Sims Online Presidential Campaign Shapes Up
Ant writes "Wired News has an article on a campaign for the presidency of Alphaville, the biggest city in The Sims Online. Two challengers will square off in a final primary for the opportunity to unseat Alphaville's incumbent president, the appropriately named Mr-President, in next month's general election."
You do not have a right to free speech on games like "The Sims Online".
These games are a privledge, and if the communities are outraged about censorship, or anything else, well they should fight with their money.
Sidenote:
This may not be the case with TSO, but i've noticed in many MMORPGS (think EQ), people are so addicted to it, despite the fact they hate the company that owns it, they continue to play it.
They still piss and moan about it but they never actally cancel the game.
Maybe thats what happened here.
Bethanie: Whore...
Fan Whore
Art imitates life, I guess.
Everybody's a libertarian 'till their neighbour's becomes a crack house.
I'd argue that a democracy without freedom of speech is not a true democracy.
If you can't speak freely, you can't expect to exchange information regarding the government - which means you're not able to freely cast an informed VOTE... in which case you have a sham democracy. QED.
Go ask the people in Afganistan and Iraq how much they think Dubya is simulated...
This "Government" appears to have no control other than through the actions of 100 or so voluntary members who have no more power than a normal player. Using this election as a case study of such small, self-policing authorities is valid, but it has no more authenticity than the politics 10 year-old's Secret Agents club.
Okay, let's get one thing out of the way. Sims Online is not a geek's game. It's designed more for teenage girls and soccer moms than any geek. Any geek would see it for what it is: IRC with graphics..
/. community would care. That is, unless there was some slick story about a technical failure of said company.
/. going strong with News for Nerds. Stuff that matters.. Not with every Hello Kitty tea party, IRC world, attempt to mimic social behavior in real life. While on that same note, please cut back on the Wired articles. I remember a /. that made fun of them. Now, they appear to be /.'s most major news outlet.
This game is right up there with There, inc. I think if both of these games vanished today less than 1% of the
Let's keep
They're aren't taking the game "too seriously," they're just taking their fun seriously. And it is very interesting from a sociological point of view as well, since it crudely mimics reality.
Not everyone likes short games for lazy people with an attention span of... hey, look! Some dirt! Yum!
Besides, if real life is so good, why is everyone trying to get away from it?
"You should never doubt what nobody is sure about." -- Willy Wonka