Posts Tagged ‘Blu-ray’

David Perry at GCDC: Free to play is the future

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

While Leipzig might be a brand new town for David Perry, video games, development, and the industry are not.  Perry, a 27 year veteran of the gaming industry lead the panel at the Games Convention Developers Conference yesterday.  His topics ranged from personal history (the PS9 spoof was outstanding), statistics on the current status quo, and important players to look at in developing markets in China, Korea, and India.

Perry’s ‘time capsule’ intro included insight to Perry’s first programming tool – a Sinclair ZX81 with 1KB of memory, right on through to today’s complex media.  He covered the landscape from old media (cassettes) to new (Blu-ray, DVD, etc.) and on to developing storage media (hard drives).  Perry firmly believes that the industry will continue to push towards a global digital distribution outlet, with hard drives being the main storage media.  He did however also highlight another possible step after storage: virtual media.  Perry envisions a world where full games and even processing power wouldn’t be sitting on your desktop or console, but rather a cloud computing scenario where games would be broadcast across the internet.  He also admits that there are problems with this theory, and that today’s internet would maxed and taxed by this scenario, and fast and strong broadband is needed.

Exploring expanding game markets, Perry launched first into China, which has seen 65.9% overall industry growth over the past year.  Perry highlighted China’s must successful publisher Shanda as a benchmark as to where companies in that market are headed.  While Perry was visiting the Shanda offices, he shared a note that lots of team members were playing western videogames in an effort to match the quality seen herein.  While Chinese and Korean titles may not match western quality, they are certainly doing their homework, and should be on par shortly.

Creativity and risk are two key factors that allow eastern publishers to florish.  The free-to-play MMO Dance! Introduced new social systems by simply adding a chat feature, along with reasons for people to keep talking – embarrassing scenarios where players are forced to dance in strange costumes and marriage systems that allow players to look each other up and play together.  While these social additions sport high numbers, Stardoll (19 million members) and Zynga (55 million members), Perry is quick to point out that they lack one crucial component: the viral factor.

Using facebook as a testing ground, Perry highlighted his new Facebook Create a potato app as a viral experiement.  He says that he hopes to identify nodes within the network that will help spread the word about the game (and future viral projects).  He also spoke to Blizzards recent testing and entry into the viral market with their aggressive ‘recruit a friend – get an exclusive mount’ program.  Perry sees this as a failure waiting to happen.

Heading into the final stretch of his presentation, Perry made it clear : Free-to-play models are the future.  This shift will be possible in part by something he calls the “money wall” – the tipping point at which certain consumers will no longer be willing to pay for entertainment.  With consoles ranking in huge entry fees, and the average game cost of $59.99, this “money wall” is already keeping a large portion of ‘potential’ gamers out of the mix.

Perry left us with two scenarios regarding the outbreak of free-to-play models in the western market.  1. A publisher decides to release a major tier 1 game (think Halo, WoW, StarCraft) as a free to play, or…2. The Korean, Indian, of Chinese market begins producing games on the level of their Japanese neighbors like Miyamoto of Hojima, creators who inevitably will realease their games under the free-to-play model which is already strongly in place in the region.  Either of these events would set the ball in motion, says Perry.

While Perry’s presentation went well over the 1 hour time he was given, he managed to present listeners with an insightful view of the gaming industry.  Certainly there will always be those that disagree and see it in 22 different ways, but a growing number of industry experts are echoing, and adding to, Perry’s vision of a free-to-play global economy.  fatfoogoo is preparing for this future today.  What are you doing?

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Audio/Videophiles rejoice – Blu-ray audio released!

Friday, May 30th, 2008

While Blu-ray has been making waves far and wide for it’s video clarity and quality, the less touted aspect is its outstanding audio quality.  Well hang on to your hats (and if you haven’t already, maybe it’s time to think about ebaying that SACD player), as Norwegian record label 2L released the world’s first Blu-ray record yesterday.

While technically to be a record, media must be fashioned from vinyl plates and contain grooves, we’ll let this one slide.  If classical music symphonies are your deal, you’re gonna want this disc. The first ever blu-ray audio is a recording of the Divertimenti as performed by Trondheimsolistene – the Trondheim soloists, one of Norway’s finest orchestras.  If not, no worries…it only takes one, and you can bet the family dog that we’ll be seeing plenty more blu-ray audios in the near future.

Blu-ray technology makes use of five separate tracks which requires complex mixing and recording processes, as well as an equally equipped blu-ray player.  2L worked in close conjunction both with manufacturers and recording artists to achieve this spectacular new release.  Using Blu-ray technology, the audio is just like the video; like nothing you’re ever heard before.  Each instrument is perfectly positioned thereby creating a multidimensional listening experience that makes your cd collection look like child’s toys.

For those of you that already own a PS3 or are planning on buying a mac, no sweat, this Blu-ray has been confirmed 100% compatible and simply, “awesome!”

 

Metal Gear Solid 4 Limited edition for PS3… not just for Japan!

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Sony’s official playstation blog dropped some Solidly good Gear on North American customers Wednesday night in San Francisco at the Konami Gamers night and made the info official worldwide yesterday: Japan ain’ the only ones getting a first crack at the limited edition June 12th release of the gunmetal grey Metal Gear Solid 4 PS3.

For $599, you can nab yourself a bundle of blitz masked at a 40gb PS3 including a color matched dualshock controller and of course Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots Limited Edition game. In addition, you’ll be the only one one the block with an exlusive Blu-ray disc with over 2 hours of content including: “Hideo Kojima’s Gene” – a “making of” documentary and a special look at Hideo’s team.

The MGS4 LE is available exclusively through Konami, and you can head on over right now and give a clicky click on the wish list, and hope to me one of the lucky few to nab this badboy. Konami will start taking pre-orders on Monday May 19th.

 

My gaming Rig is better than yours!

Monday, May 5th, 2008

One of the beauties and attractions to MMO gaming is the incredibly detailed artwork and sound that goes into their creation. Many of us even support the graphics card industry by continually upgrading cards and even overclocking them (you never heard that nvidia) ;)

Well, ladies and gentlemen, hold on to your hats, as record label owner Jeremy Kipnis has created what we believe to quite possibly be “The Greatest Show on Earth”.

OMG! This is what $6 million will buy you. Kipnis’ theatre is installed in his home in a vaulted ceiling room that measures 8 feet high at the rear of the room and 16 feet high at the screen end of the room, with dimensions of 26.5 feet wide and 33 feet long. In other words: large, but not a tremendously big room.

Within this room, he’s packed one of the largest screens installed in a home in the world, measuring 18 feet wide! Just give that a think for a sec. Even if you’re gaming on a 30″ Cinema HD cinema display on your desktop, this guy plays on something 7x as large!

The main video comes from a Sony SRX-S110 Professional Video Projector and is supplied by a variety of inputs:

Sony BDP-S1 Blu-ray Player
Sony PlayStation 3 Gaming Console
Toshiba HD-XA1 HD DVD Player
JVC HMDH-5U D-VHS Recorder
SATA Drive (72 HDTV Hours Total)
Mark Levinson N° 51 DVD/CD Media Player
Pioneer HLD-X0 Hi-Vision HDTV MUSE Laserdisc Player

If the video isn’t enough to blow you away, let’s talk about the sound. Kipnis is running 13 Theta Digital Generation VIII 32-bit 8x Oversampling Dual Processors (link this) for audio processing, and then amplifying it via:

2 Mark Levinson N° 33h Amplifiers
30 McIntosh MC-2102 Amplifiers
3 Crown Macro Reference Gold Amplifiers

Being projected through:

16 Snell 1800 THX Music & Cinema Reference Subwoofers
8 Snell THX Music & Cinema Reference Towers
10 MuRata ES103A Super Tweeters
3 Snell THX Music & Cinema Reference LCR-2800 Center-Channel Speakers

Umm… yeah. Kinda makes my rig look mighty sad at the moment.