View Full Version: Video Game News

TFC Wh0r3s Forums > Games > Video Game News


Title: Video Game News
Description: current news of the gaming world


OMFG_ILC - August 16, 2003 10:41 AM (GMT)
3DO games find new homes

A number of 3DO's games have been sold to other publishers at a recent bankruptcy auction.

When 3DO filed for bankruptcy on May 28, the future of its upcoming games and long-running franchises was thrown into doubt, but at a bankruptcy auction in San Francisco yesterday, a number of them found new homes. Street Racing Syndicate was bought by Namco for a little over $1.5 million, the rights to the High Heat baseball series went to Microsoft for an undisclosed sum, and the assets of Might and Magic and Heroes of Might and Magic were sold to Ubi Soft for $1.3 million.

Nintendo to Invade China

Nintendo plans to start selling its products in China to gain additional market share.

According to a report by the Asahi Shimbun, Nintendo has revealed that it plans to expand its business into China in order to increase sales of its products. The company is still deciding which products it wants to sell in that country, stating that a different marketing campaign is needed. Nintendo president Satoru Iwata also mentioned that it will announce successors to the GameCube and Game Boy Advance next spring.

chikichicky - August 17, 2003 12:16 AM (GMT)
wow still long way from now... maybe the Japanese will laugh..
user posted image

Sturmtruppe - August 17, 2003 01:54 AM (GMT)
yea 3DO died a while ago.
it was dying before and turning out crap games.

OMFG_ILC - August 17, 2003 09:02 AM (GMT)
yep, several years ago they tried to release the 3DO around the start of the 32-bit era but failed to capture any fanfare so they quickly died off. They became a third party developer and had a few hit titles within the Army Men and High Heat baseball series but it wasn't enough to keep them from folding once again.

chikichicky - August 18, 2003 08:02 AM (GMT)
It's a scary world out there :shakes head:

OMFG_ILC - September 4, 2003 10:20 PM (GMT)
Sony gets behind Walk of Game

The Sony Metreon, a business unit of the Sony Corporation of America, is an entertainment center in downtown San Francisco that offers a combination of stores and attractions. Its amenities include restaurants, a store that offers Sony brand consumer electronics, a rare PlayStation-themed store, and 15 theaters--including the largest IMAX screen in North America.
Metreon management announced today that the Sony Metreon will be the future home of a walkway designed to honor video game industry luminaries. The walkway will be similar to Hollywood's Walk of Fame.

Beginning this October, the Metreon will launch a Web site designed to let the public choose members for inclusion on the "Walk of Game."

The Sony Metreon opened in June of 1999 and featured a store named MicrosoftSF that sold shrink-wrapped Microsoft software, among other products. Atypical of the Redmond, Washington-based software giant, MicrosoftSF was replaced in the fall of 2001 by another store--just as the Microsoft Xbox was launched in North America and began challenging the Sony PlayStation for dominance of the game console market.

BloodRayne movie deal announced

Majesco has today announced that its vampiric third-person action game BloodRayne is the latest to be signed by German movie production company Boll KG. The company has already finished filming on a House of the Dead movie, and is currently wrapping up production on a movie adaptation of Atari's Alone in the Dark.
"BloodRayne is one of the select interactive entertainment franchises that transcends the video game genre and appeals to mainstream entertainment audiences," said Jesse Sutton, president of Majesco. "With its unique blend of action, horror, and sex appeal, BloodRayne contains major crossover potential and we are continuing to explore additional licensing opportunities."
Executive producer and director Uwe Boll hopes to begin filming BloodRayne sometime next year, and estimates a budget of around $30 million for the movie.

Sturmtruppe - September 4, 2003 11:14 PM (GMT)
CNN Tech news,
directly quoted from here
Study: Female gamers outnumber boys
Wednesday, August 27, 2003 Posted: 3:32 PM EDT (1932 GMT)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The shifting culture of video games


I do see a lot more girls, especially the students that I'm teaching, that want to play games.
-- Vikki Hrody, professor at the Illinois Institute of Art


LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters) -- Challenging the stereotype that video gaming is the domain of teenage boys, an industry group Tuesday reported that more women over 18 than young boys are playing games and the average age of players has risen to 29.

A poll released by the Entertainment Software Association and conducted by Peter D. Hart Research Associates found 26 percent of game players are women 18 or older, while 21 percent are boys 6 to 17.

Video gaming has traditionally been seen as the province of teenage boys locked in dark rooms and twitching away at their game consoles, although in recent years the industry has worked to publish games catering to kids, women and older gamers.

Growing audience
In line with that trend, adults over 50 now make up 17 percent of the gaming population, the ESA said, compared with 13 percent three years ago.

The largest group of gamers, at 38 percent, is men 18 and up, while girls 6 to 17 account for 12 percent of game players, the poll found.

"I think that what used to be the standard in games, which was the female character in distress and the big macho man saving the day, is no longer the case," said Vikki Hrody, a faculty member at the Illinois Institute of Art in Chicago, who teaches art for game design.

A random national sample of 806 adults, covering a total of 1,048 game players including kids, was used in the poll, the ESA said.

The average gamer spends 6.5 hours a week playing games, the ESA said, while boys 6 to 17 average 7.3 hours per week of game time.

Prefer mature games
As the age of gamers has risen, so has the number of games for adults. Of all games sold in 2002, the ESA said 13.2 percent carried a "Mature" or "M" rating, up from 9.9 percent in 2001 and under 8 percent in 2000.

Hrody said she and her friends much prefer many of those mature games, like war titles, to the games specially designed and targeted by game companies at the female market, such as dancing themes or Barbie.

"They don't hear enough about what the market is. I think they just assume that it's boys that are playing these games," she said. "(Girls' games are) very boring, there's no story line, it's almost like they play it down for girls."

The poll found little difference in the relationship between game play and income, with 39 percent of gamers reporting total household income of less than $50,000 a year and 41 percent reporting an income of more than $50,000.

chikichicky - September 6, 2003 12:35 AM (GMT)
Males still outnumber females playing games....and WHAT games? there's RPG, little kids games or what not... Multiplayer games? Online? geez... not much point to their information :\

OMFG_ILC - September 7, 2003 10:06 PM (GMT)
they release articles with big headlines like "Female gamers outnumber boys" that mislead you into thinking OMG OMG more females play games then males..but in the end there isn't too much to it. As chikichicky pointed out the issue of games is rather vague as it can encompass a wide selection of things.

Maarlo - September 11, 2003 08:33 AM (GMT)
well what would i count as a female gamer a male gamer or both hehehe *Maarlo likes to keepem guessing

DEsoLAToR - September 14, 2003 06:13 AM (GMT)
Im not into the news of game companies and stuff -_- Imma miss 3DO I luved the army man series :) it was cute how they melted into puddles when u tourched them with a flame thrower

chikichicky - September 19, 2003 01:43 AM (GMT)
QUOTE (Maarlo @ Sep 11 2003, 01:33 AM)
well what would i count as a female gamer a male gamer or both hehehe *Maarlo likes to keepem guessing

tell me... do you question your sexuality?




Hosted for free by InvisionFree