Google Search Finally Adds Information About Video Games
An anonymous reader writes Google has expanded its search engine with the capability to recognize video games. If your query references a game, a new Knowledge Graph panel on the right-hand side of Google's search results page will offer more information, including the series it belongs to, initial release date, supported platforms, developers, publishers, designers, and even review scores. Google spokesperson: "With today's update, you can ask questions about video games, and (while there will be ones we don't cover) you'll get answers for console and PC games as well as the most popular mobile apps."
the current trend of google to create a "smart search" that directly answers your questions. Not because this isn't useful, but because projects like wikipedia suffer from it. This is even a direct competitor to wikidata. I still don't understand why wikidata isn't copyleft, its a bad descision in my eyes. Or isn't there any copyright on databases? Then i'll look forward for open google scraping projects.
Did a test search for "Metroid" and it pops up a box with a list of games that does not include either Metroid or Super Metroid. It seems to have nothing older than about 2002.
As for a guesstimate from the headline/summary, I generally like "smart search", I'd love to see Google apply Watson-style technology to return relevant answers.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
People are still making video games? I thought we all got sick of that after Duke Nukem Forever?
What's a viable option for quality results still? Perhaps if enough people used DuckDuckGo there search would actually become useful
Google didn't do this to make the gamers happy. They did it to make the non gamers happy, because video game culture is ladden with a rich and repurposed vocabulary that constantly shows up when people don't want to see video games in their search results.
They have to recognize games in order to remove games. Once they've gone that far, throwing up a positive infobox is Slidebox Bob.
Finally, I've been waiting for this for so long (NOT)
They're really trying against the big one here this time. How do they plan to trump TPB?
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Most Wikipedia articles on software types are outdated or incomplete. For instance, according to Wikipedia there are only 20 'notable' File Managers.
Searched for the NES game "Ring King", examined the star ratings, but they were Rom sites and X-rated Newgrounds parodies instead of actual review sites.
None of the mods remember the ubiquitous "Winners don't use drugs" message from the later arcade days?
Required reading for internet skeptics
The Monkey Island series shows up in the sidebar for me, and the first two links refer are to the wikipedia pages for the first game and the series in general.
The third link is to that monkey island indoor playground in Chicago.