Awesome Stuff: All Play And No Work

from the games-old-and-new dept

For this week's awesome stuff, we're doing away with productivity tools and revolutionary ideas and just looking and some crowdfunding projects for things to be played with.

Mate: The Wall Hanging Chess Board

If I'm being honest, I've long thought chess was a highly overrated game, since it seems to only require actual ingenuity and creativity at the very lowest and very highest levels of play, with years of little more than rote memorization and study in between. Nevertheless, there's no denying that it's a cultural icon, not just as a game but as a physical object and a set of symbols. It has inspired countless pieces of magnificent functional art and craft. It's also fascinating to me for its asynchronous nature: the most interesting chess matches to me aren't rapidfire showdowns with two masters slapping the clock, they are the curious experiments where Kasparov takes on the world, or an avid player engages in ten games-by-mail at once over the course of months and years. The Wall Hanging Chess Board combines both these aspects: a neat piece of home decor that also creates a cool in-home play dynamic, where a long-term game can evolve on the wall as people make their moves whenever they pass by the board.

Tactics: Revolutionize The Foosball Table

Foosball, on the other hand, is a game I've always thought was highly underrated. It may just be because they had a table in my high school, and I've always sucked at ping-pong and pool — but as far as bar and basement games go, I think foosball takes the cake, and has a surprising amount of depth once you get past the "madly spin the handles" stage. Thus, the idea of Tactics, a foosball table that adds a bunch of new twists like specially-shaped feet on certain players to allow more precise aiming, and adjustable team configurations, is an intriguing one to me.

Mineblock: A Small Affordable Minecraft Home Server

I'm almost ashamed to say that I've never actually played Minecraft. I strongly suspect that I would consider it neither over or underrated — it seems to be exactly as brilliant and significant as everyone claims. But I also love the idea of any game where people set up many servers in which they build entirely new worlds, then go and visit each others' creations to interact or compete or just tour around. While a big part of the beauty of this is the fact that these worlds can exist anywhere, all connected by the internet, the idea of tying one to a specific physical space with a local server is also fascinating. The Mineblock, an easy-to-set-up home server for hosting a dedicated Minecraft world, could be a lot of fun, and make this sort of home network gaming more accessible to the less technically inclined. It also looks great.

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Filed Under: awesome stuff, crowdfunding, gaming


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  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 Nov 2014 @ 1:18am

    I wonder if Microsoft will C&D that Minecraft server out of existence? (And then not bother releasing anything like it themselves, naturally.)

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    John Fenderson (profile), 2 Nov 2014 @ 8:17am

    Solace in company

    I'm almost ashamed to say that I've never actually played Minecraft.


    Well, if it's any solace, you're not alone. I've never played it either. I never saw the point because if it doesn't live up to its reputation, then there's no reason to play it. If it does live up to its reputation, then it would become a huge time sucker for me, and my time tends to be at a premium as it is. The last thing I need is something that absorbs endless hours of it.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Leigh Beadon (profile), 2 Nov 2014 @ 11:11am

      Re: Solace in company

      This is a good point. I'm not really ashamed so much as disappointed that there isn't infinite time in the world. I feel like I understand exactly how and why Minecraft is so engaging and I know it would almost certainly work on me (I did get briefly sucked into Terraria, which is like the 2D platformer version of Minecraft).

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Mike Masnick (profile), 2 Nov 2014 @ 2:13pm

        Re: Re: Solace in company

        This is a good point. I'm not really ashamed so much as disappointed that there isn't infinite time in the world. I feel like I understand exactly how and why Minecraft is so engaging and I know it would almost certainly work on me

        Exactly how I feel.

        Though I've had enough people tell me that Minecraft is *amazing* for kids that I may have to break down and set it up for my kids...

        link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Mason Wheeler (profile), 3 Nov 2014 @ 11:01am

      Re: Solace in company

      You're not missing all that much. It's a game that, at first glance, appears to be an open-world adventure game with really horrible graphics and no plot whatsoever. Then when you get deeper into it, you find out it's actually a virtual LEGO set, which makes you wonder why all the fighting with monsters and zombies is even in there in the first place.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Mary Ann Ludwig, 2 Nov 2014 @ 8:48pm

    Mineblock

    My grandson is working on an Amazing Race Minecraft scenario. I'm pretty impressed since he is only 10 years old and seems to have grasped Minecraft completely. I look. I watch him demonstrate his skills. Then I go play Candy Crush. That I get.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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