Sony Goes After Saturday Night TV
The Guardians Gamesblog posits that, with the family friendly casual game Buzz, Sony is going after the Saturday evening TV crowd. While most TV is getting more and more banal, the quiz-type game attempts to be friendly, irreverent, and interactive all at the same time. The blog has an interview with a creator of the game to explore the new trend in capturing the casual gaming market. From the article: "Sony were looking to repeat the 'social gaming' success of EyeToy and SingStar and suggested the idea of a quiz show to us. They were already in contact with a company who supplied music clips and questions, and asked us what treatment we would give such a game. We suggested setting the game in a TV show, which people would be familiar with, and suggested they included gameshow style buzzers in the box. That was about a year ago."
Hard to top "You Don't Know Jack".
"...We suggested setting the game in a TV show, which people would be familiar with, and suggested they included gameshow style buzzers in the box. That was about a year ago."
He went on to say, "They haven't really talked to us much since then. I guess they've been busy or something."
Am I nuts or is there no link to the article?
Yes yes, I must be new here, etc etc.
This would be a great idea... if only Saturday night TV didn't suck more than any other time of the week.
WARNING: If accidentally read, induce vomiting.
Um... Aren't most people like.. you know... going out? Drinking? Clubbing? Dating? Getting laid?
Seriously - I'm not trolling here - but what *is* the "Saturday night" crowd? Is that like the... homebound geratric crowd or something?
there was an interview with that company http://www.getthesugar.com/wp/?p=4
n t-know-jack.html
and a petition to bring the game back http://jeffool.blogspot.com/2005/07/revive-you-do
http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/games/archives/2005/0
Just a theory, my ass- the missing link has been FOUND!
They had this game on a big screen with proper podiums with buzzers at the Edinburgh International Games Festival this month. Was pretty good fun and apart from the intros to each round and the "witty" putdowns to players getting a question wrong I think it would have good replayability provided there were a lot of questions. They weren't all about pop stars and presidents either, lots were quite technical science questions or identifying songs that were in the charts 30+ years ago. One for the whole family I'd say.