Gore-free PC games appeal to older set

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Augix
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Gore-free PC games appeal to older set

Post by Augix »

Gore-free PC games appeal to older set

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Tenchu 3.

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WALTER MOSSBERG: PERSONAL TECHNOLOGY


When you hear the phrase "computer gaming," the image that naturally springs to mind is that of a teenager or 20-something, sitting at a PC equipped to the teeth, exterminating aliens or kickboxing with some anatomically improbable foe.

These pleasures are shared by people of all ages and genders, even if the center of gravity of the PC world is still young and male. But playing these kinds of PC games often requires the reflexes of a teenager. And it involves an appetite for virtual violence and combat that is considerably lower in many adults, especially women, than it is in teenage boys.

There's another, less-publicized type of PC gaming, however, that's favored by millions of computer users -- primarily adults, and including lots of women. I call these "games for grown-ups." They include computerized board games, card games, word games, puzzles, flying games, noncontact-sports games and some simple, non-gory shoot-'em-ups.

A specialized online service caters to fans of these games. It's RealOne Arcade, from RealNetworks, and runs on Microsoft Windows. It sells inexpensive, downloadable games either one at a time or via subscription. More than 150 games are available. You can study detailed descriptions and reader reviews before you buy them, and even try them out free of charge.

The games cost no more than $20 each. If you don't buy them a la carte, you can subscribe to the service for $6.95 a month. That gives you a game each month, plus $5 off any additional games you buy. Subscribers must commit to a minimum three-month term, at $20.85 upfront. People who buy one game get a one-month free trial subscription, including one free game.

The service has an estimated 50,000 to 100,000 subscribers, and the company says it has sold nearly 1.5 million games. Real says its clientele for the game service averages 40 years old, and more than half are women.

I have been testing RealOne Arcade, and I like it. I downloaded six games, tried them all and bought two. The service is convenient, easy to use and does what it promises. It provides a source for the type of games that are often hard to find in stores, or are scattered around various Web sites. And the games cost much less than most of the popular shooting, fighting and sports games.

Like Apple's online music store, RealOne Arcade isn't accessed from a Web browser, but from a special program that connects directly to RealNetworks' game servers.

This Arcade program is nicely organized, easy to use, and provides clear, detailed information about downloading, installing and playing each game. It even checks your PC to tell you whether it is capable of running each game. And it searches your hard disk for games you already own, even if they weren't purchased from Real, and lists them along with the games you've downloaded from Real, to provide a sort of cockpit for launching all your games.

When you download the trial version of a game, you can test it as often as you like, free of charge, up to a total of one hour of playing time. You don't need to be connected to the Internet to play a game you've purchased or are testing once it has been downloaded.

Any game you actually buy is yours forever, even if you cancel your subscription. And if you remain a subscriber, you can redownload any game you've bought, on multiple PCs, for up to a year. You can also get free updates to the games you own for a year.

Most of the games are meant to be played on a Windows PC, but some are for Palm handhelds. There are also about 50 "teaser" games, essentially stripped-down promotional versions, that can be played directly from the Web.

The games offered by RealOne Arcade are reminiscent of old, classic titles like Breakout, Missile Command, Tetris and Solitaire. The company pointedly tries to avoid games featuring graphic violence. The six games I downloaded were Compulsive Solitaire, which includes lots of solitaire variations; Mahjonng Towers, featuring multilevel boards; Gutterball 3D, a bowling game; AirStrike 3D, a helicopter-battle simulation; SuperCollapse II, a Tetris-like puzzle; and Word Jolt, in which you try to make words out of random, scrambled letters.

I liked them all, and spent several hours playing them on a cross-country flight. All worked fine on my Windows XP laptop. I bought Compulsive Solitaire and Word Jolt. My favorite was Word Jolt, which can be played in either a fast-paced arcade mode or an untimed mode.

There is one downside to RealOne Arcade: It insists on getting in your face all the time. Even when you have purchased and installed a game on your PC, in most cases it runs in tandem with the RealOne Arcade software. A game can't be launched directly from the Start Menu. It's annoying to have to see pitches for other games when you just want to play the one you bought. After I asked the company about this practice, Real said it would change the system soon, so that games you purchase can be run by themselves, without also launching the Arcade software.

I found RealOne Arcade to be a well-designed, moderately priced haven for grown-up gamers. If you fit that category, check it out.
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Post by BillyGoat »

some of the best bf and cs players I know are 30+
Patience and wisdom, instead of rushing and dying :)

I say grampa can have the card games :)
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Post by Absolut Talent »

wait...are those pics of tenchu3 and MGS3 supposed to be non gorey?

I sure hope they get to keep the Neck braking action :p thats the best part
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Post by sbp »

Now you know how Myst got to be an all time bestseller and why its clones keep acoming. :d runk
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d_b
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Post by d_b »

"Gore-free PC games appeal to older set" No they don't. More Gore.
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Augix
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Post by Augix »

I like gore but the lastest games seems to be so pink ! :D
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FanTum
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Post by FanTum »

Gore is fun!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Soldier of fortune series took the cake!
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Post by FlyingPenguin »

I just want it to look real. SOF was a bit too needlessly over the top for my taste. It didn't enhance the game at all - it was just done for the free publicity that it would generate in the media.

I do want some gore in there, though, for the sake of realism. DOD, CS and Q3UT do a good job for instance. MOHAA looks too sterile without blood. Not to be morbid, but these ARE war games and it enhances the suspension of belief if there's blood stains on the wall after you frag someone. I don't need to see his head explode, though.

There's something very eerie about walking through a room that recently saw a fire fight and seeing all the blood stains on the floor and walls. It enhances the gameplay.

If that sounds sick to some people, then let them ask why the movie "Saving Private Ryan" was so graphic. Again, it immerses you in the fiction - makes it more believable. It's 2003 - pretending people don't bleed when they get shot is absurd.

On the other hand, I do believe all games SHOULD allow you to disable the gore if you want to. It's easy enough to implement. While an adult might be playing the game, someonme might have children in the house who - even though they're not playing - might be watching. Or you may not mind a if a mature teen plays the game, but you'd prefer not to have him see the gore.

I also know plenty of adults who are gamers, and like FPS games, but find the gore offensive and prefer to turn it off.

As I said it's easy enough to implement a gore switch.
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blitzcraig464
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I agree

Post by blitzcraig464 »

Gore should have the option to be turned off.....SOF2 does have this option. I have a mod for the game that makes it so gory that it is too absurd to be possible. These games still the video game feel and do not appear to be even the slightest bit accurate to human anatomy. They are getting closer, but I for one am not offended by this gore as it is not real. When it does look like a real human being turned into hamburger by a shotgun, then I will have to reevaluate. As for now....it just makes for a good taunt.
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Post by Hipnotic_Tranz »

I have yet to see a game that is too gory. I honestly don't even consider SOF1/2 that gory, for the fact that it just looks bad, heh. I mean, when you cut off someones head, it's all jagged--that's fake gore :D All games, no matter how great the graphics (at this point) still look like games so I don't think it's possible to get too gory. Once games are picture perfect, well now we have an arguement :cool :

But as FP said, play it safe. Those with a softer spot should be able to turn it off.
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