Alternate Reality Gaming V2.0
ItsIllak writes "Alternate Reality Games [ARGs] have been bubbling under for the past 10 years now. Usually completely homebrew or attached to big budget productions, they have been used to create buzz around a game, product or movie. Perplex City have bucked that trend. Their ARG is completely independent of anything else, its entirely self contained. With fresh ideas on income generation and a $200,000 top prize to whomever finds the real life buried treasure - is this the future of an entirely new form of entertainment?"
Not really new, they were called treasure hunts before.
Sounds similar to David Blaine's $100,000 Challenge armchair treasure hunt that was placed in his book. I don't really care until they start hiding ebony armor and Nirnroot though...
PerplexCity is a fun game with all sorts of treasure hunts and rabbit holes. There's currently over 15000 players signed up to help find the cube. They are running a video competition at the moment..view all the entries here: http://www.youtube.com/groups_videos?name=perplexc ity
and my entry is this one:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiMRE_uSPlQ
There was an ARG posted in this months' Edge magazine... apparently started off with a "This page cannot be found" error message? Anyone know?
My qualm with most ARGs is that they exist solely as a password hunt. You find the door, and you get a cookie. Games like Beast and Majestic truly scared their players, because the line between game and reality was eerily thin.
I like games with immersion. I enjoy games where the player feels they have a role in the game.
I'm working on a grassroots/indie ARG at the moment that I don't want to talk about too much publicly. If anyone is interested, drop me an email at enderandrew AT gmail DOT com
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
and not just a regular game? Hell, it isn't much more than Geocaching with a prize.
Another ad finds its way into /. article space. Even the link in the author's name is to a Perplex City movie.
Perplex City has a treasure and prize at the end?
Why, it's Masquerade, the collectible card game! There were about a dozen of these treasure-hunt puzzle books back in the eighties. Now they're just coming in different media.
Also, I call slashvertisement on this post.
egypt urnash minimal art.
I'm not in the Army, but Hurrah! anyway :)
Someone save me from this sanity.
What happened to version 1.5? And does it run on Linux?
It's not BS at all. It is having maintenace. Either that or it has been pulled doen because it can't cope with all the clicks /. is generating.
i love the game.
Buttons, buttons, buttons...
(huh?)
This looks like a seriously interesting game to me. So why do I just go play?
Because you have to buy the cards like Magic The Gathering, and each card is WAY too expensive. I do not care about the 'grand prize' that I have absolutely no chance of winning. I simply want to obtain the entire collection and have fun figuring out the puzzles.
If they'd made it a lot cheaper, I'd play. But then, with no cash reward, I suspect a lot of other people wouldn't have played, so it wouldn't exist anyhow.
Oh well, maybe some nice website will pirate all the cards for me after the contest is over. -sigh-
"If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
I've been in the right park before, but sadly I've never been the first to find it. This usually empty park was filled with people turning over every inch of snow looking for it. What else is there to do in Saint Paul in the Winter?
This is just the same thing on a larger scale. It's hardly unique.
SAILING MISHAP
With fresh ideas on income generation and a $200,000 top prize to whomever finds the real life buried treasure...
It's buried under a big 'X'!
So someone finally saw 'The Game' with Michael Douglas?
From what I've seen there's a pretty big ARG subculture. The organization that I've come across that seems to do this best is http://www.mistergamer.com/. They're pretty mysterious (the so-so English on the website somehow adds to this), and the games are apparently really immersive and pretty expensive (e.g. spanning several months & countries and costing upward of $50K). If it seems like I'm using a lot of "seems" and "allegedly" it's because I got all of this information second-hand from someone who claims to have participated in one of their games, but was reluctant with details. Anyway, I've give a nut to have enough cash to do one of these.
Research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing. -- Wernher von Braun
I wonder why there are so few comments? Some of the puzzles in this game really blow my mind, I wonder why the Slashdot community ignores it so? I agree there's an issue that on the Internet, in any game, there's always one or a few guys who seem to have all the time in the world to devote to that one thing, and you know you'll never catch up with them, because you have a real life to live. E.g. if you visit any of the games on miniclip.com they all have highscores that are in the stratosphere.
The solace for me is that it's fun to try to solve these types puzzles with other people. It's a social experience. I won't get the reward, but I'll have some unique memories (I sure remember Beast).
Also, every article on Slashdot that links to something commercial is a "slashvertisement." I don't know why those comments get modded +5.