A Response to Roger Travis

who misconstrues my work and that of my colleagues

(1) I’m not going to bother to write a thorough prose response to your recent Escapist article Quibus Lusoribus Bono? Who is Game Studies Good For?, but only numbered objections and comments. Readers, you’ll have to go read Travis’s article before any of these will make sense. (2) Your article is based on the premise that Douglas Wilson looks down… read more

Advertisers have yet to unlock the power of play

Opinion piece published in The Guardian

There are a few common reasons why advertisers want to use videogames to reach consumers. One is the belief that videogames are a place to recover the waning audiences of television advertising. The highly desirable, seemingly elusive 18-34 male demographic is often, unfairly, assumed to correspond directly to videogame players. What better way to retrieve these “lost” consumers than to… read more

CNN Headline T-Shirts

WTF?

I woke up this morning and went through my usual rounds of news. I was surprised to see little t-shirt icons next to some headlines on CNN.com It turns out CNN has a new service (a “beta” one, for effective Web 2.0 cred), CNN T-Shirts. You can order a t-shirt with the headline of choice, along with the date it… read more

Liberal Arts College vs. Research I University: Deathmatch

Ten principles for better academic career advisement

Jason Mittell, a media studies scholar at Middlebury College, recently wrote about his experience being a researcher at a liberal arts college. Mittell’s offering points to and comments upon a related article in the Chronicle of Higher Education by Kristen Ghodsee, who explained her path from UC Berkeley graduate student to Bowdoin professor. Both Ghodsee and Mittell question the assumption… read more

Technical Evolution and Creative Constraint

The vices and virtues of selective color shift at high ISO in the Sigma DP1

One of the problems with digital SLRs is their large footprint. Not only the size and weight of the camera, but also that of the lens attached to it, especially for serious photographers interested in large apertures and high-quality glass. This is an issue that affects professionals and amateurs alike, since both groups might want to have a smaller, more… read more

Tenure

The future lasts forever

This spring I was awarded tenure at the Georgia Institute of Technology and leveled-up to Associate Professor in the School of Literature Communication and Culture. As I tried to think about an appropriate way to announce this accomplishment to my readers here, the phrase that kept entering my head was the one reproduced in the subtitle above: the future lasts… read more

Me on All Things Considered

I got a barrage of text messages and emails and Facebook messages this afternoon, all telling me their senders were listening to me on NPR’s All Things Considered. The segment isn’t about me but rather about the broader topic of videogames and depth. The correspondent is Heather Chaplin, co-author of Smart Bomb: The Quest for Art, Entertainment, and Big Bucks… read more

Is Spore For Everyone?

Opinion piece published in Gamasutra

Note: the “Spore Store” description has been updated here to account for misinformation I received researching this material. Full clarification is available at the end of the Gamasutra article. In the games industry, Will Wright’s Spore is surely the most highly anticipated title in recent memory. Everyone knows about it — we’ve been seeing previews and demos and hearing news… read more

Stuff White People Like

Straight Outa Canada

This week I was in Canada, which is the country immediately north of America (“the States” for the rest of you). I like to read the newspapers delivered to my hotel room when traveling, so I inhaled today’s issue of the Globe and Mail, which is a national coverage paper in that country. Among the many things I learned about… read more

Private Eyes / They’re Blogging You

... blogging you blogging you blogging you

Eric Marcoullier and I were tonight embroiled in a riveting, yet wistful conversation about 70s/80s pop duo Hall and Oates. After reviewing classics such as this music video for the #1 hit title track of the 1981 album Private Eyes, it occurred to me: Daryl Hall and John Oates look exactly like Kotaku editors Brian Ashcraft and Brian Crecente. See… read more