Nigel Kendall, Times games reviewer
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If there was a time when the market for video games in this country truly came
of age, it was the run-up to last Christmas. Spurred on by the launch of
three new home consoles in the space of 12 months, sales of video game
titles hit £332.6 million in the final quarter of last year, up 19 per cent
by volume and 36 per cent by revenue from the year before, according to
figures released by the industry body ELSPA.
Over the full year, 78 million video games were sold in Britain. So who is
playing them all?
The Byron review comes at a time when more families than ever are playing
video games, thanks largely to the motion-sensitive Nintendo Wii console,
which allows players to mimic the movements of real sport. For the first
time since Space Invaders arrived in arcades 30 years ago, gaming is
becoming a social and sociable activity. The Wii excels at on-screen sports
such as table tennis and golf, and the reason for its popularity with both
parents and children is that it brings the fun back into playing. Playing it
is enjoyable and watching someone else flailing around with a remote
controller is hilarious.
Yet the Wii is technically a primitive machine compared with its competitors,
the Microsoft Xbox 360 and Sony PlayStation 3 (PS3). These two consoles,
dubbed “next-generation” because they can display high-definition images on
modern flat screen televisions, retain an undeniably masculine bias. These
are the gorillas of gaming and many of the games are designed to get players
beating their chests in an artificial world, to the exclusion of the real
one.
Many of the early releases for these consoles were squarely aimed at young
males, with a heavy emphasis on shooting, driving and sports. Both consoles
are also capable of connecting to the internet, opening up the possibility
of playing against hundreds of opponents online. It is this aspect of
gaming, and the perceived target market, that has caused the most concern.
If, as expected, the Byron review comes out in favour of statutory
certification, one option open to the makers of the consoles is to make the
parental lock feature (currently installed as an option) the default
setting. Adults would then need to key in a secret code to play the game of
their choice.
But to label all gaming as “bad” is to do the industry a disservice. As with
novels, films and internet websites, there are good and bad games, and the
process of becoming engrossed in a well-told story is similar, whether it
unfolds digitally or on the pages of a book. Many games, notably the
77-million-selling Japanese Final Fantasy series, tap into the market
for modern myth, marrying storylines and are as satisfying to play – and as
demanding – as chess.
Faced with the success of the Wii, Sony and Microsoft have recently changed
marketing tack to get themselves out of the spare room and into the living
room, repositioning themselves as home entertainment hubs.
Both machines can play DVDs. The Sony PS3 also plays high-definition Blu-ray
discs and comes with a built-in hard drive that can be used to store photos,
videos, music or content downloaded from the internet via the built-in wi-fi
capability.
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