15 years of the best of game-based arts and culture
Games, play, and culture with Jamin Warren
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3D heads on display at digital art fest, Colonel Kurtz’s hut
Sophie Kan reveals her design process for these portraits: 38 New Yorkers whose portraits I made, using a 3d laser scanner. The result is an identity parade of textured 3d scans of their faces, rotating in and out of the light. The glitchy, fragmented look of these scans results from my misuse of t
Indiecade diversity a glimmer of hope in white male culture
Will this be the norm for much longer? In an industry that seems plagued with the underepresentation of any group besides white males, it’s reassuring to read reports of a little diversification. Walking around the show, playing the games, and networking with peers, it was striking how many people
This map is like the XCOM alien invasion world map, but in real life
James Fallows, eminence grise at The Atlantic, has probably never played XCOM: Enemy Unknown. Today, however, he linked to a real-time cyberattacks map made by the security concern Honeypot (FYI a “honey trap” is a dummy server made to look like exploitable by hackers, in order to catch them). It lo
EA Founder: Console gaming to become minor hobby
The founder of Electronic Arts, the amusingly-named Trip Hawkins, predicts a slow decline for console gaming: It’s going to become a smaller market, and it’s going to be more like a hobby market. You look at airplanes. Most of us just want to be a passenger, but there’s a hobby market for people who
The game-inspired art of Uno Moralez
Art that looks like a cross between Super Metroid and Watchmen can’t go wrong, can it? Uno Moralez doesn’t think so, and his art does more than that. Some of his black and white pieces look like higher res renditions of some Commodore 64 adventure games. You can see more of his work here.
New Boyz Noise video turns keyboard clicks into electronic energy.
German electronic producer Boyz Noise’s new video transmogrifies your everyday keyboard into a living breathing, um, person. The spot was co-directed by Patrick Jean, who you might remember, directed the phenomenal short Pixels that had old-school videogame characters invading New York City. – – –
