10 times larger than an iPhone 6s
==========

When the iPhone 6S came out, people were talking about how big the screen was, 
and how much more you could do on the phone with such a big screen.  Larger 
screens means that games can display a bigger environment, and they would be 
more fun.

Having designed audio games for the past year or so, these new screens are tiny 
compared to the image you can maintain in your brain.  I stumbled onto this 
idea when I was building the cryptogram game.

When I design an audio game, I first design the screen, so that I can see how 
the game operates.  For example, with the Sudoku game on a 9x9 board, I create 
a board on the iPhone screen, and the start programming the game.  The position 
for row 1, column 1, is in the upper left corner of the phone, and the position 
for row 9, column 9 is in the lower right corner of the phone.

When the audio game is completed, and all the blind gamers that have tested the 
game say the game is ready for the App Store, I modify the app to make the 
screen dark.  That way sighted gamers playing the game have no advantage over 
blind gamers.

When a blind gamer plays, she flicks her finger right or left, up or down, to 
move around within the puzzle.  The screen could be one inch by one inch, and 
the flicking would still work.  The screen could be 1 foot by 1 foot, and her 
flicking would still work.  Screen size is completely irrelevant.

When a game designer builds an audio game, the playing field is your brain - 
not the screen.  That gives the game designer an infinite space to layout the 
game.  In a visual game, the screen is a tiny window into a virtual world, and 
the gamer must move the window to play the game.  In an audio game, you are in 
the virtual reality of the game, and not restricted by a tiny window.  Your 
ears tell you what the virtual world looks like, and you use your body - your 
hands, your arms, which way you are facing- to move within this world.

If you've never tried an audio game before, check out Blindfold Racer and keep 
your eyes closed.  You'll appreciate how immersed into an alternate reality you 
can be while playing a game.

My blog follows the development of the game, and other apps that we’re building 
that don’t require using your eyes.  It’s a different way of perceiving the 
world, and it’s amazing what you can learn.

Check out our blog, where you can download any of the games for free: 
BlindfoldGames.org ( 
http://sable.madmimi.com/click?id=12318.13883.a816a6cc7e3c9a6f7378b04f321b61a4&l=19&url=http%3A%2F%2Fblindfoldgames.org
 )

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http://sable.madmimi.com/click?id=12318.13883.a816a6cc7e3c9a6f7378b04f321b61a4&l=2862&url=https%3A%2F%2Fmadmimi.com%2Fp%2F69fff6%3Ffe%3D1%26pact%3D13883-128656893-8271513483-c3c1b0935ff04bc91c1b56fcadf3de087c9caf7c

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Kid Friendly Software | 5900 Collins, Miami FL 33140
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