G Train

The G train into Manhattan one morning is unusually late and unusually crowded. At each stop, as person or two get off, and a dozen more try to get on, the conductor asks several times for passengers to get away from the doors, and promises that there is another G immediately behind this one. The car I’m in is Beijing-packed full of commuters who are becoming increasingly late for work.

The conductor tries again at each stop, with increasing frustration. “There will be another G along momentarily. Please step away from the closing doors. There will be another G along momentarily. Please remain on the platform, there will be another G train momentarily.”

Finally a faceless passenger at the other end of my car shouts back: “No there ain’t!”

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Mah-Jong Themed Mah-Jong

The other night, I met Roy at a pub in our neighborhood. We ducked in from the rain, and compared electronic gadgets, which is some cultures (this one) serves as a greeting. “Wow, you have a lot more books in your Kindle than you did the last time I saw you.” Roy said.

“Yes, well, I also have *embarrassingly high number* fewer dollars in my bank account than last time.”

“Are you using the free app-a-day function? Isn’t it great?”

“It is! But it borks up my Amazon recommendations.” I said, “I put a mah-jong app on because it was free, but now Amazon is offering me Panda Mah-Jong! Celebrity Mah-Jong! Outer-Space Themed Mah-Jong! Now the internet thinks I play dull games.”

“No, the internet thinks you’ll be entertained by the same game in different colors.”

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Office Conversations

Coworker #1: Oh, that guy? He’s the one who wrote all the Chuck Norris books.

Coworker #2: Chuck Norris doesn’t write books, he stares at blank pages and the books write themselves.

Coworker #1: And now we know who plays WarCraft.

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GiN Interview

John Breeden II over at Game Industry News asked me a few questions about Next Island and game designing in general, and the story’s up today on GiN.

GiN: Not everyone gets into this sometimes crazy business. Were there any games or people who influenced you to want to become a developer?

Stivison: My dad introduced me to text-based adventure games when I was a little girl. I really loved exploring and solving puzzles, and just interacting with an unfolding story. Those hours playing Zork and Adventure have really influenced the games I enjoy playing and making.

My current project is a multiplayer, persistent gameworld, so the parameters are quite a bit different from a linear, single-player game, but I think a good narrative is pretty universal.

Thanks, John!

Via Interview: Meg Stivison on Game Industry News

 

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Stupid Mundane Garbage

So I lost my phone the other day.

This is pretty annoying for a lot of reasons, the biggest one is that I don’t have a phone.  Well, actually, I do have a phone, a second-hand Verizon model that would work fine until I either found my lost phone or broke down and got a new one.

In order to use this phone, though, I needed to deactivate my missing phone and reactivate the old one, and to do that, I needed a password. Which wasn’t my billing password, or my billing password after carefully checking that the caps lock wasn’t accidentally on, or my 4-digit password I often use for numbers-only security codes, and then crap! Too many attempts! Locked out of Verizon!

I called the phone company, with my account number, and they were happy to reset my password and send me a temporary one by text to my phone. I explained that I don’t have a phone. We went back and forth for a while, while I repeated my account number and social security number, and offered to recite every text I’d sent and received, or even admit to purchasing a Harry Potter ringtone in 2009, anything to prove I could use the account, when they realized that there was someone else on the account.

“Oh! Right! Stick! I’d forgotten about that! Right, that’s M-A-L-A-V-E-T-T-E, his date of birth is ##-##-####, and his social security number is ###-##-####!” (Note: I’d only use my ex-boyfriend’s personal information when I’m trying desperately to prove that I’m really me.)

I eventually got my temporary phone turned on with my temporary password. And I was happy that I done it without presenting a DNA sample, but if I’d needed to, I totally would have.

I happened to be GChatting with Stick when this was going down, although I was mostly using it to say how annoying Verizon was being and how weird I felt without my phone. It’s been really good talking with him, especially without it turning into how I always lose things and never remember things and why am I so bad at things normal adults do every day? (Note: Stick has not actually asked why I am so bad at things normal adults do every day, however, one can only hear me at admit to getting lost near my house, locking myself out, forgetting my gloves, leaving the oven on, failing to charge my phone, etc., etc., so many times before starting to wonder.)

Meanwhile,  I’ve been apartment shopping, and my goal had been to find a studio. The kind with running water and without rats is just barely in my means.

But I eventually decided that I wanted to live slightly below my reach, so I could possible have some savings and even have an emergency fund, where a surprise car repair wouldn’t be financial disaster. Not like I have a car anymore, but you know what I’m saying. I didn’t want to be financially crippled by a surprise expense.

Like, say, a replacement phone.

I guess I am getting slightly better at normal adult things.

Then, in the dramatic conclusion to the thrilling story in which our heroine is tragically thwarted from making phone calls, my phone was found on the train, right before I decided to order a new one. I went to the Hoboken train station to get it, and I practically jumped over the service desk to hug the girl who gave it back to me.

“I’m so glad it turned up! This is the greatest, thank you so much! You have no idea how great this is! Oh, sorry, I bet you do, I bet people say that all the time.”

“Actually no one says that.” she said, and I was back with my phone again.

But, first, I’d Spokeoed Harold’s phone number. I don’t have a normal, adult address book or anything, so I had to turn to internet stalking to call him back.

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Lexicon

I wonder if there’s a word for that distinctive mixture of pride and frustration felt when one is freakishly fast, thorough and good at implementing a workaround for a workaround to resolve a “temporary” issue. There’s probably a long German compound word for it, don’t you think?

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Think Before Printing

As seen at work.

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Black Friday

I went out with Tryon, Katie and Roy the day after Thanksgiving, a Black Friday traditional gathering since we were coming home from college for Thanksgiving break. It was great, actually, the major difference over the last ten or so years is that now we can stop by one of the few places in Montclair with a liquor license after dinner.

“I think I still owe you some money from the Pixies show.” I said to Roy when our bill came.

“Or do I owe you from Comic Con?” Roy asked.

Getting older is totally optional.

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Amazon Jungle

Harold sent me an Amazon link to Wisegal, a casual game he produced, because it’s gotten a pretty stunning player review:

This game is very fun. It is not an easy game nor is it very hard. It is perfect. If you like hidden object games with a good story behind it, this game is for you!

I’m completely impressed with the review. Many outlets for player feedback are skewed towards complaints over commendations, if you know what I mean, which makes a thoroughly positive response like that one a real delight. And we journalists try to stay away from all-caps fanboy style reactions, we try so hard to be unbiased and thorough that it’s quite rare to write a review that’s so unequivocally positive (even for games I’ve really enjoyed).

I couldn’t be more impressed, but after telling Harold this, I can’t resist pointing out that listed under What Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?, is Tiger Eye, a game I’d worked on.

In a totally unrelated news, never ever look at how many used copies of your product are available on Amazon, or how inexpensive they are. Nothing good comes of that.

 

 

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Lex Julia

Eric called me a few days ago to say the Pompeii exhibit, Life And Death In The Shadow of Vesuvius, is now up near him in Boston, and that he was planning to take his not-girlfriend to see it. I said that Harold and I had seen it while it was in New York, and the show was interesting in a History-channel documentary sort of way, lots of pretty things to see but a little vague with descriptions. Not false information, just a bit vague, saying, for example, that the Romans had rules against excessive jewelry when a more accurate statement would be that the Lex Julia limited jewelry, since excessive jewelry was worn and owned by wealthy Romans before and after Augustus’ reforms.

“I can’t believe you warned me about underwhelming wall text,” Eric said, after he went to see the show. “But you didn’t tell me about the plaster casts of the bodies.”

“Oh, yeah, people died at Pompeii.” I said. “I thought you knew. So, how was your date?”

Sometimes I wonder why Eric even talks to me.

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