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Rock_Blackstone

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Rock_Blackstone

23

Forum Posts

676

Wiki Points

29

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

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Rock_Blackstone

23

Forum Posts

676

Wiki Points

29

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

#2  Edited By Rock_Blackstone
@Evilsbane:  I agree.  There's plenty of Xbox content online and in podcasts, so why pay extra for one more source of Xbox content?
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Rock_Blackstone

23

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676

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Reviews: 1

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#3  Edited By Rock_Blackstone

Yes, it does reset.  When my 1-year Gold subscription lapsed, and then I signed up for another year of Gold a few months later, my year counter had reset to 1 (which I guess means "1st year"?).

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Rock_Blackstone

23

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676

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Reviews: 1

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#4  Edited By Rock_Blackstone

The Nielsen Company, best known for  measuring U.S. television audiences ("the Nielsen ratings"), published a new report yesterday on video game usage.  Based on data collected from Nielsen's national TV panel of more than 10,000 homes,  the report includes a deep dive into Xbox 1 vs 100 usage.  I have highlighted a few of the key findings below; the full report can be found here.   

  • More than half (56%) of Xbox 360 users are 18 or older -- an indication that console video games aren't "just for kids" anymore
  • Almost a quarter of Xbox 360's are active during prime time hours (8-11pm) in Nielsen homes -- a sign of the multimedia capabilities of this generation of game consoles.
  • The average length of play for a 1 vs 100 session on Xbox Live is 71 minutes, and nearly 90 minutes for the "Live" game show editions -- impressive figures, especially for advertisers who place commercials during periodic "game breaks"

What do people think about these findings?

 

      My two cents: it's good to see another report that vindicates gaming as a mainstream activity, rather than a fringe hobby.

  

 

 * Source :  Nielsen Wire, "Who, When and How? A Closer Look at Video Game Measurement," 21 April 2010.

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Rock_Blackstone

23

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676

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#5  Edited By Rock_Blackstone

I'm playing through ME1 for the first time as well.  It's definitely as addictive as I feared it would be :-)

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Rock_Blackstone

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#6  Edited By Rock_Blackstone

Rock Blackstone

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Rock_Blackstone

23

Forum Posts

676

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29

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Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

#7  Edited By Rock_Blackstone
Can Xbox 360 Achievements undermine the oldest gaming achievement of all? 
  
Last night I did the video game equivalent of spring cleaning by plowing through the final few sections of the original Assassin's Creed.  "Spring cleaning" is probably an overly harsh description; even 30 months after its initial release, AC still amazed me with its dazzling graphics, free-flowing mechanics, and intriguing storyline.  That being said, the only thing driving me to scour the map for that one last Saracen flag or that one elusive Templar was an Xbox 360 Achievement. 
 
Now don't get me wrong -- I don't regret the countless hours collecting 400+ flags and tracking down sometimes glitchy Templar locations.  I've only played a handful of games to 100% completion, so it's worth it to try for 1000 gamerscore on a game I really like.   
 
But the thing that bugged me most about my final AC  session was that my achievement hunt overshadowed my enjoyment of the game's climactic ending.  As the final cinematic played, I was actually frustrated  rather than fulfilled because I thought I had failed to obtain a missable achievement (Creed of the Disciple) that would require starting over from the beginning!  (In fact, I had unlocked that achievement with another one a few minutes earlier, and the final 50-pointer unlocked after the final scene of the game.)  Should the possibility of finishing the game with 950 points instead of 1000 really have consumed my mind at that moment?  At the culmination of more than 24 hours worth of playtime?
  Keep your eyes on the prize...what's the real prize?
 Keep your eyes on the prize...what's the real prize?
Growing up in the NES/SNES/Genesis generation, the only real (single-player) achievement that gamers sought was to "beat the game."  Most kids could recite the list of games they had completed from memory.  Some games tracked how quickly you finished the campaign, but the real bragging rights still came from taking down a game's final boss. 
 
Fast forward to March 2008, when I bought my Xbox 360, and it was no longer "the play's the thing."  Rather than just playing a game from start to finish, gamers could earn achievements (or trophies) for accomplishing tasks both central and peripheral to the story.  I assume this was a byproduct of the Internet Revolution, which allowed gamers to see how they stack up with friends on gaming leaderboards.  was never a PC gamer and kind of missed out on the online gaming scene of the late '90s and 2000s.  All of a sudden, I found myself greedily pursuing achievements and comparing my gamerscore to my peers' as if I had been a lifelong achievement hunter. 
 
Does the addition of Xbox 360 Achievements and PS3 Trophies undermine the gaming experience?  I think in general that it enhances it, adding replayability to games that would otherwise collect dust on my shelf (Dead Space, for example).  However, I do think achievement hunting can run counter to the true spirit of a game, detracting from the authenticity and immersiveness of a game's story.   Would Altair really pause at the penultimate stage of his quest so that he could go collect his 100th King Richard flag?  Would he risk exposing his identity to city guards in order to steal his 200th throwing knife?   
 
I'm fine with suspending disbelief when it comes to these video-gamey side activities, but in the future I'm going to try not to obsess about achievements at the cost of a game's story payoff.  My new mantra: Embrace your achievement greed so long as it's secondary to your enjoyment of the game itself.
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Rock_Blackstone

23

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676

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#8  Edited By Rock_Blackstone

 

No Caption Provided
"...OK. If anybody else wants to come with me, this moment will be the moment of something real and fun and inspiring in this godforsaken business, and we will do it together!   
 
Who's coming with me? Who's coming with me? WHO's coming with me?   

Who's coming with me besides...'Flipper' here?" 
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Rock_Blackstone

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#9  Edited By Rock_Blackstone

Check out the Tiesto podcast on iTunes. He posts weekly hour-long sets that are sick.

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Rock_Blackstone

23

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676

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Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

#10  Edited By Rock_Blackstone
@nanikore: Let's just say that for me, gaming and adult beverages go hand in hand.
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