I think you both make points. Would it be nice to have more games to choose from as a blind person? Yes, of course. But Creators of "assistive tech" including games, do not make a lot of money, due to our numbers (the blind) being so low compared to the sighted community. The sighted want more graphics and realistic visuals, and we blind want clear text or sound effects. So, it's kind of a catch 22 when it comes to mainstream designers creating games the blind can play along sides the sighted.
Keith ----- Original Message ----- From: Cara Quinn To: Gamers Discussion list Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2014 6:53 PM Subject: Re: [Audyssey] About pc games wow! How did we get to family values? Do you not think that there were no merchants in the 16th century? People did not get goods and services for free you know, even then. :) As for morality, as a blind individual, you might have found yourself locked away somewhere (or worse) because of people's views of the disabled back then. That's not much morality in my book. Cheers! Cara On Dec 16, 2014, at 8:17 PM, Josh k <joshknnd1...@gmail.com> wrote: they develop for the money that's it. they could care less whether disabled folks can play their games. sometimes I wish I had a time machine and could go back to the 1500s or so. maybe we did not have technology but we had our morality and family values. On 12/16/2014 7:06 PM, Cara Quinn wrote: > Michael, > > Again, excellent points. Let me ask you (and the list) a simple question. > > Why do mainstream developers develop? > > Cheers! > > Cara > --- > iOS design and development - LookTel.com > --- > View my Online Portfolio at: > > http://www.onemodelplace.com/CaraQuinn > > Follow me on Twitter! > > https://twitter.com/ModelCara > > On Dec 16, 2014, at 3:32 PM, Michael Gauler <michael.gau...@gmx.de> wrote: > > Hi Dark, > The sad thing about all this is that all these "new" things we are currently getting in the audio game sector are partially old school compared to mainstream games. > Seriously, I know of a mainstream game called Uprising 2. > You wouldn't be able to play it withouth sighted assistance just to tell that first. > What I want to say is the following: > This game was a science fiction game where you have to fight in a war against an alien race. > You had to go to over 30 planets and your task was to destroy all alien bases on the planet. > The player controled a futuristic tank with different weapons. > He could build factories to produce other units to call during battles to aid you. > These units were computer controlled of course. > I have the game CD. > During these missions you gained more weapons and technology until you came to the final level. > Every planet you had to go to was its own map file. > On the game CD (it was small enough for one CD-Rom) you had the game, the full user manual as well as other documents. > The game itself had three extra levels which were a really big ingame tutorial. > But that was not all the CD contained. > There was a level editor plus its own manual plus another file which contained the technical specifications for one of the four main files you need for level design. > And there was one last document explaining the scripting language which you needed íf you wanted to create story events or define on what terms you won or lost a certain mission. > This game let the user edit some but not all its files. > It did not require any form of hardware based registrations, nor was the CD copy protected with the kind of copy protection which prevents legal use of the product because it is buggy. > > This title was released before the year 2000 and ran on Windows 98 systems without problems. > > This is just one example of what some games of the Windows 95-98 era could do. > Or remember Doom and Quake. > You could make your own levels and mods for them. > > And if you like RPGs you know what Final Fantasy is. > That series goes back before PCs were common products. > But I also knew of a Japanese Play Station game which was originally listed in the audiogames.net database. > But up to now we had little in audio RPG titles and the two we have while impressive currently don't have official addons/expansions, nor do they support user created game content as far as I know. > > --- > Gamers mailing list __ Gamers@audyssey.org > If you want to leave the list, send E-mail to gamers-unsubscr...@audyssey.org. > You can make changes or update your subscription via the web, at > http://audyssey.org/mailman/listinfo/gamers_audyssey.org. > All messages are archived and can be searched and read at > http://www.mail-archive.com/gamers@audyssey.org. > If you have any questions or concerns regarding the management of the list, > please send E-mail to gamers-ow...@audyssey.org. > > > --- > Gamers mailing list __ Gamers@audyssey.org > If you want to leave the list, send E-mail to gamers-unsubscr...@audyssey.org. > You can make changes or update your subscription via the web, at > http://audyssey.org/mailman/listinfo/gamers_audyssey.org. > All messages are archived and can be searched and read at > http://www.mail-archive.com/gamers@audyssey.org. > If you have any questions or concerns regarding the management of the list, > please send E-mail to gamers-ow...@audyssey.org. --- Gamers mailing list __ Gamers@audyssey.org If you want to leave the list, send E-mail to gamers-unsubscr...@audyssey.org. You can make changes or update your subscription via the web, at http://audyssey.org/mailman/listinfo/gamers_audyssey.org. All messages are archived and can be searched and read at http://www.mail-archive.com/gamers@audyssey.org. If you have any questions or concerns regarding the management of the list, please send E-mail to gamers-ow...@audyssey.org. --- Gamers mailing list __ Gamers@audyssey.org If you want to leave the list, send E-mail to gamers-unsubscr...@audyssey.org. You can make changes or update your subscription via the web, at http://audyssey.org/mailman/listinfo/gamers_audyssey.org. All messages are archived and can be searched and read at http://www.mail-archive.com/gamers@audyssey.org. If you have any questions or concerns regarding the management of the list, please send E-mail to gamers-ow...@audyssey.org. --- Gamers mailing list __ Gamers@audyssey.org If you want to leave the list, send E-mail to gamers-unsubscr...@audyssey.org. You can make changes or update your subscription via the web, at http://audyssey.org/mailman/listinfo/gamers_audyssey.org. All messages are archived and can be searched and read at http://www.mail-archive.com/gamers@audyssey.org. If you have any questions or concerns regarding the management of the list, please send E-mail to gamers-ow...@audyssey.org.