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Up or down economy, expertly rendered digital violence finds a market
By Andrew Leonard
November 13, 2009
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Computer game giant Electronic Arts is getting blitzed by the bad economy. But if you cater to 11-year-old boys, you're still doing alright
By Andrew Leonard
December 10, 2008
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The co-creator of Dungeons & Dragons is dead. Let's all stop playing World of Warcraft for a minute, and remember him.
By Andrew Leonard
March 4, 2008
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Two kids, 13 and 15, killed an innocent highway motorist. Was a violent computer game responsible -- or their sad lives?
By David Kushner
February 22, 2005
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Developers, critics, gamers and analysts weigh in: What they loved, what they learned, what they worried about.
By Wagner James Au
December 22, 2004
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Electronic Arts developers work night and day to crank out hits like "Madden NFL 2005." But now the elves are revolting.
By Katharine Mieszkowski
December 2, 2004
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The controversial video game "JFK Reloaded" plays to our inner sociopath. But it also shows how government scandals fester in the national psyche until the truth comes out.
By Jefferson Morley
November 30, 2004
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Rich and evocative, "Myst IV: Revelation" is a worthy successor to one of the greatest computer games of all time.
By Laura Miller
November 23, 2004
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In "Battlefield Vietnam," a new version of one of the most popular games in the U.S., you too can try to win a Silver Star saving your buddies in the jungle.
By Wagner James Au
April 13, 2004
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I'm not a violent guy. But I just cheerfully burned an entire marching band to death, then kicked a woman's head downstairs. OK, it's all virtual slaughter, but I'm starting to scare myself.
By Peter Olafson
March 31, 2004
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In Lev Grossman's "Codex," an investment banker manages the neat trick of simultaneously getting lost in medieval England and a 21st century computer game.
By Andrew Leonard
March 4, 2004
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Eugene Jarvis, legendary creator of "Defender" and "Robotron," is still making computer games for arcades. But his new bad guys aren't aliens -- they're terrorists who want to crash a plane into the White House.
By Mitch Borgeson
March 2, 2004
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Long after Bo Jackson retired, the legend of Tecmo Bo lives on. For today's gamers, digital athletes are even realer than the real thing.
By Jon Azpiri
February 5, 2004
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While missiles crashed around him, Zeyad struggled to keep Crash Bandicoot alive. Today, he continues to play, even as Baathist holdouts rage on and his frustrated countrymen demand a better future.
By Wagner James Au
January 20, 2004
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Was 2003 the year of the great online multiplayer gaming flameout, or the year when a whole new approach to computer games finally gained real momentum?
By Jane Pinckard
December 23, 2003
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What happens when a virtual newspaper covering virtual events runs afoul of a real corporation?
By Farhad Manjoo
December 12, 2003
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America's most bankable female movie star confesses that she is a hardcore shoot-'em-up gamer. What does this mean?
By Wagner James Au
June 23, 2003
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Former "Star Trek" star Wil Wheaton was the main attraction on G4, the fast-rising video-game TV network. Until he quit, embroiling the network in a 21st century "Quiz Show" scandal.
By Bob Calhoun
May 8, 2003
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Tolkien provided the blueprint for one generation of computer games after another. But have today's whizz-bang graphics brought us any closer to Middle Earth?
By Andrew Leonard
December 30, 2002
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Grand Theft Auto: Vice City goes where no video game has gone before -- into the dark heart of the 1980s.
By Wagner James Au
November 11, 2002
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A new breed of computer games is teaching today's teenagers how to wage, and win, the war against terror.
By Wagner James Au
October 4, 2002
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More dangerous than Grand Theft Auto 3 -- a defender of video games is given the trash talk-show treatment. Here's what he really wanted to say.
By Henry Jenkins
August 20, 2002
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Keep the gamers happy, and the world is yours: How one 3-D graphics company shrugged off a recession and vanquished every foe.
By Daniel Drew Turner
May 15, 2002
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A federal judge says computer games don't deserve First Amendment protection. His decision is wrong, stupid and dangerous.
By Wagner James Au
May 6, 2002
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Bill Gates presides as Microsoft's WebTV and Xbox development teams duel for the honor of attacking Sony.
By Dean Takahashi
April 25, 2002