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What If?: Gaming's Alternate Realities
by 1UP Staff
21 May 2012 at 6:27pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If?: Gaming's Alternate Realities 1UP explores what might have happened had video game history gone differently.

People love to look back at the past and ask, "What if things had gone differently?" Navel-gazing at history spans cultures and races. Whether it's author Harry Turtledove making a fortune by contemplating how differently the American Civil War would have gone if someone had time-traveled to give the Confederate Army machine guns, or the manga Konpeki No Kantai in which the Japanese navy beats up America in World War II before teaming up to kill Hitler, second-guessing ourselves seems to be human nature.

Maybe it's the competitive nature of the medium, but video gamers seem especially fond of revisiting the past and wondering about alternate outcomes. As the Three Fates in the image above suggest, games have woven a rich and complex tapestry in their mere half-century of existence -- a tapestry whose design and nature could have changed radically had things turned out differently.



What If Video Games Never Came Home?
by 1UP Staff
21 May 2012 at 6:25pm

1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What if Video Games Never Came Home? Cover Story: A chilling glimpse into a world where the arcade still rules supreme.

1

UP's cover story this week revolves around the question, "What if?" In keeping with that theme, we'd like to offer this glimpse into one of many alternate realities of video gaming: A world where video games never came home. A world where the arcade still dominates gaming. How would a site like 1UP be different in such a place? We talk to our mirror universe counterparts about the state of gaming and their thoughts on the medium.




What If Third-Party Development Didn't Exist?
by Nadia Oxford
21 May 2012 at 6:24pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If Third-Party Development Didn't Exist? Cover Story: How Activision's 1982 win in court changed the industry.

L

et's be honest, when we think about Activision-Blizzard as a company, at least a few of us get a mental image of a dark overlord with hooked fingers looming over a burning landscape. This image is usually accompanied by a deep-voiced demand for sacrificial virgins. Given Activision-Blizzard's status as The Biggest Thing That Has Ever Existed in Gaming, it's easy to forget that prehistoric Activision fought for the right to develop third-party games on the Atari 2600 -- a battle that it eventually won in court.

Activision's victory essentially made it possible for third-party game designers to ply their trade on home game consoles.

Activision's drive for justice wasn't exclusively about being paid its deserved royalties, either. During the 2600 era, Atari had a nasty habit of not crediting its game developers (or even letting developers bring attention to themselves, which convinced Adventure developer Warren Robinett to bury his name in the game, possibly creating the first digital Easter Egg). When Activision won the right to make its own games for the 2600 in 1982, credit was no longer a problem.



What If Square Never Left Nintendo?
by 1UP Staff
21 May 2012 at 6:22pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If Square Never Left Nintendo? Cover Story: We look at how the RPG powerhouse would've fared without the PlayStation.

F

or RPG fans of the early 1990s, Square practically had their own branch on the Nintendo family tree. This held especially true on the Super NES, where Square came into its own with Final Fantasy IV and VI, Secret of Mana, Chrono Trigger, and wealth of Japan-only releases that loomed just out of reach for Americans. By the end of 1995, the union seemed solid. Nintendo's long-awaited Nintendo 64 system was on its way, and would be home to Square's next Final Fantasy.

There seemed no reason to worry until the spring of 1996, when those same RPG fans opened game magazines and learned that Final Fantasy VII wouldn't release in the form of a Nintendo 64 cartridge. It was now headed for the Sony PlayStation, as with every other game Square planned to make for the latest generation of consoles. By the end of the year, Square sewed up a publishing agreement with Sony, and their first PlayStation release, the fighter Tobal No. 1, sat on store shelves. It came as quite a surprise to players who'd effectively grown up with RPGs on Nintendo systems.

Final Fantasy VII didn't just amount to a critical PlayStation success; it was also instrumental in establishing the Japanese RPG in North America's mainstream game industry.



What If Steam Hadn't Recovered From Its Shaky Launch?
by 1UP Staff
21 May 2012 at 6:21pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If Steam Hadn't Recovered From Its Shaky Launch? Cover Story: Without Steam in a central role, the last decade of PC gaming would have been remarkably different.

W

hen Steam first appeared in 2002, its success was far from a sure thing. Bugs and network problems outnumbered the available games on Valve's digital distribution platform by a wide margin. Users who disliked having to launch an extra application before playing their games doubted the necessity of the program itself. It took years for Steam's library to grow, for Valve to smooth over the rough spots, and for the public to embrace the concept of digital distribution. Today, Steam is synonymous with PC gaming, putting Valve in a unique position from which they can influence the industry in a number of ways.

What if the initial stumble had resulted in a full-on faceplant? How far would the ripples of that failure have spread? I don't claim to know exactly how things would have played out differently, but a lifetime of regret and PC gaming -- which occasionally go hand in hand -- has sharpened my hindsight enough to make a few educated guesses.



What If Star Wars Had Been a Flop in 1977?
by Kat Bailey
21 May 2012 at 6:19pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If Star Wars Had Been a Flop in 1977? Cover Story: How the gaming galaxy would've been different without a few good Jedi.

I

magine that Star Wars had been a flop at the box office. Maybe George Lucas was allowed to release his original edit, or maybe word just never got out. Regardless, while it's not a disaster on par with Heaven's Gate--which brought down a whole studio--it's still pretty bad. It might survive as a cult film, and possibly even merit a reboot, but its influence is gone.

Now imagine the failure of Star Wars as one gigantic shock wave running through the video game industry. Genres, studios, even basics concepts vanish as it goes along. Now you see that, while the industry would (obviously) still exist without Star Wars, it would be very different indeed.



Mario Vs. King Kong Review: Universal Nintendo's Downward Spiral Continues
by Jeremy Parish
21 May 2012 at 6:18pm

1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

Mario Vs. King Kong Review: Universal Nintendo's Downward Spiral Continues Cover Story: What if Nintendo had lost the King Kong lawsuit? A review from another reality.

I

don't know if you're old enough to remember Donkey Kong, but I am. You don't really hear much about DK these days. He's been all but expunged from the annals of game history, and the tiny handful of arcade cabinets and Coleco carts that weren't destroyed back in the '80s remain a rare commodity traded among truly dedicated game collectors (quietly and in private forums, since eBay and other online auction houses instantly cancel all DK-related transactions at Universal's behest).

I miss DK. Maybe it's just nostalgia talking, but I always felt his games -- regardless of how derivative or illegal the character himself may have been -- demonstrated a lot more creativity than the King Kong games we've seen ever since the lawsuit that outlawed him. Any student of video game history knows the story there, of course: It was one of the landmark events that helped shape the industry's early days. A plucky little Japanese company called Nintendo created a fun platform-climbing game starring a carpenter named Mario as he attempted to rescue his love Pauline from the clutches of an ape called Donkey Kong. Not a very subtle reference, but that's homage for you. Universal Studios didn't share that gee-whiz sentiment, though, and they brought the full freight-train force of the Hollywood legal system to bear on Nintendo, claiming infringement on the King Kong trademark. The tiny game company never stood a chance.



Can Aliens: Colonial Marines Free Itself from Prometheus' Shadow?
by Nick Todd
21 May 2012 at 5:05pm

With the runaway success of 2009's Borderlands, Dallas-based developer Gearbox created a reputation for itself as more than just the studio behind a few Half-Life expansions or WW2 shooters, but one capable of offering its own serious creative output. With the long-in-development Aliens: Colonial Marines finally set for release early next year, Gearbox's latest trailer is capitalizing on the film franchise's return to theaters with next month's prequel-in-all-but-name, Prometheus.



Your Retro Reference Guide to Community's "Digital Estate Planning"
by 1UP Staff
18 May 2012 at 7:57pm

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By: Bob Mackey and Marty Sliva May 18, 2012

Community creator Dan Harmon isn't a stranger to video games; he's been public about his love for the medium, so it wasn't surprising to see the first episode of last night's season finale hat trick devote itself completely to old-school gaming references. What would have been a throwaway gag in any other sitcom took over most of "Digital Estate Planning's" 22 minutes, as Jeff, Britta, Pierce, Shirley, Abed, Annie, and Troy found themselves participating in a multiplayer platformer in an attempt to wrest the Hawthorne Wipes fortune from the grasp of a bastard child. This episode overflowed with visual gags devoted to the blocky roots of gaming culture, most of which flew by at a blink-and-you'll-miss-it pace; but, thankfully, your friends at 1UP are here to comb over this chunk of comedy gold to dig out the purest pieces of retro gaming nostalgia. Read on, and be sure to let us know if any references slipped past our intricate knowledge of gaming's past.


"Digital Estate Planning's" title sequence doesn't seem to point to any specific title; it's more of a pastiche of retro games that gave the player a brief preview of all the playable characters and their awesome abilities. Though Gilbert's fake game offers a resolution and color depth the NES could only dream of, the opening credits feel a lot like the intro to the NES version of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.



EA to Piggyback Origin on Popular Kickstarter Games
by Chris Pereira
18 May 2012 at 4:44pm

As Electronic Arts continues to work toward having Origin reach feature parity with Steam -- and hopefully finding something unique it can offer in the process -- it also is focused on getting the software installed on as many computers as possible. Bundling it with EA's own computer games has proven to be one effective way of doing this, whether it be with Battlefield 3 or Mass Effect 3, as has exclusively offering the digital version of its big MMO, Star Wars: The Old Republic, through the service. Now it's extending a helping hand to independent developers who have turned to crowd-funding to get their games made in a move that will further help to increase the size of Origin's userbase.

The publisher today announced it will waive Origin's distribution fees for 90 days for any developer wanting to bring its crowd-funded, downloadable PC game to the service, just so long as the game is ready to publish. Develop notes the only costs developers will be subjected to are those pertaining to transactions, such as the fee charged by credit card companies. Even with that small caveat, this is still a potentially great deal for independent developers who will be able to receive a significantly larger portion of revenue on each game it sells in the three months following release. Particularly when you consider many of the games that have been funded by Kickstarter are unlikely to ever be multi-million unit sellers, that extra money could prove to be a major boon.





Car Shoes

Upgrading Car Audio System

Featuring S2000

Step by step illustration of upgrading an entry level system to mid-range sound system on a Honda S2000. Changes include: - 2-way active wiring and setup - Custom Tweeter Pod & Vinyl Wrapping - Front Components & Subwoofer - Dual Amplifier - Head Unit - Door deadening and sealing - Custom Speaker baffle & waterproofing

In the past 7 years, I have been upgrading my car audio system with multiple entry level components. In the relentless quest for perfection, I felt that it's time for a major system overhaul for a Honda S2000, which I'll illustrate here.

Some of you may wonder why bother upgrading the sound system in a small convertible. It's all in the eye of the beholder IMO. Every single one of my upgrade resulted in noticeable incremental improvements. First, let's start with what I had already installed, to serve as the initial reference point. This was a budget setup I'd recommend for starters (except for the HU, which cost me an arm and leg since it's one of the first few high end car MP3 player on the market 6-7 years ago.) This basic setup can be had


i wrote this how is it i have it in several languages ?!?
English: "We are an entire generation pumping gas, waiting tables. Slaves in white collars, advertising has us chasing cars, shoes, things we dont need.We are the generation of the middle children, no place, no true purpose, there is no depression, no great wars. our true great depression is our lives, our great wars we fight with ourselves.we have all been raised on tv to believe that we will all be millionares, movie gods,rockstars, but we wont and we are slowly learning that fact but if we dont stop the way we are going now there will be another world war within our lifetime maybe two i can see it starting now north korea shooting missiles into the sea,the end is coming soon, be ready for revelations." italian: "Siamo una generazione intera di pompaggio di gas, in attesa tabelle. Schiavi in colletti bianchi, la pubblicità ci inseguono auto, le scarpe, le cose di cui abbiamo need.We sono la generazione di mezzo bambini, nessun luogo, nessun vero scopo, non vi è la depressione, non grandi guerre. la nostra vera grande depressione è la nostra vita, la nostra grande le guerre si combattono con ourselves.we sono stati allevati in tv credo che saremo tutti millionares, dei film, rockstars, ma non si e stiamo lentamente imparando che abbiamo fatto, ma se dont fermare il modo in cui ci accingiamo ora non ci sarà un'altra guerra mondiale all'interno della nostra vita forse i due si può vedere da adesso nord Corea del tiro missili in mare, alla fine è venuta presto, essere pronto per rivelazioni ". German "Wir sind eine ganze Generation Pumpen Gas, warten Tabellen. Slaves in weißen Kragen, die Werbung hat uns der Jagd nach Autos, Schuhe, Dinge, die wir keine need.We sind die Generation von der Mitte Kinder, keinen Platz, keinen echten Zweck, gibt es keine Depression, keine großen Kriege. unser wahres große Depression ist unser Leben, unsere große Kriegen wir kämpfen mit ourselves.we wurden, die im Fernsehen zu glauben, dass wir alle millionares, Film Götter, Rockstars, aber wir gewohnt, und wir sind langsam lernen, dass die Tatsache, aber wenn wir nicht um die Art und Weise werden wir jetzt gibt es eine andere Welt Krieg in unserem Leben vielleicht zwei Ich sehe es jetzt nach Norden Korea schießen Raketen ins Meer, das Ende ist in Kürze zu bereit für Enthüllungen. " Russian "?? ?????? ????????? ??????? ????, ?????? ???????. ???? ? ????? ???????????, ??????? ??? ??????? ??????????? ?????, ????, ??????? ?? Dont need.We ???????? ????????? ???????? ?????, ?? ?????, ?? ???????? ????, ??? ?????????, ??? ??????? ?????. ???

Get the answers...


Is this start to my story any good?
It's about a typical girl who's in love with her bestfriend but he already has a girlfriend. [i]Wake up it's a beautiful morning, Feel the sun shining for your eyes...[/i] Great, another Monday morning. Another week of boring classes and getting completely ignored by my sister in the hallway. Although, I can?t really complain about that last bit I?m glad she ignores me, I wouldn?t want to talk to her anyway. I?m pretty sure people don?t even know me and Ruby are related. It?s an easy walk to the kitchen for the people who haven?t quite woken up yet, just down the hall; I should remember to thank my Dad for moving us into an apartment. I do miss that big old house on Wharf Road but it did get too empty, and now there?s only three of us we didn?t need all of the rooms. I walk straight to the coco pops as usual; Ruby refuses to have them as she believes they?ll ruin her complexion so she eats oatmeal and other disgusting things that shouldn?t be counted as foods. There she is, scoop by scoop she shoves the gooey stuff into her mouth, let?s just say I?m glad I?m not her. Dad walks into the room, his slippers on the wrong feet and his eyes half closed, his hairs a bloody mess too. That reminds me I haven?t even checked what I look like yet, unlike Ruby here who?s already got a full coat of make-up on. ?Good Morning Father? Ruby says in an all too innocent way, she wants something. ?What is it, Ruby?? Dad knows her tricks all to well. ?There?s these really nice pair of shoes I want...? ?No? ?But Dad, that?s not fair! You let Erin get those Car shoes!? ?Vans? I correct her but don?t make to much fuss about it because I know it?s true, Dad did get them me. Dad looks at me for back-up but I look down at my cereal and quickly walk out of the room. By the time I?m back in my room I?ve finished my bowl so I just put it on top of my shelf where all the other pots and pans seem to be appearing. Please comment and don't worry to be harsh if it helps. How the hell is this copying Twilight? For starters theres no vampires, seconds Edward and Bella were never "friends", these characters are completely different, Edward didn't already have a girlfriend, its not based in Forks or any other plac in America, my characters are younger,... The world doesnt revolve around Twilight.

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Has anybody stopped to think, Why are we debating seeing a health care provider in the political spectrum?
When did politics enter into the equation of seeing a doctor or getting medical treatment? Why is there no raging debate on food, cars, shoes jewelry, cell phones.......???? What gives elected officials the right to dictate and or interfere with medical/health decisions? Nope been awake for a while. Health care providers are subject to the same laws of supply and demand as every other sevice or industry in the world. Why does this enter the realm of politics?

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LooneyPals Children's Car Shoes Crocs Style

24 Jul 2008 at 6:11pm



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Car Shoes News


How our predictions for the Year 2000 changed throughout the 20th Century - io9


How our predictions for the Year 2000 changed throughout the 20th Century
io9
But I wouldn't mind a set of those car shoes. 1930: These fashion predictions for the year 2000 seem mostly done in fun, and there's a strong emphasis on technological innovation rather than aesthetic advancements. Women don convertible dresses, ...

Read more...