All Aboard the Nerd Boat
Forbes is running an article detailing a most unusual cruise. 180 Computer Science profs were brought together on a Royal Carribean ship to talk about bringing computer games to the classroom. Despite the topic, there was a lot of serious discussion. From the article: "After Microsoft's Luehmann praised the technical sophistication of three new Xbox 360 games (Mass Effect, Too Human, and Gears of War), a silver-haired professor raised his hand and commented: 'You just showed us three very sophisticated and very violent games, and I'm sure they're good for something--though I don't really know what that is--but what I want to know is, when will you make a videogame that's really useful? When will you make a videogame that's going to teach my students chemistry?'"
What, this guy's never played Chemistry Hangman? http://www.creative-chemistry.org.uk/funstuff/hang man/hangman.htm I mean Come on!
nothing
Civilization taught me history and geography, Sim City taught me business and government, the Total War series taught me military tactics, the Sims taught me about relationships, Pro Pinball taught me, uh, how to play Pinball, Chessmaster taught me how to play chess and Doom taught me the proper use for a chainsaw.
Computer games taught me everything I know...
Computer games taught me everything I know...
So you didn't learn anything from Leisure Suit Larry? Come'on, that was chalk full of one-liners that are sure to impress the ladies!
-Valiss
"When will you make a videogame that's going to teach my students chemistry?"
Full-Metal Alchemist!
Well, if you mix random chemicals without the manual (chemistry book), it would be likely like in your scenario. Or more like: Mix chemicals X and Y. Nothing happens. Heat them. Bubbles appear. (so what?) Add chemical Z. Some cheesy stuff lands on the bottom. Add P and Q. It starts stinking. Filter out the cheesy stuff. Boggle.
Either you understand the parts of chemistry and get desired results, or you don't and you get random results. Usually boring. You need to learn to achieve something.
My scenario was a likely mission containing a simple task of making nitroglycerine. It would behave like that once you mixed the proper ingredients in proper proportions.
Anagram("United States of America") == "Dine out, taste a Mac, fries"