Showing posts with label Alex Hutchinson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alex Hutchinson. Show all posts

Headline RePLAY – 4.6.12

Today on Headline RePLAY: The creative director of Assassin’s Creed 3 calls the internet’s ideas “predictable,” major publishers removed registered sex offenders from their online services in New York and a South Korean representative uses Angry Birds for his campaign.  


Alex Hutchinson, the creative director of Assassin’s Creed 3, really didn’t like the ideas proposed by fans on where the next Assassin’s Creed game should go.

“People on the internet suggest the most boring settings,” Hutchinson told OXM. “The three most wanted are WWII, feudal Japan and Egypt. They’re kind of the three worst settings for an AC game.”

Hutchinson and Assassin’s Creed 3 writer Corey May rather do India. “[May] really wants to do India,” said Hutchinson. “I would too. I’d really to do the Raj.”

At PAX East, Hutchinson clarified his stance on potential Assassin’s Creed settings and the creative process: “It’s part of a bigger discussion. Obviously any setting is potentially awesome,” Hutchinson told Joystiq. “The point we were making was that some settings are more familiar in videogames than other settings. And the two particular ones [WWII and Feudal Japan] that were mentioned are very familiar videogame settings.”

“The exciting thing is that the game can go anywhere,” the creative director continued. “We’ve had versions of the assassin… people have thrown ideas around for probably literally any setting that people would think of. But when you get right down to it—when we’re doing the actual nitty gritty of spending the time on it, spending a couple years making something—we wanna go to a setting that other games haven’t gone to.

“We’re trying to find places that will surprise people.”

“If people think they have the worst ideas, I apologize for that,” he said. “But really, they’re very predictable. The internet is not the place for insight, unfortunately.”  

*Source: OXM, Joystiq


In an aptly titled initiative dubbed “Operation: Game Over,” major videogame publishers have purged 3,580 accounts of New York registered sex offenders from their online services in collaboration with the state.

The initiative used information from a database that collected sex offenders’ e-mail addresses, screen names and other online identifiers. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman then approached publishers to remove the sex offenders from their online platforms. The first-of-its-kind effort involved Microsoft, Apple, Sony, Warner Bros., Electronic Arts, Blizzard Entertainment and Disney Interactive Media Group.

“We must ensure online videogame systems do not become a digital playground for dangerous predators,” said Attorney General Schneiderman. “That means doing everything possible to block sex offenders from using gaming networks as a vehicle to prey on underage victims.”

The New York Civil Liberties Union disagrees: “While the intent here is admirable, schemes like this one do very little to keep children safe and trample on the right to free speech and expression,” communications director Jennifer Carnig told Gamasutra.

“And the problem this initiative is trying to solve is almost non-existent,” Carnig explained. “Children are almost always abused by people they know—a friend or family member—not by people they interact with while playing videogames online.”  

Nevertheless, the Attorney General’s office plans to continue what the initiative started. “The process is still ongoing, so we’ve been in touch with [Nintendo] and other companies as well. These major companies are just the first to voluntarily agree,” said an Attorney General spokesman.

*Source: Gamasutra


Capitalizing on the Angry Birds craze, a South Korean representative has released a campaign video titled “Hong-ry Birds” where he, well, dresses up like an Angry Bird to discuss social issues.

In a rebranding effort to distance themselves from South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, the incumbent Saenuri Party has decided the best approach was to dress Representative Jeong Hong with feathers, make bad puns and declare: “I’ve become a bird for the Sae[bird in Korean]nuri Party. I’m a completely different candidate, with completely different promises!”  

If it squawks like an Angry Bird, explodes like an Angry Bird… it’s still a South Korean politician in disguise.  

*Source: koreaBANG via Kotaku