Write About Games 2.0
Write About Games 2.0: Giving it a chance

Come on, people. It's not like you have to carve it in stone!
So normally I would have terminated such an underutilized section of the site with extreme prejudice with InsaneBear’s quarterly refinements, but I’m going to go ahead and give this second chance of a section a second chance of it’s own. I know all of my current readers are creatively bankrupt bums with nothing to say here, but I’m hoping some of the chaps I meet at college might be interested in this sort of thing. “What exactly is ‘this sort of thing?’” you ask? Well, it’s a place where any registered user can write their own rant, rave, or any other reflections on video games. Doesn’t matter what the topic is as long as it’s tied to video games some how. Could be a scholarly essay, could be a charming poem. Be as creative or straight-forward as you want. Say what’s on your mind. Just say something! I’m hoping somebody with a passion for video games feels compelled to say something about our favorite pastime. Share it with the IB community!
Author: CodyWrite About Games 2.0: Write Harder

May your ambitions soar as high as Mr. Plainview's.
As you may have guessed from the sophisticated moniker of this post, Write About Games is returning, but with a twist. I’m certainly not going to tell any of you want you can or cannot write, so feel free to rant about anything you want in there simply by clicking on your profile link and then the New Post link in the top-right corner. Write up your post and pending my review (because I can’t rightly have you fiends freely posting nekked pictures of yourselves), your valued contribution will appear on the home page shortly. But back to that all important twist. The first time around, there seemed to be a general lack of motivation within the community. So hopefully, by providing a more structured and focused outlet, 2.0 will have everybody joining in on the fun.
Author: CodyWrite About Games!: This month’s choice selection

Third month in a row. I’m good. So good that everybody else is too scared to even try writing something.
Author: CodyWrite About Games!: This month’s choice selection

Well, another month has gone by and it was another hard decision, but user Cody takes the cake again. His entries are just so great that everybody else’s may as well be invisible. This particular piece, titled “BioShock in the classrooms,” is an excerpt from an academic essay he wrote on utopian literature.
Author: CodyRandom: As random as it gets

Well, it’s 1:32 in the morning and I just wandered the streets for an hour and half out of boredom. I saw three cats along the way and managed to pet one. It was a peaceful little stroll. Then I came back here into my hot apartment and read some article about No More Heroes that featured the spitting image of awesomeness that lies a few lines above this. Is that not the most incredible light saber you’ve ever seen? I want that. Just think, I could take it on my midnight walks and entertain the kitties with it. And now I’m wondering if this should be posted as Random or Our Adventures. It was a bit of an adventure, and it was mine, but the light saber was a random treasure of the internets. So I’ll leave it to you to decide, dear reader.
Author: CodyWrite About Games!: BioShock in the classrooms
So as I was finishing up the semester for school I was tasked with writing a paper for my English class in which I proposed a course I’d like to take and a reading list to go with it. I decided to create a course centered around the concept of utopian societies and their inevitable failure. The texts I chose to include were 2K Boston’s BioShock, Ayn Rand’s Anthem, Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, Kurt Wimmer’s Equilibrium, T.H. White’s The Once and Future King, and Andy and Larry Wachowski’s The Matrix. Surprisingly, a list half full of movies and a video game actually impressed my teacher quite a bit. I think it really speaks to BioShock‘s depth and substance that it can be respected in an academic capacity, and I’d like to share with you the passage that focuses on that 2007 classic.
The course would begin with a haunting exploration of a fallen utopia’s ruins in 2k Boston’s BioShock. The game’s unique in that the player is an outsider coming to the utopia of Rapture years after its fall. The world is littered with relics of the glory days that hint at what sort of society Rapture was, like a massive banner in the entrance that reads, “No gods or kings. Only man,” or orientation videos featuring the under-water city’s founder Andrew Ryan condemning the irrationally altruistic governments of the surface world. But the player quickly realizes that all is not well in Rapture, and they’re soon fighting to escape a society driven mad by abuse of the wonder-drug ADAM. Along the way the player will encounter dozens of audio-diaries from the city’s former residents that give a taste of what led to the great society’s fall, and according to respected game critic Jeff Gerstman, “Hearing the voices of these wide-eyed idealists as their world falls apart makes the whole game feel more human.” And that’s really the strong suit of BioShock in that it presents players with human characters that almost make you believe in the ideals of Rapture. And there are characters that can make you hate everything that Rapture stands for too. It truly is a tragic tale of the best intentions gone horribly wrong and the audio-diaries give the player a great idea of all the little metaphorical cracks in the city of the sea that led to the inevitable disastrous flood. The player even has some personal choice along the way when it comes to upholding the objectivist beliefs of Rapture or the altruistic values of the rest of the world. Game journalist Brandon Sheffield probably sums it up best when he says, “If you want to be told about the dangers of capitalist extremism and its dystopian results, play Final Fantasy VII. If you want to be shown, play BioShock.”
Author: CodyWrite About Games!: This month’s choice selection

Believe it or not, it’s been about a month since Write About Games! was first put into action. And as promised, we here at InsaneBear are recognizing the best entries. It was a tough decision, but ultimately, we felt like user Cody‘s A Bear is Born was a cut above the rest of the competition. And by that I mean, it was the only entry. So all ye faithful readers out there should really get off your butts and write a little! Well, I guess you don’t have to get off your butts. But anyways, without further ado:
Author: CodyRecent Comments
- wqyukf on 2011 VGAs: Hitman: Absolution Has Blood, Killing
- Cody on Trailers: Kingdoms of Amalur launch trailer
- Ryan on Let’s Finish: The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess! Episode 8-Part 4
- Cody on Random: InsaneBear’s giving out free hugs today
- Ryan on Let’s Finish: The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess! Episode 8-Part 3
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