the controversial Jack Thompson. Those of you not in the know would do well to see that Jack Thompson has probably been one of the more polarizing forces of the debate on video game violence, leaning extremely anti-video game at times. Thompson’s fiery, at times vitriolic attacks on the gaming industry for games such as Grand Theft Auto IV have been the subject of much debate, discussion, and outright ridicule by those who play games. A while back, Thompson was disbarred as a lawyer for the acidic comments he gave on 60 Minutes on this subject, and as such, he’s been a favorite chewtoy and burning effigy for game players outraged at Thompson’s highly conservative, stereotypical attacks.

One would think that at a gaming convention of all places, Jack Thompson would, under normal circumstances, be eaten alive by the audience or his debate opponent, going down in a blaze of glory and ardor as video gaming’s greatest enemy. But surprisingly, all reports from this debate show Thompson as rational and calm, rarely interrupting, making points respectfully and in a knowledgeable manner, and taking questions from a crowd that was equally as tame, perhaps even taken aback by Thompson’s pleasant candor.

Even as someone who might hate Thompson for his comments of the past, the points he makes during the debate aren’t really that worthy of the zealotry of his previous diatribes. He argues for more stringent enforcement of ESRB, or to have it abolished altogether if it can’t be. He thinks that parents are ultimately responsible for putting a game in a kid’s hands that isn’t appropriate for them. He wants vendors to take more responsibility by screening for age in better ways. He asks for organizations and developers to see that studies show causation, not correlation of video games to violence, and that while video games don’t share the whole blame (amazing considering previous commentary) that they are ultimately part of an outlet of violent entertainment that needs to be dealt with as a whole, to educate children against being desensitized to it.

There are many other points Thompson makes that are more controversial – for example, the frequent use of Columbine as the “9/11″ of the games industry and taking partial credit for ESRB improvements because they were “afraid” of him. But it seems the audience left the presentation and Q&A with at least a small amount of respect for Jack Thompson, not just for making his points in a rational manner, but for showing up at all. It seems that even if this is to some cynics a desperate grab for relevance, that Thompson honestly believes that presenting his side of the video games violence debate is worthwhile.

Honestly, this is great to hear for many reasons, but most of all, for the fact that the debate can be had at all without flaming, hate-filled ranting, and comments that would make your grandmother blush. The fact that Thompson performed well under fire, argued with calm, even joking demeanor, and that he and his debate opponent shook hands to respectful applause, means that there’s hope for not just Thompson but a meaningful approach to violence in video games. Regardless of the motivation or the means that led to this outcome, if a firebrand like Jack Thompson can be cooled off, then there’s not just hope for video games, but for us humans as well.

Check the link in the first paragraph for the full details. Thanks Jim!

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
© 2012 Overly Positive All rights reserved - Wallow theme v0.46.4 by ([][]) TwoBeers - Powered by WordPress - Have fun!