Video Games are an interactive-medium, which means the music, the story, art direction, has nothing to do with it being art. What should invoke the emotional response is how the player is interacting with the game directly. And if you break most games down to the interaction, you're pretty much just shooting things. How does that expose to the player something of the human heart? How is that showing something about the human condition? It isn't. I mean honestly: after you play a match of Call Of Duty, do you put on your french beret, with a wine glass in one hand, and discus what the match meant to each of you?
Sure the story in a game might be well written and incredible, but that is a completely separate medium from video games, and no one is going to be taking video games seriously as an art form until gamers get that through their heads.
An example of a game that I think understands it's medium with flourish is the indie game Passage. Passage is a game with very retro graphics, there's no fighting, you're just walking. You play as a man who is walking down a narrow passage in which the end of the passage is blurred to you, but becomes clearer and more revealed as you continue on. In the early parts of the game you can also choose whether or not to take on a female companion who will follow you; now if you do take on the girl you won't be able to fit into certain walkways, so you'll miss treasure that way, but all the treasure you do find gives you more points with the female companion. And as you progress through the game you're character (and the female companion if you choose to bring her along) ages, and moves more slowly, tell you're character eventually dies.
The game is all about the passage of time, and that if you don't settle down with a life partner you could probably do more things with your life, but sharing moments with someone you love is so much richer. It actually almost made me cry once I finished the game.
It seems most gamers are in denial because they've wasted so much of their life playing video games all day to the point they don't want to come to the realization that it was all for nothing. I mean I love Dragon Age: Orgins, but it's just garbage for my brain.
I don't blame Robert Ebert for saying Video Games arn't art, even though I disagree with him because clearly Passage is, but from what he sees on the market, I think he is defiantly right.
Sure the story in a game might be well written and incredible, but that is a completely separate medium from video games, and no one is going to be taking video games seriously as an art form until gamers get that through their heads.
An example of a game that I think understands it's medium with flourish is the indie game Passage. Passage is a game with very retro graphics, there's no fighting, you're just walking. You play as a man who is walking down a narrow passage in which the end of the passage is blurred to you, but becomes clearer and more revealed as you continue on. In the early parts of the game you can also choose whether or not to take on a female companion who will follow you; now if you do take on the girl you won't be able to fit into certain walkways, so you'll miss treasure that way, but all the treasure you do find gives you more points with the female companion. And as you progress through the game you're character (and the female companion if you choose to bring her along) ages, and moves more slowly, tell you're character eventually dies.
The game is all about the passage of time, and that if you don't settle down with a life partner you could probably do more things with your life, but sharing moments with someone you love is so much richer. It actually almost made me cry once I finished the game.
It seems most gamers are in denial because they've wasted so much of their life playing video games all day to the point they don't want to come to the realization that it was all for nothing. I mean I love Dragon Age: Orgins, but it's just garbage for my brain.
I don't blame Robert Ebert for saying Video Games arn't art, even though I disagree with him because clearly Passage is, but from what he sees on the market, I think he is defiantly right.