How is my post out of line? It is a gaming topic. It has nothing to do
with "real life". My point is that continuous shooting takes no skill,
while waiting until you should shoot and being quick enough to do so
successfully is the actual object of pinball or any other game. Playing one
way is a game of skill while playing the other way takes no skill.
If you think you're finished, you! really! are! finished!!
-----Original Message-----
From: Jude DaShiell
Sent: Monday, September 25, 2017 7:31 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [blind-gamers] Gaming without Aiming, panel discussion from our
old pal Liam!
No game penalties are imposed for missed shots and this is out of line
with reality. Actually, in real life three penalties apply. First,
time wasted cannot be recovered. Second, wasted energy which may be
recovered in time if the player survives long enough. Third, and most
important your opponent gets a shot at your position which your failed
shot just gave away. These penalties apply far more in real world
sniper situations than games made accessible for blind players but in
real world simulators used to prepare actual soldiers all of those
penalties will apply if for no other reason than to keep those soldiers
alive longer in the real field exercises and campaigns.
On Mon, 25 Sep 2017, Charles Rivard wrote:
Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2017 06:46:25
From: Charles Rivard <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [blind-gamers] Gaming without Aiming,
panel discussion from our old pal Liam!
Although this has nothing to do with Liam's panel, it does fall in line
with the subject line, so here are my thoughts, and I would like yours:
Some people claim that they can play a game without being able to see when
to hit a rolling ball or other such task that requires sight. As it turns
out, all they are doing is continuously, very frantically, firing. Take
Blindfold Pinball for example. For a while, I hosted an iPhone gaming
event on
www.Out-Of-Sight.net
in which we chose a game that was on everyone's iPhone, and we took turns
locking out mike key down, playing 1 ball, then releasing our mike key for
the next player. After the third ball had been played, high score won.
The way that I played was to listen for when the ball approached a
flipper, then hitting the flipper, trying to actually use skill when
playing. Others would launch their ball and immediately start hammering
away at the flippers in hopes of hitting the ball when it rolled within
range. Is this how the game should be played, with no skill involved?
They usually beat me, but I feel that they were cheating. Some people
claim that they can successfully play games involving punching the
opponent, but they punch quickly and continuously in hope of success. To
me, a game should be played with skill, not luck.
If you think you're finished, you! really! are! finished!!
-----Original Message----- From: Jack Falejjczyk
Sent: Sunday, September 24, 2017 9:07 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [blind-gamers] Gaming without Aiming, panel discussion from our
old pal Liam!
Hi folks. Last weekend, Liam was at an Illinois gaming convention
called Gamer Grace. Saturday, his panel, Gaming without Aiming,
discusses gaming with a visual impairment. The panel is available at
http://youtu.be/ZYt1GeiiXeY?a
--
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links:
You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#117748): https://groups.io/g/blind-gamers/message/117748
View All Messages In Topic (5): https://groups.io/g/blind-gamers/topic/6065952
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/6065952/21656
New Topic: https://groups.io/g/blind-gamers/post
Change Your Subscription: https://groups.io/g/blind-gamers/editsub/21656
Group Home: https://groups.io/g/blind-gamers
Contact Group Owner: [email protected]
Terms of Service: https://groups.io/static/tos
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/blind-gamers/leave/607459/1071380848/xyzzy
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-