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Video Games Hit The Big Screen

Anonymous Coward writes "A movie theatre owner in Logan, Utah is hoping to start a new trend by bringing video games (Halo in this case) to the big screen. The local newspaper in Logan, The Herald Journal has a nice write-up about the success they had. Does anyone else think this could catch on to be successful, especially in college towns?"

220 comments

  1. hold up. by crtfdgk · · Score: 5, Funny

    waitaminute. who actually has time to leave the house to go game somewhere else? why on earth would you leave the safety and security of your 100% sunlight free cave of an apartment or bedroom to game somewhere else, and pay extra, and possibly *shudder* socialize and the real world? isn't the point of gaming just to ensure that geeks everywhere never see the outside world? or did i just miss something?

    --

    $> man woman
    $> Segmentation fault (core dumped)
    1. Re:hold up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What distro? I think you need to update your man pages.

      man-woman.0.9.tar.gz

    2. Re:hold up. by PetoskeyGuy · · Score: 5, Funny

      Don't worry, they thought of that. The games don't start until midnight. Plenty of time to leave the house to play for hours and come back without any chance of a tan.

    3. Re:hold up. by Pharmboy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This is exactly why I play on two screens at my own house: a 51" projection TV, and an 80" projector against a white wall, both on computers. The colors are not as good as a monitor, but load up Doom 3 and start walking around the complex, and 80" of screen will make you poop your pants when something pops out and starts shooting you. The surround sound system helps, too.

      I'm already using the computer on the system for a media center anyway, playing games was the next logical step, and no P2/XBox needed.

      The theatre idea is perfect if you don't have the funds to buy your own or like to be more social with your gaming. I can see this being the next reason that people actually leave their homes and interact with other people, rather than go to bars and risk a DWI/DUI.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    4. Re:hold up. by AndroidCat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And you think that going to a movie theater and either playing or watching other people play video games is socialiizing? (There might be a 12-step program for this, you know.)

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    5. Re:hold up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't really like to pay $8.50 to see a two hour movie, I definately don't want to pay that much to watch some geek play one of the most repetitive games of the modern era in public. Other than splitscreen, it's not like you can really do multiplayer. Then, the quality would be abhorent with the low resolutions.

    6. Re:hold up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      This is exactly why I play on two screens at my own house: a 51" projection TV, and an 80" projector against a white wall..

      This is also exactly why you are filing for bankruptcy.

    7. Re:hold up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I've used movie screens to play games, and the key is tournaments. Just getting together and playing only works if it's one group of friends, but even a huge group will be happy to pay in and spectate if they're competing in a tournament for prizes.

      We had an MS-sponsored college recruiting halo tournament, 8 players at a time, dozens in the audience, with prizes ranging from tshirts to xbox games to an xbox for the winner. It was a lot of fun, but without the competition it would've sucked.

      The image looked pretty good though. The low resolution just isn't a problem. Of course high res would be much nicer, but even in 4 way split screen it's watchable.

    8. Re:hold up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      rather than go to bars and risk a DWI/DUI

      You mean Dance With Intensity, the DDR clone for PC? Yeah, I wouldn't want to risk that either... my wrists are already strained enough from using a PC every day, thank you.

    9. Re:hold up. by jackbird · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Um, once upon a time there were these things called "arcades." They were very very sunlight free, often filled with smoke, and, while crowded, had very little socializing going on. They were pretty cool.

    10. Re:hold up. by Tongo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Anyone else think that all these hardcore gamers are vampires gaming among us?

    11. Re:hold up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, yeah, 'course that's the reason your wrists are strained. We believe you! Honest!

    12. Re:hold up. by flewp · · Score: 1

      He said his wrists were strained from using the computer all day, he didn't say WHAT he was doing on the computer all day.

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
    13. Re:hold up. by hayalci · · Score: 1

      No,
      they dig the place 600m below earth.
      %0 sunlight
      %50 moisture
      %100 gaming :-)

      [[ free lunch included. oh rodents! :)) ]]

      --
      hayalci
    14. Re:hold up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A good game of pong on that big screen would make me put on some pants.

    15. Re:hold up. by mayotte · · Score: 3, Interesting

      About 10 years ago I worked for a tradeshow company. I was in the (not so) grand ballroom of a Silicon Valley hotel converging a projector that was setup on a 9'x12' screen and needed a computer video source to test it.

      So I brought in my old MacIIfx and fired up PacMan of all games. Let me tell you that PacMan on a 9x12 screen in a dark room with a set of Bose 402s was amazing.

      PacMan suddenly got a whole lot cooler. But it was all for testing purposes of course ;-)

    16. Re:hold up. by paulcammish · · Score: 4, Funny
      Oh, just because we...

      have pale skin,

      are sensative to sunlight,

      have hightened reflexes,

      wear black,

      are rarely seen in public,

      have elongated canine teeth and

      drink blood

      ...we're Vampires now?

      Typical!!!

    17. Re:hold up. by RTFA · · Score: 0

      Me and my friends are doing almost the same as you. We use a 51" projection tv and a projector against a wall for playing Halo, 8 at a time, using system links (4 / TV).

      Now, I just wait for the cinema here (which have 12 screens) to do this...!

      --
      This comment was written using 100% reused electrons.
    18. Re:hold up. by ndogg · · Score: 1

      I see the human has finally caught on.

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    19. Re:hold up. by Eideewt · · Score: 1

      Now that's an amazing display of prescience. I'll just refrain from making similar predictions, since they might come true as well. I wouldn't want that.

  2. Halo 2 by lightdarkness · · Score: 0

    When halo 2 comes out, we are storming the local movie theater, and demanding they let us play. It's times like this I lived in Utah.

  3. Dupe by Rie+Beam · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Isn't this a dupe? Just need to find the link...

    1. Re:Dupe by lightdarkness · · Score: 1, Informative

      http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/08/19/ 164257&tid=127&tid=211
      DUPLICATE!

    2. Re:Dupe by Ranma21 · · Score: 1

      Yep. Why is it that the /. MODS are the ones that so often post dupes?

  4. The possibilities! by miscellaneous_havoc · · Score: 5, Funny

    If they let me play Dead or Alive Beach Volleyball on the big screen... I'd live there!

    --

    -----
    Make Love not [Browser] War!
    1. Re:The possibilities! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even better yet, if they have Dead or Alive Beach Volleyball with the nude hack (atleast the one on the XBOX release).

      Mmmmmmmmmmm!!

    2. Re:The possibilities! by Fulkkari · · Score: 1

      Hahah. I and my friend actually once got banned on an exhibition when we continuously played DoA Xtreme Beach Volleyball. The staff though somebody else should have the opportunity to try the game. Then once we had been driven away, the staff of the exhibition took over the gaming. That was pretty funny.

      --
      I demand the Cone of Silence!
    3. Re:The possibilities! by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      Forget that, just imagine what you could with porn on a big screen like that!

      Oh, I guess they've done that already...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
  5. Hmm... by ProppaT · · Score: 1, Redundant

    DOA Volleyball on the big screen.... ::drools::

    --
    Wise men say, "Forgiveness is divine, but never pay full price for late pizza."
    1. Re:Hmm... by Mazem · · Score: 1

      Geek minds think alike.

  6. Uhhh... by agraupe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not sure if it's ever been something you can pay for, but the local Famous Players (big Canadian theatre chain) was advertising a Halo 2 fest with ten friends if you entered and won some sort of contest. That being said, I'd be more likely to pay 8.00 for a massive two-hour Halo deathmatch than a boring movie.

    1. Re:Uhhh... by bladesjester · · Score: 1

      We used to have a game tournament on my campus on occasion (usually once a quarter) in one of the biggest lecture halls using the floor to celing projection screen. It was great fun and the time in the room was donated because it wasn't in use during that period of the evening =)

      --
      Everything I need to know I learned by killing smart people and eating their brains.
    2. Re:Uhhh... by Pxtl · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, one unfortunate fact about Halo that other games do better (such as the aforementioned DoA games) is the splitscreen. Its more fun watching a single game than multiple small screen games split up out of one big screen. A multiplayer single-screen brawl game such as Bomberman, Super Smash Bros, or PowerStone II would be best, imho. Fast enough to run a tournament that way too, and let the whole audience play.

    3. Re:Uhhh... by tverbeek · · Score: 1
      That being said, I'd be more likely to pay 8.00 for a massive two-hour Halo deathmatch than a boring movie.

      I'd be more likely to pay $8 for for a boring movie than sit and watch someone masturgame for two hours, even for free. Movies are designed to provide passive entertainment, and even the worst ones offer opportunities for entertainment criticising the acting, plot, dialog, etc. But games are designed to entertain only the player, which makes the rows and rows of seats in the theater pretty pointless. It seems like a simpler solution than projecting the image on a cinema screen would be to sit closer to the TV.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    4. Re:Uhhh... by agraupe · · Score: 1

      I didn't say watch... I said play. Yes, you're right, watching it would be dead boring.

    5. Re:Uhhh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Super smash bros? surely you jest. it already uses the full screen! if you used multiple tvs, they'd just all display the same thing!

  7. IMAX by wackysootroom · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Put Doom3 or Halo in an IMAX and you won't have any trouble getting $50 out of my wallet.

    1. Re:IMAX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess you don't mind having pixels the size of your head.

      Btw, take your spam sig elsewhere, pal.

    2. Re:IMAX by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 4, Funny

      All playing Doom3 on Imax is going to do is shorten your lifespan by about 10 years. And soil a couple pairs of your trousers ;)

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    3. Re:IMAX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose, CA. hosts the annual MaxGames Video Game Tournament. The finals are played in the IMAX dome: 40'x60' image and a 13,000 watt, 44-speaker sound system.

      http://www.thetech.org/events/maxgames/2004/

    4. Re:IMAX by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      I'm with the others, it is pointless. The exceptions may be if they have a UXGA projector or higher connected to PCs.

      Playing console games on an IMAX would simply be a sad joke.

    5. Re:IMAX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The resolution on the IMAX is phenominal, I can't see how they could get even a modern computer game running with a crisp screen.

  8. hmmm by mknapp905 · · Score: 0

    I live 90 minutes from Logan, Sign me Up!!!!!!

    --
    If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice. RUSH
  9. But... by bburton · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is the theater really going to make more money doing this than showing a movie?

    It says that "There is a $3 charge for spectators to watch the games.", but that's a far cry from the $7+ they would charge for a movie.

    Who here would actually participate, either player or spectator?

    --
    Slashdot = ((Technology + Politics) / Trolls) % Grammar Nazis
    1. Re:But... by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With your numbers, if it costs the theater $5 per person in royalties to play a movie, they come out ahead assuming the same number of people would show up either way.

    2. Re:But... by csimicah · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's during a time when the theatre would otherwise be idle... assuming the licensing fees weren't too high, it's found money.

    3. Re:But... by DeepRedux · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the key is that "tournaments are scheduled for Friday nights at midnight". If this were at 8pm, I would not see how it would pay the theater better than a showing a movie. But by midnight they need a special event to get any kind of a crowd.

    4. Re:But... by ruprechtjones · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's it in a nutshell. Theaters make zero money from ticket sales, and their entire profit margin comes from consession sales. With this program, that door charge is all profit.

      This is how the big chains work, but the smaller theaters are either owned by the big chains and run older movies (at near 100% profit on ticket sales) once the initial release schedule is expired at the big chain, or they are independent theaters that run alternative/older movies.

      I'd pay 10 bucks to go watch a 3-hour Halo 2 deathmatch at Seattle's Cinerama any day. Hell, I'd pay more to sit in the front row of the balcony and play the deathmatch myself.

      --
      Kip Hawley is an idiot.
    5. Re:But... by ticklemeozmo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      assuming the licensing fees weren't too high

      I just tried calling the theatre listed in the article (area code 435), they gave me Calvin Timothy's home phone (I pretended to be a manager of the local AMC theatre) and he said he's not at liberty to discuss the licensing, who they go through our how they got it.

      They want to market the idea before anyone steals it. Whatever happened to letting kids have fun?

      --
      When modding "Informative", please make sure it both has a source and IS actually informative.
    6. Re:But... by donutello · · Score: 3, Informative

      From what my friends in film school have told me, the cinema owners pretty much break even on admission price versus distributor royalties. Where they make their money is from selling you overpriced popcorn and sodas. Ever wonder why not a single theater tries to compete on the price of concessions?

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    7. Re:But... by jaywarrietto · · Score: 1

      It's during a time when the theatre would otherwise be idle...
      Not only that but, as a worker for a Cinemark, I can tell you that box office sales go straight to the movie makers not to the theatre. Theatres make thier money on concessions not on ticket sales. The money they charge spectators is all thiers after and licensing they might need to get.

    8. Re:But... by M.+Silver · · Score: 1

      Ever wonder why not a single theater tries to compete on the price of concessions?

      Some do, actually. But it's usually either taking a loss trying to starve out the competition, or as a "We'll gouge you for SLIGHTLY LESS than other theaters do!" sort of campaign.

      --

      Slashdot's token middle-aged housewife
    9. Re:But... by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      With this program, that door charge is all profit.

      At least as long as they don't offer Counterstrike. I wonder how long before other game companies will want a cut of the ticket price.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    10. Re:But... by john_smith_45678 · · Score: 1

      They're going to charge $7 to play Far Cry?

    11. Re:But... by FlutterVertigo(gmail · · Score: 2, Funny

      ...the bottom line is theatres make their money off of concessions. Matinee? Cheaper ticket but the same price for concessions.

      *sigh* I've thought about filing a patent for something called an " intermission ". It would be a break in the movie. Those who fell asleep during a boring movie could get up & stretch, everyone who carried a drink|food in at the beginning and buy more (there's nothing worse than needing to empty your bladder during an excellent movie.

      (would peeing in the empty cup be a bad thing>?)
      come to think of it, I've never seen a sign which says, "Please don't pee in the cups.


      Unfortunately, theatres wouldn't reduce their prices of tickets or food - it'll be seen as a major increase of revenue and their stock will climb.

    12. Re:But... by FlutterVertigo(gmail · · Score: 1

      Midnight?

      That's when Rocky Horror comes on.

    13. Re:But... by stealth.c · · Score: 1

      I've actually wondered why someone hasn't done this already. It's very entertaining to watch good players play. What would be really neat is if you got a skilled "spectator" cameraman inside the game and that's what the spectators of the game would see on one screen (possibly as someone narrates, filling in the viewers on details about certain players and their habits or grudges). Meanwhile, the actual players are elsewhere, playing on their own machines and screens.

      Perhaps they get paid for victories or good showmanship. It could be like professional wrestling, but with pale, pizzafaced adolescents instead!

    14. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or cameramen, and someone to switch between angles etc.

    15. Re:But... by unum15 · · Score: 1

      IIRC it's one of the local cheap theaters. I have been to it lately so I may have my numbers confused. But if I am thinking correctly they only charge $3 anyways.

    16. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It could be like professional wrestling, but with pale, pizzafaced adolescents instead!
      omg i'd love that. it could be really corny and stuff, just like wrestling! "In this corner, HOLLYWOOD! And his evil opponent...PRANCER!"

  10. Doom 3 on Imax by Excen · · Score: 0, Funny


    Imagine the Beowulf cluster needed to render THAT screen!!!
    Yeah, I went there. Deal with it.

    --
    "No beer until you finish your tequila!" -Leela's Dad
  11. If I get my hands on this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... Moviegoers will be wondering why they always see a Pac-Man maze burnt into the background of every movie they watch! Mwahahaha!

    1. Re:If I get my hands on this... by rDx666 · · Score: 1

      You can't burn in stuff onto a projector screen, at least not with normal ones...

    2. Re:If I get my hands on this... by Rosonowski · · Score: 1

      Sure ya can. Just crank up the bulb strength, add a couple lenses, douse the screen in some hydrocarbons... and POOF! burnt in pacman!

      --
      01101001 01100001 01101101 01101110 01101111 01110100 01100001 01101100 01100001 01110111 01111001 01100101 01110010
    3. Re:If I get my hands on this... by deimtee · · Score: 1

      Could you burn in an image on the projector?

      --
      I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
  12. Twilight Zone by lightdarkness · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/08/19/ 164257&tid=127&tid=211

    This has already been posted.

    1. Re:Twilight Zone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh heh and they mod you "Redundant". How amusingly ironic.

  13. Actually been done... by sarkeizen · · Score: 5, Informative

    Cineplex Odeon did this back in the early 90's. Allowing people to rent out a theater to play nintendo. It tanked, big time

    1. Re:Actually been done... by WatchAndListen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sure, but that was Nintendo in the early nineties. The pixels were probably measurable in inches on a big screen. 3D graphics and smooth first person gameplay make everything better :)

    2. Re:Actually been done... by stevemm81 · · Score: 1

      The difference, though, is that modern games could actually look good on a big screen, and they can involve massively larger numbers of players. Having a Super Nintendo tournament where 2-4 kids play at once while 200 watch an oversized, probably pixelated image doesn't sound very lucrative...

    3. Re:Actually been done... by josh3736 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      But that was in the days where you could measure the game's pixels on the theater's screen with a ruler. With today's high-res games, it would be more entertaining.

      Not to mention that in 1993, it was mostly only kids with (a) no car and (b) no cash who played Nintendo. Now you have gamers that can drive themselves to the theater and plop down a few bucks.

    4. Re:Actually been done... by LGagnon · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that video games are much more popular now than then. It could have just been ahead of its time.

    5. Re:Actually been done... by halowolf · · Score: 2, Informative

      Every now and then there is a video game ad at a cinema, and all of them that I have seen have looked bad. Washed out, pixellated beyond all belief. Most if not all of them have been console games since their mass production and pop culture status is much more assured than PC games and makes them more suitable candidates for cinema.

    6. Re:Actually been done... by PetoskeyGuy · · Score: 1

      NES only had a 256x240 pixel screen. Blowing it up to theater size would have been almost painful to watch. Newer consoles and games like HALO four player could really benefit from this. I think this has a good chance of taking off.

    7. Re:Actually been done... by jackbird · · Score: 1

      That's because it's the 640x480 TV image res-ed up. Also, when you're not actually playing the game, it's much harder to follow the motion and the lack of cues like motion blur and decent camera work become more apparent.

    8. Re:Actually been done... by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      The resolution consoles use merely doubled in that time, on that screen you could still measure pixel densities in ipd.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  14. Coral link by Kinesthe · · Score: 5, Informative

    In reference to the previous article and to ward off any potential slashdotting, here's a link using the new Coral P2P cache. Enjoy!

  15. Already been posted... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/08/19/ 164257&tid=127&tid=211

  16. I did this by magefile · · Score: 3, Insightful

    At UMich Ann Arbor. With Super Smash Bros. and a few dozen others.

    1. Re:I did this by Qinopio · · Score: 1

      I'm also at UMich Ann Arbor and a big Smash Bros. fan (though I haven't played in a few months).

      Are you doing this again?

      --
      __________
      [Big Brick Wall]
    2. Re:I did this by stealth.c · · Score: 1

      I go to school in the relative vicinity of Ann Arbor.... Like the other respondent: any plans for doing this again?

    3. Re:I did this by TheBot · · Score: 1

      I'm from Michigan-Detroit Area, this would be cool to see...Todays games would do even better though.

    4. Re:I did this by magefile · · Score: 1

      Not AFAIK. I did it with the Camp CAEN group (a computer camp for high schoolers). So someone else might be doing it in that theater in Pierpont, but not me/us.

  17. Being done in Australia already... by Wolfcat · · Score: 5, Informative

    Village Cinemas in Melbourne are already doing this...See here
    What prizes can I win?
    First Prize: Family trip (2 adults and 2 kids) to the USA to visit Nintendo America. Second Prize: A GameCube Interactive Unit and a year's supply of GameCube games. Third Prize: A private Gold Class screening for 25 people at Village Cinemas Crown.
    What dates can I play?
    Get in by 8.30am each Sunday to register and prepare yourself for the big screen action!
    1 August: Registration and Round 1 - 1080: Avalanche
    15 August: Round 2 - Mario Kart Double Dash!!
    29 August: Round 3 - Super Smash Bros. Melee
    12 September: Round 4 - F-Zero GX
    26 September: Round 5 - Super Smash Bros. Melee
    10 October: Round 6 - Mario Kart Double Dash!!
    24 October: Superfinal The top 300 players will compete in the Superfinal on Sunday 24 October where a winner will be crowned!

    How much does it cost?
    You can purchase a single session ticket for $12, which entitles you entry into one of the above challenges. A guest can also come and watch you play for just $5 a session.

    --
    If at first you don't succeed, destroy all evidence you ever tried.
  18. thanks!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been waiting to try out gmail for ages, thank you :D

  19. Why? when you can do it in the conference room by eltoyoboyo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Those projectors do not get used for slide sales demos ALL of the time you know. The response time is a little slow on the LCD screens, but lower the demo screen, set up the speakers and fire away.

    --
    Have you Meta Moderated t
    1. Re:Why? when you can do it in the conference room by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should throw away the ancient LCD projector and get a DLP. They offer an infinitely superior image and have no latency issues.

    2. Re:Why? when you can do it in the conference room by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      The projector in the training room at your local fire station is never used for late-night Halo. Never, ever.

  20. already done in college towns, by colleges by LauraScudder · · Score: 3, Informative

    This was already done when I was in college a few years back at Harvey Mudd. Every year one dorm builds a movie screen in their courtyard for the super bowl and leaves it up for a week after for video games and movies. In between, people regularly use the screens in our large lecture hall for after hours gaming. It looks like a blast, but at Mudd at least there's no market for selling this service.

  21. Only 'landscape mode' video games will do.... by iamcf13 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Why not do this 'right'....

    Host (for example) a arcade-version Street Fighter tournament at the movie theater and tap the game's A/V signals and route them through the theater's sound system and image projector to make the action appear on the movie screen. Charge a modest spectator fee to fill the seats (and likely offer a cut of it as prize money) and knock yourself out!

    Note that classic games like PAC-MAN and TEMPEST won't do as they are played in 'portrait' mode and not the 'landscape' mode that is the same as the orientation of the movie screen.

    1. Re:Only 'landscape mode' video games will do.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Charge a modest spectator fee to fill the seats

      Cool! Make money by charging for public showing of game content, in violation of every EULA on every game you own! Heck, that'd probably also work for other things that come on shiny discs, like music and movies! What a great idea!

      Just funning you. Hooking your PC's video output up to something that shows you playing Doom3 in a public theater and charging money for it is of course as illegal as renting a copy of Terminator3, showing it in a public theater and charging money for it.

    2. Re:Only 'landscape mode' video games will do.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These are console games. No EULA's.

  22. I'm so there... by Bin_jammin · · Score: 0

    as long as a new Leisure Suit Larry hits the market. In HD. And can I get some popcorn?

  23. Knock yourself out? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought the purpose of Street Fighter II was to knock the other guy out!

  24. Yeah by fredopalus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Even better:
    Video games on the IMax.

    Can you imagine playing Rogue Leader on a screen that size?!

    That would be one awesome dog fight!

    --
    Jonahweb.com has stuff.
    1. Re:Yeah by centipetalforce · · Score: 1

      Even if that game is HD compatible, the equivelent resolution of an imax screen is probably much, much higher than even 1920x1080 (imax is even 4:3 IIRC, not 16:9). But yes it would be cool.

    2. Re:Yeah by Unxmaal · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Feh, we did that in 1999 at the Huntsville Space & Rocket Center IMAX theater.

      Sonic Adventure was truly nausea-inducing on the big screen, but Crazy Taxi was a blast. And then, there was multiplayer Goldeneye.

      --
      http://unxmaal.com
    3. Re:Yeah by kidgenius · · Score: 1

      At my old job at the science center, we had a large format screen (not Imax but Iwerks, pretty much the same thing). We had one week each summer that was something like "The Science of Video Games" or some shit. Each day, a different video game system would be set up on the screen. There was the very large video projector that went to the center. But, since it didn't fill the entire screen, some other projectors were setup much, much closer, so two other systems could be playes on the sides of the much larger system. I also came in before work multiple times and brought my PS2. The theater tech and I would then hook it up and play for about an hour before we opened. It rocked.

    4. Re:Yeah by Jarnis · · Score: 2, Funny

      Rogue Leader on an IMAX screen?

      I find your lack of resolution disturbing...

  25. But what will the RIAA, MPAA, & Jack Valenti s by Proudrooster · · Score: 5, Funny

    Look for a new group ending in AA to form soon called the VGAA (Video Game Asssociation of America). I am sure they can put a stop to this illegal, immoral, and downright scandalous behavior. I bet video game sales are plummeting as you read this due to this activity.

    Playing video games on the big screen must violate some law, act, or at least allegedly infringe on some intellectual property right. I wonder if anyone will sneak in a mini cam corder then record a game and make it available on P2P. I wonder if people take modded X-Boxes to the movie theatre? Imagine playing Halo on a modded X-box using the big screen (public display), while having someone record a video of the game, then posting it to a P2P network with a hacked 802.11 WEP key from the adjacent grocery store. This might be a new record for the amount of laws broken with a single activity!

    Be warned! The black helicopters are probably assembling right now to go round these hoodlums up. I just wish the black helicopters would stop stealing my lawn furniture.

  26. Parent link is Last Measure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Q: What is Last Measure?
    A: See here

    Although it would seem that my latest version (0.9.3) of Firefox does a good job of blocking most of that shit. Yay!

  27. Duping Is Not Flaming by Rie+Beam · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why are all posts pointing out that this is a dupe getting modded flamebait?

    1. Re:Duping Is Not Flaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, the irony.

    2. Re:Duping Is Not Flaming by jericho4.0 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Because nobody likes a smart ass, and because people really prefer to punish rather than reward with mod points.

      --
      "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
    3. Re:Duping Is Not Flaming by Epistax · · Score: 1

      The SPAA (Slashdot Post Association of America) Does not support unsolicited assistance in the managerial aspect of the subject header specification whereby two subjects may at any time: site the same article(s) as source(s), contain the same word(s), be exact duplicates of each other. We here at SPAA fully appreciate your inquiry, however your soliciting of an answer from staff inside a thread falls against the Unfair Use Act as stated in our Terms and Conditions, which you agreed to upon signing up for an account. A fine has been sent to your current location and you will have to surrender your hard drive for a standard HappyScan (TM). This is your first offense so there is no additional jail time.

      Have a Nice Day!

  28. Been doing this for a while by evn · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have a friend who is a manager at a one of the Famous Players theaters here in town. Occasionally late at night there will be an "xbox night". Everyone brings in a controller and their xbox (well 4 people do). Add a few meters of Cat5 and a $19 SMC 4 port router and you've got a recipe for good times. Last weekend we had 16 player games of Halo running for hours. Crimson Skies wouldn't go more than 4 player (2 theaters * 2 players) which was a shame. The new zelda really comes into it's own on a huge screen though.

    Pretty much every theater these days has a digital projector for displaying those powerpoint-esque advertisements so it's just like plugging in at home: at least some good came out of those. It's worth buying the controller extension cables so you can sit 2 or 3 rows up rather than right against the back wall. Walkie-talkies cover the inter-theater communication because cellphones can be hit-and-miss.

    They sell beer at the concession now and there is a Pizza Hut right there for the food so I can see how it could make a good night out for the guys. All that said, I'm not sure this is something I'd be willing to pay for. 4 players * 4 theater is great because there is no down time. If I had to sit out every 4th round I think I'd rather just play at home on my puny 130cm TV and xbox live. Splitting $60 4 ways also seams a little pricey (though not much more than a regular movie). Not being able to eat and drink while playing would be a major disappointment too.

    "Revolutionary"? I don't think it will be any more revolutionary than when they were showing saturday morning cartoons on them a few years ago. A good novelty, but ultimately to expensive, inconvenient (can't just go-and-play) to compete with the home gathering.

    1. Re:Been doing this for a while by jaxle · · Score: 1

      I have friends that work as janitors in an elementry school and they have 5 or 6 projectors. Every once in a while we organize Halo lan parties and get 16 player games goin while we are all in the same general area to talk smack and moon the opposing when we capture the flag :)

      The best Halo matches are where you can be sitting right next to your team and yelling through the doorway at your enemy!

      Oh, and its all free :)

    2. Re:Been doing this for a while by LBArrettAnderson · · Score: 1

      I don't think it will be any more revolutionary than when they were showing saturday morning cartoons on them a few years ago. A good novelty, but ultimately to expensive, inconvenient (can't just go-and-play) to compete with the home gathering.

      while i agree that this is not revolutionary, and not even an original idea, it can be just as fun (and the same thing as) a LAN party... but this one is already set up for you.

  29. Whatever you do... by Zorilla · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...don't browse Slashdot at -1 on the big screen, lest you get a ten foot gaping surprise.

    --

    It would be cool if it didn't suck.
  30. Hell Yes! by attam · · Score: 2, Interesting

    i most certainly believe this is going to become a popular way to game (in multiplayer situations for sure). i just graduated from college and i cant tell you how many hours my friends and i wasted playing HALO on the projector i bought. whenever it was time to make teams (i was in a fraternity so we always had 8 people ready to play) there was always a huge fight over who got to play on the "big screen" and who had to go in the other room and play on the tv. i definitely recommend that if any HALO fans get a chance to play on a projection screen, take it! its a totally different experience. incidentally, there were clubs at school that used to commandeer lecture halls and stage huge HALO tourneys on the projection screens. this was at MIT though, so i guess that might not be so common.

    1. Re:Hell Yes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I certainly hope there were component and/or DVI inputs on that projector to justify the price, otherwise there isn't much of a technical advantage to playing Halo on a larger screen, except maybe avoiding pixel bleedover from smaller CRT screens. The primary reason I sucked at Halo was not being able to shoot the little brown blob that looked like the rest of the terrain while my player kept getting random heart attacks from snipers. It would be nice to see what you are actually doing while playing.

  31. There would be one serious draw back. by gumbysworld · · Score: 1

    Just like every groups of gaming friends there is one master. What happens when one guy gets 20hrs of play while 75 people wait in line all day over n over waiting their turn to get beat?

    That sucks with only 4-5 people. Let alone a 1hr wait for your next turn.

    I assume they are 20min timed games but king of the hill style.

  32. Uhh, "could be"? by crashnbur · · Score: 2, Informative

    They've been doing this around here for a few years now. A local theatre manager who happened to like video games would allow co-workers to invite a couple of friends and play video games on the big screen once in a while on either Friday or Saturday nights. I don't remember what it started with, but they had been addicted to Halo for a while last I heard. I don't play Halo, so I've never bothered to check it out. :-P

  33. No way by pHatidic · · Score: 5, Funny
    Does anyone else think this could catch on to be successful, especially in college towns?

    No way. College students are way too busy studying to do things such as playing video games and drinking.

  34. outside? by Dj+Stingray · · Score: 1

    outside.....????

    I thought that was just virtual reality. Uh, speaking of that.....isn't this internet thing a 22 inch window?

    fooled you.

  35. I believe it might work very well by Pan+T.+Hose · · Score: 1

    ...since it already has. Wasn't Mortal Combat the first game to hit the big screen, back in the 80s?

    --
    Sincerely,
    Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
    "Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
  36. Yes by TedCheshireAcad · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Does anyone else think this could catch on to be successful, especially in college towns?

    Yes, but only if there is beer provided. Pizza also a plus.

    1. Re:Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Logan. It is a college town.

    2. Re:Yes by unum15 · · Score: 1

      only if there is beer provided I think you missed the in Logan, UTAH part. That's why this will work so well here. There is nothing better to do since most students don't drink here(Last survey I read said only about %15 of students here drink). unum

    3. Re:Yes by unum15 · · Score: 1

      only if there is beer provided

      I think you missed the in Logan, UTAH part. That's why this will work so well here. There is nothing better to do since most students don't drink here(Last survey I read said only about %15 of students here drink).

      unum

      ps that same paper ran a picture of me:
      http://hjnews.townnews.com/articles/2004/08/2 9/new s/news01.txt

  37. BTDT by FlutterVertigo(gmail · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Mario Brothers

    There are other "rumors" of this type of thing. Wasn't there an intent stated to have a Doom movie (many moons ago)? And I'm certain we could come up with plenty of other ones. But there is a case of movie->games->movie
    (movie #1) Predator + (movie #2)Alien -> (game #1)"Alien vs. Predator" + (game #2)"Alien vs. Predator v2" -> (movie)"Alien vs. Predator"
    It's either FOAF|UL or I think they're floating a balloon and see how much buzz there is about it? It's more realistic than hiring a feedback panel. "Leak" the story, then watch for activity on slashdot, usenet, etc. and figure out if there's a possibility of it working. Game sales outperform movie sales. Why not merge the two? Gosh, it must be better than both!

    Just remember:
    ______________________________________
    My Trunk Monkey can beat up your Trunk Monkey.
    http://www.suburbanautogroup.com/ford/trunkmonkey. html

    1. Re:BTDT by smart.id · · Score: 1

      Is this a joke? The article is about playing games on big screens.

      Hah.

      --
      blog & fiction: jd87
  38. Oh come on by sometwo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Video games have been done on a bigger "screen" than that: Brown students create massive Tetris game on building

    1. Re:Oh come on by belg4mit · · Score: 2, Informative

      How original
      http://hacks.mit.edu/Hacks/by_location/5 4.html

      Interactive even
      http://vadim.www.media.mit.edu/games/gbt.htm l

      See also
      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=89704&ci d=7749 183

      --
      Were that I say, pancakes?
  39. Re:But what will the RIAA, MPAA, & Jack Valent by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

    I read something about these guys a week or so ago, and they pay a licensing fee.

    Everything they are doing is legit and is violating no laws.

    I can't speak for everybody, just the guys in Utah that I read about.

    --
    Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
  40. LaserMAME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd pay to try my hand at LaserMAME in a planetarium...

    1. Re:LaserMAME by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

      Bring your own laser-pointers and play pong. (The guy who plays the ball can do the sound-effects and keep score too.)

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  41. Sound by Zorilla · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm curious about this. There are a lot of accounts of theaters running gaming and such being posted on here. Of these, how many people are actually hooking the sound up to the theater system? As nice as it would be to see the game at theater size, it would be even cooler to hear it, provided it was hooked up in full surround, not just stereo, or upmixed 2 channel surround.

    --

    It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    1. Re:Sound by M.+Silver · · Score: 1

      Of these, how many people are actually hooking the sound up to the theater system?

      If it's at all like the theater our church used to meet in, probably not very many. We brought in our own speakers, mounted them up behind the screens, and ran all our own cabling, just because the theater sound system was so proprietary.

      I don't know if this is only in the tiny trashy independent theaters (I say "used to meet in" because it went bankrupt, to no one's surprise), or if all sound systems are like this, though. IANASoundTech.

      --

      Slashdot's token middle-aged housewife
    2. Re:Sound by evn · · Score: 3, Informative

      When we play (see my post above) we use the theater sound system. The projector to run the advertising accepts standard RCA type connections and is patched into the sound system for the theater - there's no real rummaging around to find empty jacks. I would assume this is to allow a PC to be used to run a slideshow or multimedia presentation when it's rented out for company meetings and such. The advertising is driven by a standard Wintel PC: keep in mind that we're interested in the advertising project (800x600 lcd project) not the projector that shows your the movies. This system is independent of the main projection system but is still tied into the theaters audio system.

      It's not 7.1 THX surround, but it's still loud enough to rumble the ice in your cup.

  42. New idea fishing. by llZENll · · Score: 1

    Well since they've gone through all the comic books now, next up are video games :) Hollywood is in need of some good ideas to base movies on, and video games serve up an audience who are already familiar with the story, so why not make a movie based on a great video game?

    1. Re:New idea fishing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like... ...Super Mario Bros? ...Mortal Kombat? ...Street Fighter? ...Final Fantasy: The Spirit Within? ...Tomb Raider? ...Resident Evil? ...Double Dragon (ugh)?

  43. Next step for the industry... by streicher · · Score: 1

    Video games have become more and more like movies lately; deep character development, complex plots, and a production process that is becoming strikingly similar to that of hollywood movie production make it seem like this is the next step on the path to merging these two industries. -streicher

  44. My experience with big screen gaming by theluckyleper · · Score: 2, Informative

    I tried this with a few friends of mine once... we knew a T/A in the CS department who had keys to the AV equipment (enough abbreviations FY?). We went to the largest lecture hall and played 20 foot Mario Kart 64 with the RGB projector.

    It was fun... but damn, was it ever fuzzy. I don't think the N64 was meant to be blown up so large! Even on big screen TVs it gets a bit foggy-looking. Fish-doggy (Yoshi) was little more than a 6 foot blob.

    Next time we'll have to try some PC gaming I think, to see if the higher res images fare better.

    --
    Visit the Game Programming Wiki!
    1. Re:My experience with big screen gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What was the interface between the N64 & the projector? If it was composite I would expect it to be fuzzy. But if it was RGB directly from it, I would wonder what was going on.

    2. Re:My experience with big screen gaming by grolschie · · Score: 1

      X-Box is fuzzy also, even on small screen. Friends and I play 4 player X-box Euro Soccer on a large screen projector. Can hardly tell who is who.

  45. Why I didn't renew my subscription. by DAldredge · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is why I didn't renew my /. subscription.

    http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/08/19/ 164257&tid=127&tid=211

  46. Re:Mods are ghey! NOT REDUNDANT! 1min Apart! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Mods on crack ... it never ceases to amaze me why someone would waste a mod point on pedantic stuff like this.

    Besides, it's not fair, like you said. The two comments were posted at almost the same time.

  47. Alert alert Natalie Portman to take up new career by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a plumber....shes even in training http://www.improperorder.com/irokin/plumber.jpg hahaha stupid nerds

  48. So how can I... by ticklemeozmo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I would like convince my local theatre manager (I happen to know him) to do this, but he wants to know which steps are involved?

    Who do you have to get permission from?
    What if you do not charge (peeps will still want popcorn and soda)?
    What hoops must you go through to have fun?

    --
    When modding "Informative", please make sure it both has a source and IS actually informative.
    1. Re:So how can I... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      1. Do you need permission at all? Read the EULA of the game you want to use.
      2. More people will come. But if you want to give out prizes for winners, a door charge will pay for it and scale with the level of competition.
      3. Big glorious tournament with desirable prizes. A few side games running concurrently for the losers and spectators. A good announcer. STRIPPERS!!! STIPPERS JUMPING THROUGH HOOPS!
      4. Profit!!

      holy shit, that didn't even have a ???? step in it.

    2. Re:So how can I... by balster+neb · · Score: 0

      When modding "Informative", please make sure it both has a source and IS actually informative.

      LOL, A set of 4 questions moderated as Informative -- Only on Slashdot!

  49. How cinemas make money: by EvilCabbage · · Score: 1

    Down here at least, when a movie is released the distributor makes a percentage of the admission fee.

    For example, if a movie ticket is $10, the distributor might get 80% of that. If the cinema decides to charge $5 per ticket, the distributor cut is still 80%, they're just making less.

    Through this plan if the cinema charges $10 to play a game, I guess they're giving a percentage of the takings to Microsoft for the Xbox license.

    The local cinema charges anywhere between $2 and $11.50 (australian) to see a range of movies and they all make money, just depends on the cut the distributors feel like asking for ;)

  50. Motion Sickness by SnowWolf2003 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A friend of mine recently bought a projector, and we started playing XBOX games on it. Most are great and it's made a huge difference to the gaming experience. The only problem is that for people who have a tendency to experience motion sickness when playing FPS style games (like Halo) the effects become amplified. I can play Halo on a normal tv and only feel a little ill after, but after just a minute on the big screen I cannot play any more.

    1. Re:Motion Sickness by Junta · · Score: 1

      I like the more specific term simulator sickness to describe motion sickness related to visual perception of movement without inner ear perception.

      I know people proned to motion sickness who are fine with games, and people who are bad with games who are fine with being moved without seeing the movement (traditional motionsickness).

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  51. I should have mentioned... by EvilCabbage · · Score: 3, Insightful

    .. I hate replying to my own post.

    The cinema really makes a killing on selling the candy. $3 cokes and $4 packs of salted and sweet snacks go a long way to stuffing the coffers of your local cinema outlet. The movies themselves are almost just a vehicle to sell junk food.

    Film distributors are greedy, soul sapping bastards. If the candy bar didn't pull in an extra $10 or so per consumer here at my local cinema the place would be really scrounging for cash.

    1. Re:I should have mentioned... by halowolf · · Score: 1
      Its for cinemas outrageous prices for food that I don't, under any circumstances, buy any of their food, period. Since my local cinema is in a shopping centre (mall for you Americans) there is a whole host of other places to buy delicacies from which we are allowed to take into the cinema. Even if they didn't (like another cinema I went to) then the girlfriends handbag makes for a perfect place to stash something to eat. Cargo pants work a treat as well :) Its not like some 15 year old kid is going to start searching adults bags.

      Am I a soul sapping bastard for denying them their revenue on tickters subsidized by candy bar food? Well my conscience is clear, if they can't make money on me by my purchasing a ticket then tough luck. Welcome to business. Make the companies that provide the films start being a bit more reasonable. If the A list actors wern't getting their $20 million checks then there might be room for a bit more quality film making in the biz that could sell more tickets.

    2. Re:I should have mentioned... by EvilCabbage · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Am I a soul sapping bastard for denying them their revenue on tickters subsidized by candy bar food?

      No, but you're not a film distribution company, are you?

      I don't agree with the way things are, but if the cinema doesn't agree to the distributors terms, they don't get movies. If they don't get movies, they don't make _any_ money.

      It's similar bully tactics to the **AA, except it's been going on even longer and it's just taken for granted as part of doing business.

  52. Waitaminute by MikeBeck · · Score: 1

    Logan is a College Town...(Utah State)

  53. Red v. Blue by imAck · · Score: 1

    So does this mean adapting Red Versus Blue to the big screen? That's good news for everyone still using dialup.

    --

    It's hard to tell the cool to chill, my favorite hotel room has a view to an ill.

  54. Business school spending! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    When I was at The University of Texas (graduated two summers ago in '03) the Business School buildings (probably a few others, too) had projector screens built in to in the rooms with a VGA connector in the podiums. Very smooth hookups for laptops, VCRs built into the podium too, etc.

    My *entire* senior year was spent lusting after these screens, wanting to get me and a few friends down to these buildings at night when classes were out to play on them. But it was always too much of a hassle, we had to worry about getting people together, ensuring we had time before the gates rolled down, etc.

    Finally, my roommate and I managed to go down one weekend and hook up a VGA adapter to my Gamecube (not one of the good hacked HDTV cables, one of the boxes that converts S-Video to crappy VGA) and we managed to beat Wind Waker on the big screen. Apart from a few awful graphical glitches from the box, it was great. I forgot what other games I brought with me, but It was really satisfying to see the ending to Zelda on a big screen like that.

    As far as size, I'm not sure how big they were. Maybe about 5 feet tall? Still, it was fun. A shame we didn't do it sooner. Smash Bros. would've given all of us a headache. Heh.

    Skadus

  55. Re:But what will the RIAA, MPAA, & Jack Valent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Insightful? It's FUNNY damn it! Funny!

    Well, kinda funny. Unless you wear a tinfoil hat. Then it's kinda scary. But then, if you wear a tinfoil hat, YOU'RE kinda scary. Stop looking in my windows you freak!

  56. New *AA group? by The+Monster · · Score: 2, Funny
    Look for a new group ending in AA to form soon called the VGAA (Video Game Asssociation of America).
    How about Game Manufacturers' Association of America (GMAA) so that we'll know that they're a bunch of trolls?
    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

    1. Re:New *AA group? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GMAA?

      Gay Munchkins Association of America?

      I think you mean GNAA... now how to rewrite that acronym...

      RsG :-)

    2. Re:New *AA group? by NemosomeN · · Score: 1

      ISDA[A]??? I thought it was just ISDA /asshole

      --
      I hate grammar Nazi's.
    3. Re:New *AA group? by VitaminB52 · · Score: 1
      Look for a new group ending in AA to form soon called the VGAA (Video Game Asssociation of America).

      How about Game Manufacturers' Association of America (GMAA) so that we'll know that they're a bunch of trolls?

      Hehehe ... soon all these *AA groups will get in big trouble with the AAAAA *LOL*.

      * AAAAA = American Association Against Acronym Abuse

  57. Big Screen Gaming in the University by foxalopex · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've actually done this before. Thanks to my affinity with an Anime club, we had access to University theater projection equipment. Car racing type games were breathtaking since the cars were pretty much life sized! The only games that didn't work too well were side scrolling space shooters where there were lots of objects to track on screen. They're difficult because it takes longer for your eyes to track the whole field of view on a big screen killing your reaction time. Aside from that it was a lot of fun. I think if theaters decide to do this, it will be loads of fun! :)

    1. Re:Big Screen Gaming in the University by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      Back when I was at Carnegie Mellon, our Online Gaming Society would often run tournaments on the huge lecture hall projection screens. Tourneys included games like Soul Calibre, Smash Bros, and Halo. We even played DDR once or twice, although the slight video delay and having to stare up at the huge screen got a little annoying.

  58. hasn't this already been done? by airbie · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    i.e. Tomb Raider, Mortal Kombat, Resident Evil... just to name a few...

    --
    They couldn't fix my brakes, so they made my horn louder.
  59. Yes and more by MMaestro · · Score: 1
    Off campus, beer and gaming? I'm there!

    To get back on topic, this would definately work in college towns. But we all know this would almost never hold anywhere else. Try doing this in New York or San Francisco and we all know what'd happen. Controllers get smashed, the occasional fight, the 'games cause violence' protesting, the insane amounts of damage, the fire regulations being broken (can't have people falling asleep in the pathways of others), and of course, the little kids who you KNOW will throw stuff at the screen magnified by billions because its a video game on the screen.

  60. There's still copyright by tepples · · Score: 1

    These are console games. No EULA's.

    Doesn't matter, as there's still copyright. Public performance of a copyrighted video game is just as unlawful without the copyright owner's consent as public performance of a copyrighted motion picture. Heck, performing even GPL'd video games in public would need separate permission from the copyright owners, as the scope of the GNU GPL extends only to copying (in verbatim or derivative forms) or distribution.

  61. Cleveland Indians + PSII + JumboTron 5/6/04 by Theologian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The Cleveland Indians allowed people during "College Night" to play on their newly replaced JumboTron (now the largest screen in North America) at Jacob's Field on their "College Night" on May 6, 2004.

    I don't have any photos of the event, except for a local radio station's gallery of pictures.

    http://www.wmms.com/jacor-common/globalphotos.html ?eventID=24801&eventsection=&pagecontent=
    It's kinda coincidental that they've also made the connection between college and big-screen gaming.

    --

    Crapdot
    News from birds. Stuff that splatters.
  62. Movies suck lately by tepples · · Score: 1

    Video games have become more and more like movies lately; deep character development, complex plots

    You mean unlike Hollywood.

  63. I wonder... by john_smith_45678 · · Score: 2, Funny

    if people will sneak camcorders into the theaters to record the games, then release them on the Net.

    1. Re:I wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....if people will ever start reading the comments that have already been submitted and save us from having to read the same lamearse joke again and again?

    2. Re:I wonder... by john_smith_45678 · · Score: 1

      I wonder when lameasses will stop hiding behind "Anonymous Coward."

  64. Lecture halls are for gaming by smarthippy · · Score: 1

    The Linux User Group at my university get together on reading days and use the enormous projection screens at the front of the CS building's lecture halls for Halo and DDR. The rows upon rows of seating have desk surfaces with power and ethernet, which allow the people waiting for a turn at the consoles or pads can play Starcraft. This guy with his theater can do better?

  65. Re:But what will the RIAA, MPAA, & Jack Valent by Lost+Dragon · · Score: 1

    I.. I had fun while I played a game once.. I feel so guilty - OH PLEASE TAKE MY WALLET - PLEASE!!

    -- Lost Dragon

  66. Videogames? WOW! What a GREAT IDEA! (smirk) by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    *thinks*

    Street Fighter
    Mario Bros
    Final Fantasy
    Mortal Kombat

    Yeah. GREAT idea... indeed.

  67. Well, I have two rules dealing with this issue. by nastro · · Score: 5, Funny

    1. As long as this has nothing to do with Fred Savage, Super Mario Bros. 3, and the word "Wizard" (which, when you think about it, spawned, after several generational mutations, "Hackers")...Well, then I'm game.

    2. As per college kids...C'mon, Timothy...

    Here I quote after drunkedly RTFA...
    "Timothy said tournament entry fees are $60 for a team of four. There is a $3 charge for spectators to watch the games."

    Let it be said, and I feel safe generalising here, that any college kid with $63 will either spend it on: Ramen
    Beer
    Some Girl

    This idea reminds me of the movie theaters that opened up with the pretense of being 'high class', i.e. serving dinner and booze. Nice idea, but the average Joe Consumer can only watch from afar and wish that he/she could afford such niceties. So. Target patron: College kid? Nope. Maybe parents could foot the bill for their kids to do it. Some pay membership fees for their wee ones to join skate parks, why the hell not this, I guess. It's a goofy niche, s'what I'm sayin'.

    In conclusion, I'll get another beer.

  68. Market Study by ducomputergeek · · Score: 3, Interesting
    We did a market research study for a client in a college town that was an existing bar and was looking for a new gimic and though of purchasing the building next door and setting up a system of HD LCD TV's networked into divded areas. Fees to play would would be $5 per person during open times, to cover basic overhead expenses and then make the profit from selling concessions such as snacks, soda, and beer.


    Our conclusion was it could work with about a $50,000 investment in equipement and rennovations and could turn a tidy profit, however it was the fact that it was the X-box and we found that while gamers would pay to play on larger screens that many wouldn't because the ease of setting up a 4 room X-box match in the Dorms or existing frat houses, many of which had several new flat-panel TV's in every room (college/frats had just built 4 brand new houses at an average price of $2M a peice).

    --
    "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
  69. Large Screen NES by cei · · Score: 1

    Back in the day, I knew a guy who owned a movie theater in Houston (the Bellaire, FTitK). They had a video projection system as well, and for his son's birthday party they hooked up the original Nintendo NES with a Duck Hunt cartridge and the Zapper light gun... much fun was had, blasting away at the movie screen...

    --
    This sig intentionally left justified.
  70. It's All Been Done Before by afish40 · · Score: 1

    A novel concept, but hardly a new one. For the past three years, the Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose, CA has been running the Maxgames. The finalists for most of the games get to play on the IMAX Dome screen (Project Gotham Racing looked quite nice on the Dome when I played referee the first year).

    --
    Thanks a million. Push Start to replay.
  71. smirk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's funny when people can't even be bothered to read the summary, let alone the article. Community college + you = less embarassing posts on slashdot.

  72. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  73. Drafthouse did this last month with RedvBlue by ruiner5000 · · Score: 1

    and they are doing it again next month before the showing of of the season 2 DVD of Redvsblue. I've often thought of doing something similar. I'd have our Texas Gaming Festival at Drafthouse, but the tables are not big enough for a computer. Console works though, and it is more fun seeing Mr. Sinus at Drafthouse where they belong instead of at a makeshift venue during Quakecon.

    --
    ignorance is bliss. googlefiberatx.com
  74. It wont be an **AA that you have to worry about it by No+Name+Face · · Score: 1

    It will be the big guy, Billy Gates himself. After all he does own X-box and Halo. And really if micro$oft wants something from you, i think that they have more money than any of the **AAs, maybe even combined.

  75. HOLY CRAP!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is my home town!!!! I never thought it would get /.ed!!!! Thank you for making my day just little more absurd.

  76. Wow by tsa · · Score: 1

    Imagine the thrill and excitement of playing Syberia or Myst (I, II, III, Uru, IV (insert your favorite)) on a big screen like that! Especially for the spectators! ;-)

    --

    -- Cheers!

  77. Superchallenge by Takkuri · · Score: 1

    My local theater (Victoria, Australia) has been running a "Nintendo Super Challenge". It's a tournament containing 1080 Avalanche, Mario Kart Doubledash, Super Smash Bros. Melee and F-Zero GX. The first prize for competitors is a free trip to the USA, and a tour of Nintendo America. It's a measly $5 AU to spectate ($3 US) or $12 to compete ($8 US).

  78. Wasnt there supposed to be a doom movie by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    I remember reading about it 10 years ago.

    What happened?

  79. Its not the theaters that set the price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a cinema manager I can say...

    Most film companies keep ~70% of the ticket gross. Add on a ~8-10% tax for the city and state (Everyone wants their cut..), and our net profits on tickets alone arent that much. Typically, distributors will let you keep an extra 5% of the ticket price for every additional week. Sometimes on movies that stay in theaters a long time, we might be able to keep almost 50% of the gross.

    On top of that, movie distributors do oftentimes force the price. For example, one of my theaters had a ticket price of $4 for an adult evening ticket for new release films. Customers loved it, but movie companies did not. Disney, Miramax, Buena Vista, Paramount, would not give us movies at all. Fox and Sony were bitching. So prices had to be raised so we could keep getting movies to play. I'm told that their actions were illegal and that we might be able to win a court case, but whats the point of winning a moral victory and going out of business?

  80. Licensing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My theater does this a couple of times a month, but its just employees and their friends.

    So far its been Xbox's and whatever mix of games they bring. (Halo is popular)

    I've thought about bringing my computer up those nights but haven't bothered yet. All my employees are console gamers, so I dunno which games I can network with them.

    Some of the employees think it would be a good idea to hold public tournaments. I might give it a shot.

    I know one thing, I'm certainly not going to pay royalties to Microsoft. Screw them, thats my cut!

    Also, you shouldn't have pretended to be an AMC manager, the upper management are dicks, I would never help one of their theaters out.

  81. Atari Star Raiders by marko123 · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Atari Home Computer version was projected on the roof of an observatory (planetarium?) in the very early 80's.

    (most of these details could be wrong from it being so long ago, but I saw a photo of it.)

    --
    http://pcblues.com - Digits and Wood
  82. I did it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is cooler to hear it in full theater surround! I've done exactly that.

    Masive JBL drivers, a subwoofer that can shake the entire concrete room, and high quality surrounds.

    The tricky part is getting the sound to split properly. The easiest way is to use your own receiver, and plug it to the theaters amps with XLR cables, and bypass the theater processor. The downside is that you can damage the speakers if you turn the volume too high, because normally the Dolby processor would regulate that.

  83. This is cool, but... by Photo_Nut · · Score: 1

    It's a lot cooler to do this in private at a friend's house, where it's called a LAN party. Normally, you'd get a group of people with 32" - 36" TVs and take them to a friend's house/apartment which is big enough to host, but it just so happens that a few college friends of mine in the tech field are well off, and they have projectors. We all like to go and hang out on weekends watching anime, playing D&D, and the like; but sometimes we do a Halo LAN party. With 16+ people and 4 projectors (they have upstairs and downstairs living rooms, so we do 8 people per room, using a WiFi bridge), it's pretty crazy.

    Amen for Halo LAN parties with portable projectors. It's so much easier than lugging a 32" TV to a friend's place! Projectors have come down in price a lot recently, so you don't need to be rich to get one.

  84. Doom Movie /. Gone? by TheBot · · Score: 1

    Wasn't there an article about the Doom Movie up on /. a couple hours ago?? Or am I just losing it...

  85. Two words by Krunch · · Score: 2, Insightful

    LAN party

    --
    No GNU has been Hurd during the making of this comment.
  86. Re:But what will the RIAA, MPAA, & Jack Valent by CanadianCrackPot · · Score: 1

    As a future Game Developer I would say to these VGAA types, go screw yourselves out of business. I'll fail on my own if MY games suck.

    --
    Good programmers drink beer to relieve job stress.
    Great programmers drink hard liquor and work best hungover.
  87. Its the natural next step by Osmosis_Garett · · Score: 1

    We've already got video game characters making the movies (Tomb Raider et al), next we'll just have professional gamers playing thru a title with a full crowd watching. Games will have a playing time of about 2 hrs, and everyone will be able to participate in some small way.

    Sign me up!!!

  88. Video games are performance art by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The players make the game, not the rules.

  89. Two Words Resident Evil by wolverine1999 · · Score: 1

    Wasn't that enough, bringing the resident evil game to the big screen?

  90. or play on IMAX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The Tech in San Jose, CA has a yearly video game tournament where winners of selected games on the big 3 consoles play head to head on their IMAX dome.. first year I saw it, Halo.. with digital surround and picture on the dome.. and leather seating too. Mmmmmmmm.

    http://www.thetech.org/maxgames/

    Pretty cool event.

  91. Done this before by gagol · · Score: 1

    I have worked on several corp. events, and we used to pass time with pinball on big screen when everything is installed.

    --
    Tomorrow is another day...
  92. Only on Slashdot... by Red_Harvest · · Score: 1

    ...would this be modded "Insightful" :)

    So what gives? Do the moderators know something I don't?

    1. Re:Only on Slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where to buy the best crack?

    2. Re:Only on Slashdot... by Tongo · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how this got modded insightful, but it scares the hell outta me.

    3. Re:Only on Slashdot... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Metamoderated 'unfair'

  93. Copyright issues? by atlacatl · · Score: 1

    So, if the theather starts charging for people to play (and watch) via the movie screen, whould the RIAA have an issue with it? Or the makers of the game?

    --
    Esta es una firma en Espanol.
  94. why stop at 4 players per screen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.projectorgames.co.uk/ has developed a system allowing up to 256 players in one game, on one PC/screen. They've currently got the system running at the LAN party i'm at (http://www.multiplay.co.uk/i21) and it's quite popular

  95. It's the same price the theater charges already. by Qwerk · · Score: 1

    The Cinefour is Logan's "dollar theater", it plays films just before they leave the movie theater circuit. $3 is the price it normally charges for a movie ticket.

    They're also running the games after midnight, when they don't normally operate at all, so any income they generate is completely additional.

    Since Logan is a college town (Utah State), I don't think they'll have a problem finding enough participants between the campus and standard teenage population. They could probably do a better job of getting the word out, however. I live in Logan and read about it first on /.

  96. We do it all the time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Navy Morale-Welfare-Recreation people set this stuff up all the time. Halo tournaments, Golf tournaments, Quake III Deathmatch stuff... All on huge theater screens. I actually prefer playing on the 65" Plasma display better because the graphics are so much sharper than an ungodly huge projection screen.

  97. More like Dorkpires. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Huh huh.

  98. Re:Motion Sickness: Question by maggern · · Score: 1

    A former girlfriend of me had this problem.

    Why can't you just take a "motion-sickness"-pill as many does when riding cars\boats etc.?

  99. planetariums by dickens · · Score: 1

    They were doing this in the Wallace Planetarium in Fitchburg, MA a few years back. Don't know if it ever caught on.

  100. Evolution. by joleonard1 · · Score: 1

    Movie Theaters -> Television -> Cable Television -> Internet -> Movie Theaters.

  101. Photos from last Friday's tourney in Logan, UT by Johnny2Bags · · Score: 1

    This may be too late to get much attention, but last weekend I was already going to Logan to visit family, and when I read about this last week on Slashdot, I had to stop by and snap some photos.

    If interested I posted them here: http://media.ekosm.com/halo-tourney/

  102. Open source users do it in public... by kezze · · Score: 1

    Do what? Play video games and drink?