Posts Tagged ‘starcraft’

Forgive me, Sid Meier

Saturday, September 27th, 2008

Due to a strange quirk of my gaming history, I never played a numbered Civilization game beyond the original Civ (also known as Sid Meier’s Civilization: Build an Empire to Stand the Test of Time). That game I utterly consumed back in the early 90s when it was released, probably completing the game with every possible combination of civilization and victory condition.

Civ II, for example, wasn’t released until 1996, five years after its predecessor (I had spent much of that intervening period playing Civ), and at that point Quake, and then the mod Quake 40K/Chapter Honour (boy, there’s a site I haven’t seen in ages), become my time-sucking game of choice.

During most periods of my life, I’ve tried to consistently play games in a variety of genres—in the 90s, I was mainly into adventure games, shooters, and strategy games—but I’ve also generally had one game that lurks in the background, filling the cracks in my gaming time between this title or that title. Civ was probably the first game to hold that honor. (more…)

Pro StarCraft players are insane

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

But they are also quite entertaining to watch, especially when accompanied by surprisingly compelling and comprehensible commentary in English.

For the next couple months, something that the website calls the Averatec-Intel Classic 2008 Season 2 and the video intro calls the TG Sambo Intel Classic is taking place in Korea, and a fellow named Nick “Tasteless” Plott is on location to deliver a spirited play-by-play alongside the amiable but rather less enthusiastically knowledgeable “Lil Susie.” The organization running the event is streaming it live as well as archiving the videos on its site. (Note that the videos are listed newest first.)

As someone who hasn’t played StarCraft in years and would probably receive a negative ranking just for logging onto Battle.net, I still find these matches to be a great watch. Plott’s audible excitement curve appears to track with the events of the game (not that I would be able to independently understand the in-game actions well enough to be able to verify that), and even my minimal level of StarCraft knowledge—I know the names of the units, basically—is enough of a grounding to allow me to keep up with the calls. (more…)