Winners of 2009 Xbox Live Arcade Awards Announced

This article is from the first edition of The Video Game Librarian website I published between 2008 and 2010. It was originally written on April 6, 2010.

Larry “Major Nelson” Hryb has posted the winners of the annual Xbox Live Arcade Awards and Trials HD took the prize for “Best Overall Arcade Game.”

The other winners, as voted on by Xbox Live users, can be found right here:

  • Best Overall Arcade Game: Trials HD
  • Best Classic/Remake: Banjo-Tooie
  • Best Competitive Multiplayer: Battlefield 1943
  • Best Co-Operative Multiplayer: Battlefield 1943
  • Best Family Game: Hasbro Family Game Night
  • Best Graphics: Shadow Complex
  • Best Innovation: Trials HD
  • Best Original Game: Splosion Man
  • Best Solo Game: Shadow Complex

This week would be a great time to give one of these new classics a shot as Hryb also revealed that this will be the first Wednesday in a very long time without a new XBLA game.

Winners of 2009 BAFTA Video Game Awards Announced

This article is from the first edition of The Video Game Librarian website I published between 2008 and 2010. It was originally written on March 20, 2010.

The 2009 British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Video Game Awards were handed out last night and developer Rocksteady Studios and their PC, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360 game Batman: Arkham Asylum was honored as the “Best Game” of 2009. In the handheld division, Sony’s PSP conversion of LittleBigPlanet was awarded the “Best Handheld Game” honors.

Shigeru Miyamoto received this year’s “Academy Fellowship.” Of the selection, the BAFTA Academy said “Miyamoto is celebrated globally as the ‘Steven Spielberg’ of the gaming world and is often referred to as ‘the father of modern video games.’ His design credits read like a who’s who of classic gaming and include: Mario Bros, Donkey Kong, The Legend of Zelda, Nintendogs, and Wii Music.”

Among the genre/artisitic awards, Uncharted 2: Among Thieves cleaned up with a total of four wins. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, shut out of all the other awards, managed to take home the People’s Choice “GAME Award.”

The full list of winners can be found right here… Continue reading

Games and Gaming Members Initiative Group @ ALA Midwinter 2010

This article is from the first edition of The Video Game Librarian website I published between 2008 and 2010. It was originally written on January 12, 2010.

Just a reminder for those attending the 2010 ALA Midwinter Meeting this weekend in Boston…

The Games and Gaming Members Initiative Group is meeting on Saturday, January 16, in the Otis Room at the Westin Waterfront from 10:30 AM – 12:00 PM.

According to Scott Nicholson, the group will share their gaming experiences, talk about upcoming opportunities, and explore interest in upgrading the MIG into a Round Table.

Game Boy Inducted Into National Toy Hall of Fame

This article is from the first edition of The Video Game Librarian website I published between 2008 and 2010. It was originally written on November 6, 2009.

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The Game Boy has been a fixture of pants pockets and backpacks for 20 years now, and thanks to its ubiquity, the portable video game system has been recognized by The Strong Museum of Play with induction into the National Toy Hall of Fame. Nintendo’s handheld was inducted alongside “the ball” and the Big Wheel, and it beat out other nominees such as Cabbage Patch Kids, Game of Life, Hot Wheels, the paper airplane, playing cards, Rubik’s Cube, sidewalk chalk, toy tea set, and The Transformers.

Inducted by Associate Curator Eric Wheeler, who is a major supporter of the museum’s National Center for the History of Electronic Games, the unveiling also got a hand from Nintendo’s mascot, Mario. The Hall of Fame cited the Game Boy’s innovative features and blockbuster gaming library as the reasons for its admission this year:

Admitted into the hall because of its role as a major industry innovator, Nintendo Game Boy transformed the electronic-games market by popularizing handheld gaming. No video-game platform did more to put gamers “on the go” than this invention. And go they did—bringing their gaming experience to school, to summer camp, and to the back seat of the family automobile. Over the past two decades, Game Boy has become synonymous with hand-held gaming fun. Its portability and efficient design, ability to allow simultaneous multiplayer gaming, and scores of intriguing games (like Tetris and Super Mario Land, featuring Nintendos’ already-iconic character Mario) make it a true innovator.

The Game Boy is not the first video game system to be enshrined the National Toy Hall of Fame. That honor goes to the Atari 2600, which was inducted two years ago.

Instrument Compatibility Chart For Guitar Hero/Rock Band

This article is from the first edition of The Video Game Librarian website I published between 2008 and 2010. It was originally written on August 5, 2009.

Harmonix has created the first official Instrument Compatibility Chart for the official instruments released alongside the Rock Band, Guitar Hero, and Rock Revolution games.

The chart is available at RockBand.com/compatibility and covers includes compatibility notes for most of the Rock Band, Guitar Hero, and Rock Revolution games ever released for the PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, Wii, and Xbox 360. All of the Guitar Hero spinoffs released after Guitar Hero: World Tour are not specifically listed, but since they work off of the same framework as World Tour, the chart basically includes every Guitar Hero game ever released. The upcoming The Beatles: Rock Band is also included.

For those looking to maximize their plastic instrument dollar, the Guitar Hero: World Tour guitar and drums appear to have the best cross-game compatibility on all four platforms. But be sure to check out the full chart. It is a fantastic resource.

There Are 170 Million Gamers in the US According to The NPD Group

This article is from the first edition of The Video Game Librarian website I published between 2008 and 2010. It was originally written on August 3, 2009.

The NPD Group has released a new report about the video game community and it shows that more than 50% of the US population can now officially be classified as “Gamers.” The 2009 Gamer Segmentation Report (via GameSpot) is based on a survey of 21,000 respondants that took place in January. Survey takers were asked about their gaming habits (or lack thereof) and through the use of statistical sampling, The NPD Group pegged the current US “Gamer” population at 169.9 million, an increase of over 4.3 million “Gamers” from last year’s survey.

The biggest subgroup in the NPD’s survey was dubbed “Secondary Gamers.” That group is mostly made up of women who play video games less than four hours per week. They are also unlikely to own a game console and do their gaming on a PC (likely through casual game sites like PopCap, Pogo, or Facebook). This is in contrast to the smallest subgroup, the “Extreme Gamers,” who play more than 40 hours per week.

Other classifications from the report include:

  • “Console Gamers” (32.9 million) – Mostly male, they play around 12 hours a week and own at least one game console.
  • “Online PC Gamers” (25.9 million) – Mostly female, on the average they play for eight hours and do most of it online.
  • “Avid PC Gamers” (17.3 million) – They play, on the average, 23 hours of PC games a week.

Those interested in the full report can purchase it from The NPD Group’s official website.

Del Rey Publishing God of War Novels

This article is from the first edition of The Video Game Librarian website I published between 2008 and 2010. It was originally written on July 14, 2009.

Del Rey is quickly establishing themselves as the go-to publisher for video game adaptations. After publishing novels based on major franchises such as Halo, Gears of War, and Mass Effect, the Random House imprint will next turn their attention to God of War.

Del Rey will publish two novels based on the God of War series, with the first, simply titled God of War, scheduled for release in March 2010. The novel will be based on the first game, and it’ll be released alongside PlayStation 3 launch of the third game in the series, God of War III.

In the novel God of War, Kratos, the game’s protagonist, is a great warrior who seeks revenge on the God of War Ares for the deaths of his wife and child. On his journey to Olympus, Kratos must battle great monsters of legend–and fight his own inner demons. Kratos’ quest will take him through a world of Greek mythology transformed, in which the familiar legends take on a terrifying new life–from the Aegean, where Kratos will grapple with the Great Hydra, to the depths of Hades, where Kratos will face death itself, to the heights of Mount Olympus. With all the thrilling action that got fans hooked on the game, the novel God of War takes us deeper into this fascinating world.

God of War will be written by Matthew Stover, who is best known for his contributions to the Star Wars Expanded Universe, including Star Wars: New Jedi Order – Traitor, Star Wars: Shatterpoint, and Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith.

Check Out Blizzard’s Employee Library

This article is from the first edition of The Video Game Librarian website I published between 2008 and 2010. It was originally written on June 29, 2009.

I spotted something really cool on Kotaku this morning… a look inside Blizzard’s Employee Library.

Blizzard employees (who are responsible for the massive hit World of WarCraft, along with the upcoming StarCraft II and Diablo III) can peruse the stacks and borrow items as diverse as Dungeons & Dragons campaign manuals to graphic novels to modern console games.

The library also collects maps, historical reference books, programming textbooks, and a huge collection of classic PC games. And be sure to check out the pictures, they’re out of this world.