Re: [Audyssey] When a blind man rocks

2011-02-13 Thread Yohandy
Man I'd completely forgotten about that article! lol. and Clement, I think 
we should actually advertise the fact we're out there a lot more than we 
currently are. perhaps it'll make some difference in the longrun. Take the 
You don't Know Jack devs as an example. they replied to Orin and another 
blind person asking us how accessible the game was for us. reason this 
happened is cause blind people kept mentioning the you don't know jack 
twitter feed, so they eventually noticed. Perhaps, if  YDKJ sequel is 
released, we'll have the jack attack accessible, and perhaps not. but at 
least they know we exist, and I think that's a great thing. this doesn't 
only apply to games, but to any other program. Whenever I download something 
and it doesn't work with screen readers, I always leave feedback to try and 
make it work. and you'd be surprised how often I get a reply back offering 
help. truth is, developers don't really take accessibility into 
consideration when they develop programs. if we don't make them aware of 
this, then who will?





From: Clement Chou chou.clem...@gmail.com
To: Gamers Discussion list gamers@audyssey.org
Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2011 10:36 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] When a blind man rocks


Nice... well, just goes to show one of us has been doing some work! I've 
never done something like that yet... my gaming ability isn't something I 
try and advertise. lol. Nice job, Yohandi... way to spread the message! I 
wouldn't mind doing an interview like that, just haven't gotten the chance 
yet. lol.


At 07:30 AM 10/02/2011, you wrote:

Hi Folks,
I searched for the article where the blind man beat the sighted on a video 
game but couldn't fine it.

I did find this article from last year:
When a blind man rocks: Interview with Yohandy Rodriguez
April 20th, 2010
11:07 am ET
When you play Guitar Hero and Rock Band, you rely heavily on the rhythm of 
the song and the overall flow, but if you turn on performance mode, where 
the charts are hidden, you more times than not, will fail within seconds.


Now imagine having to play performance mode every single time you fired up 
the game. For Yohandy Rodriguez, that is no hypothetical; that is his 
reality.


As someone who has been blind from birth, Rodriguez never learned to rely 
on his vision as a way to navigate through life or games.


I was actually born prematurely, said Rodriguez. Due to the fact my 
lungs hadn't developed properly, it was necessary to put me in an 
incubator and pump oxygen into it to keep me alive. This was obviously 
successful, but due to too much oxygen intake at such an early age, I 
became blind. I was born in 1985, and I actually remember gaming at a very 
early age. I don't really know how I got started. All I know is everyone 
around me was playing video games, and there was no reason why I shouldn't 
be as well. So that's exactly what I did. I never considered my blindness 
as a barrier for a second. I remember playing games like Super Mario 2 and 
Donkey Kong Country quite clearly, and it was definitely a blast.


Rodriguez may have been able to play games like Mario and Donkey Kong 
Country, but there are certain games that he is unable to play due to his 
blindness.



According to a recent Rodriguez Tweet, Guitar Hero's menus can prove
problematic for blind gamers to navigateWell, I was never able to beat 
Super Mario or Donkey Kong [laughs], even though I did complete a few 
levels through trial and error, said Rodriguez. However, I did come 
across fighting games, and suddenly things changed. I recall playing 
Mortal Kombat 1 and 2 with my sighted cousin on a SNES and man was it fun. 
All the attacks had distinctive sounds, kicks and punches all sounded 
different and unique. It was such an awesome experience I begged my 
parents to buy me a super Nintendo immediately. So they did, and the first 
game I bought was a copy of Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. I played that game 
all day long and I eventually beat it on medium. then I beat it on the 
hardest difficulty. Then after that I had to buy more fighting games so I 
purchased Killer Instinct. I know I'm digressing a bit here so I'll get 
back on track. I find games with 3D environments and shoot 'em ups the 
hardest to play. It's quite easy to get lost in such large playing fields, 
and often enough there's not enough audio to convey everything happening 
on screen.


While it's not instantaneously known by Rodriguez whether or not he'll be 
able to play a game when it first comes out, there are various indicators 
that point him and other blind gamers in the right direction.


There's actually a few blind gamers out there, not just me, said 
Rodriguez. We already know that games like Mortal Kombat VS. DC Universe 
and Super Street Fighter IV are accessible since we've been buying 
fighting games for years, and of course games like Guitar Hero and Rock 
Band, but we actually love to experiment with different genres. One of my 
blind friends bought

[Audyssey] When a blind man rocks

2011-02-10 Thread Phil Vlasak

Hi Folks,
I searched for the article where the blind man beat the sighted on a video 
game but couldn't fine it.

I did find this article from last year:
When a blind man rocks: Interview with Yohandy Rodriguez
April 20th, 2010
11:07 am ET
When you play Guitar Hero and Rock Band, you rely heavily on the rhythm of 
the song and the overall flow, but if you turn on performance mode, where 
the charts are hidden, you more times than not, will fail within seconds.


Now imagine having to play performance mode every single time you fired up 
the game. For Yohandy Rodriguez, that is no hypothetical; that is his 
reality.


As someone who has been blind from birth, Rodriguez never learned to rely on 
his vision as a way to navigate through life or games.


I was actually born prematurely, said Rodriguez. Due to the fact my lungs 
hadn't developed properly, it was necessary to put me in an incubator and 
pump oxygen into it to keep me alive. This was obviously successful, but due 
to too much oxygen intake at such an early age, I became blind. I was born 
in 1985, and I actually remember gaming at a very early age. I don't really 
know how I got started. All I know is everyone around me was playing video 
games, and there was no reason why I shouldn't be as well. So that's exactly 
what I did. I never considered my blindness as a barrier for a second. I 
remember playing games like Super Mario 2 and Donkey Kong Country quite 
clearly, and it was definitely a blast.


Rodriguez may have been able to play games like Mario and Donkey Kong 
Country, but there are certain games that he is unable to play due to his 
blindness.



According to a recent Rodriguez Tweet, Guitar Hero's menus can prove
problematic for blind gamers to navigateWell, I was never able to beat 
Super Mario or Donkey Kong [laughs], even though I did complete a few levels 
through trial and error, said Rodriguez. However, I did come across 
fighting games, and suddenly things changed. I recall playing Mortal Kombat 
1 and 2 with my sighted cousin on a SNES and man was it fun. All the attacks 
had distinctive sounds, kicks and punches all sounded different and unique. 
It was such an awesome experience I begged my parents to buy me a super 
Nintendo immediately. So they did, and the first game I bought was a copy of 
Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. I played that game all day long and I eventually 
beat it on medium. then I beat it on the hardest difficulty. Then after that 
I had to buy more fighting games so I purchased Killer Instinct. I know I'm 
digressing a bit here so I'll get back on track. I find games with 3D 
environments and shoot 'em ups the hardest to play. It's quite easy to get 
lost in such large playing fields, and often enough there's not enough audio 
to convey everything happening on screen.


While it's not instantaneously known by Rodriguez whether or not he'll be 
able to play a game when it first comes out, there are various indicators 
that point him and other blind gamers in the right direction.


There's actually a few blind gamers out there, not just me, said 
Rodriguez. We already know that games like Mortal Kombat VS. DC Universe 
and Super Street Fighter IV are accessible since we've been buying fighting 
games for years, and of course games like Guitar Hero and Rock Band, but we 
actually love to experiment with different genres. One of my blind friends 
bought Final Fantasy XIII when it came out and told everyone how playable it 
ended up being for the blind, so another friend went and got the game and 
can't shut up about it [laughs]. I'm eventually going to purchase it as well 
and see what all the hype's about.


One of Yohandy Rodriguez's favorite types of games to play is the music 
video game genre. Guitar Hero and Rock Band provide blind gamers such as 
Rodriguez with a unique opportunity to actually learn to master a game 
through listening to the subtle changes in the music itself.



Rock Band 2's simplified menu system has proven very accessible to blind 
gamersFirst and foremost, for rhythm games, I think it's more about the 
music, and less about the visual aspect, said Rodriguez. I don't have much 
experience with Guitar Hero since I've only rented some of their games, but 
I have purchased Rock Band games so I'll concentrate my efforts on that 
particular title. First thing I like to do is listen to the song I'm 
attempting to learn. An easy way of doing this is to go in practice mode and 
highlight the full song for listening purposes. I do a lot of guitar so I 
listen to all the various notes and chords to get an idea of how it all 
sounds. What I usually do is if I play and the instrument is hard to hear, I 
go into the sounds option and turn everything down except for the 
instruments which I turn up all the way. Now whichever instrument I play is 
isolated from the track. Even with these options, sometimes there are notes 
that are still hard to hear, so as I practice a section, I set the game to 
90% 

Re: [Audyssey] When a blind man rocks

2011-02-10 Thread Clement Chou
Nice... well, just goes to show one of us has been doing some work! 
I've never done something like that yet... my gaming ability isn't 
something I try and advertise. lol. Nice job, Yohandi... way to 
spread the message! I wouldn't mind doing an interview like that, 
just haven't gotten the chance yet. lol.


At 07:30 AM 10/02/2011, you wrote:

Hi Folks,
I searched for the article where the blind man beat the sighted on a 
video game but couldn't fine it.

I did find this article from last year:
When a blind man rocks: Interview with Yohandy Rodriguez
April 20th, 2010
11:07 am ET
When you play Guitar Hero and Rock Band, you rely heavily on the 
rhythm of the song and the overall flow, but if you turn on 
performance mode, where the charts are hidden, you more times than 
not, will fail within seconds.


Now imagine having to play performance mode every single time you 
fired up the game. For Yohandy Rodriguez, that is no hypothetical; 
that is his reality.


As someone who has been blind from birth, Rodriguez never learned to 
rely on his vision as a way to navigate through life or games.


I was actually born prematurely, said Rodriguez. Due to the fact 
my lungs hadn't developed properly, it was necessary to put me in an 
incubator and pump oxygen into it to keep me alive. This was 
obviously successful, but due to too much oxygen intake at such an 
early age, I became blind. I was born in 1985, and I actually 
remember gaming at a very early age. I don't really know how I got 
started. All I know is everyone around me was playing video games, 
and there was no reason why I shouldn't be as well. So that's 
exactly what I did. I never considered my blindness as a barrier for 
a second. I remember playing games like Super Mario 2 and Donkey 
Kong Country quite clearly, and it was definitely a blast.


Rodriguez may have been able to play games like Mario and Donkey 
Kong Country, but there are certain games that he is unable to play 
due to his blindness.



According to a recent Rodriguez Tweet, Guitar Hero's menus can prove
problematic for blind gamers to navigateWell, I was never able to 
beat Super Mario or Donkey Kong [laughs], even though I did complete 
a few levels through trial and error, said Rodriguez. However, I 
did come across fighting games, and suddenly things changed. I 
recall playing Mortal Kombat 1 and 2 with my sighted cousin on a 
SNES and man was it fun. All the attacks had distinctive sounds, 
kicks and punches all sounded different and unique. It was such an 
awesome experience I begged my parents to buy me a super Nintendo 
immediately. So they did, and the first game I bought was a copy of 
Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. I played that game all day long and I 
eventually beat it on medium. then I beat it on the hardest 
difficulty. Then after that I had to buy more fighting games so I 
purchased Killer Instinct. I know I'm digressing a bit here so I'll 
get back on track. I find games with 3D environments and shoot 'em 
ups the hardest to play. It's quite easy to get lost in such large 
playing fields, and often enough there's not enough audio to convey 
everything happening on screen.


While it's not instantaneously known by Rodriguez whether or not 
he'll be able to play a game when it first comes out, there are 
various indicators that point him and other blind gamers in the 
right direction.


There's actually a few blind gamers out there, not just me, said 
Rodriguez. We already know that games like Mortal Kombat VS. DC 
Universe and Super Street Fighter IV are accessible since we've been 
buying fighting games for years, and of course games like Guitar 
Hero and Rock Band, but we actually love to experiment with 
different genres. One of my blind friends bought Final Fantasy XIII 
when it came out and told everyone how playable it ended up being 
for the blind, so another friend went and got the game and can't 
shut up about it [laughs]. I'm eventually going to purchase it as 
well and see what all the hype's about.


One of Yohandy Rodriguez's favorite types of games to play is the 
music video game genre. Guitar Hero and Rock Band provide blind 
gamers such as Rodriguez with a unique opportunity to actually learn 
to master a game through listening to the subtle changes in the music itself.



Rock Band 2's simplified menu system has proven very accessible to 
blind gamersFirst and foremost, for rhythm games, I think it's more 
about the music, and less about the visual aspect, said Rodriguez. 
I don't have much experience with Guitar Hero since I've only 
rented some of their games, but I have purchased Rock Band games so 
I'll concentrate my efforts on that particular title. First thing I 
like to do is listen to the song I'm attempting to learn. An easy 
way of doing this is to go in practice mode and highlight the full 
song for listening purposes. I do a lot of guitar so I listen to all 
the various notes and chords to get an idea of how it all sounds. 
What I usually 

Re: [Audyssey] When a blind man rocks

2011-02-10 Thread Scott Chesworth
Nice one Yohandy! Good to read about some of the specifics so that it
doesn't just seem like magic. It came across really well.

Scott

On 2/10/11, Clement Chou chou.clem...@gmail.com wrote:
 Nice... well, just goes to show one of us has been doing some work!
 I've never done something like that yet... my gaming ability isn't
 something I try and advertise. lol. Nice job, Yohandi... way to
 spread the message! I wouldn't mind doing an interview like that,
 just haven't gotten the chance yet. lol.

 At 07:30 AM 10/02/2011, you wrote:
Hi Folks,
I searched for the article where the blind man beat the sighted on a
video game but couldn't fine it.
I did find this article from last year:
When a blind man rocks: Interview with Yohandy Rodriguez
April 20th, 2010
11:07 am ET
When you play Guitar Hero and Rock Band, you rely heavily on the
rhythm of the song and the overall flow, but if you turn on
performance mode, where the charts are hidden, you more times than
not, will fail within seconds.

Now imagine having to play performance mode every single time you
fired up the game. For Yohandy Rodriguez, that is no hypothetical;
that is his reality.

As someone who has been blind from birth, Rodriguez never learned to
rely on his vision as a way to navigate through life or games.

I was actually born prematurely, said Rodriguez. Due to the fact
my lungs hadn't developed properly, it was necessary to put me in an
incubator and pump oxygen into it to keep me alive. This was
obviously successful, but due to too much oxygen intake at such an
early age, I became blind. I was born in 1985, and I actually
remember gaming at a very early age. I don't really know how I got
started. All I know is everyone around me was playing video games,
and there was no reason why I shouldn't be as well. So that's
exactly what I did. I never considered my blindness as a barrier for
a second. I remember playing games like Super Mario 2 and Donkey
Kong Country quite clearly, and it was definitely a blast.

Rodriguez may have been able to play games like Mario and Donkey
Kong Country, but there are certain games that he is unable to play
due to his blindness.


According to a recent Rodriguez Tweet, Guitar Hero's menus can prove
problematic for blind gamers to navigateWell, I was never able to
beat Super Mario or Donkey Kong [laughs], even though I did complete
a few levels through trial and error, said Rodriguez. However, I
did come across fighting games, and suddenly things changed. I
recall playing Mortal Kombat 1 and 2 with my sighted cousin on a
SNES and man was it fun. All the attacks had distinctive sounds,
kicks and punches all sounded different and unique. It was such an
awesome experience I begged my parents to buy me a super Nintendo
immediately. So they did, and the first game I bought was a copy of
Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. I played that game all day long and I
eventually beat it on medium. then I beat it on the hardest
difficulty. Then after that I had to buy more fighting games so I
purchased Killer Instinct. I know I'm digressing a bit here so I'll
get back on track. I find games with 3D environments and shoot 'em
ups the hardest to play. It's quite easy to get lost in such large
playing fields, and often enough there's not enough audio to convey
everything happening on screen.

While it's not instantaneously known by Rodriguez whether or not
he'll be able to play a game when it first comes out, there are
various indicators that point him and other blind gamers in the
right direction.

There's actually a few blind gamers out there, not just me, said
Rodriguez. We already know that games like Mortal Kombat VS. DC
Universe and Super Street Fighter IV are accessible since we've been
buying fighting games for years, and of course games like Guitar
Hero and Rock Band, but we actually love to experiment with
different genres. One of my blind friends bought Final Fantasy XIII
when it came out and told everyone how playable it ended up being
for the blind, so another friend went and got the game and can't
shut up about it [laughs]. I'm eventually going to purchase it as
well and see what all the hype's about.

One of Yohandy Rodriguez's favorite types of games to play is the
music video game genre. Guitar Hero and Rock Band provide blind
gamers such as Rodriguez with a unique opportunity to actually learn
to master a game through listening to the subtle changes in the music
 itself.


Rock Band 2's simplified menu system has proven very accessible to
blind gamersFirst and foremost, for rhythm games, I think it's more
about the music, and less about the visual aspect, said Rodriguez.
I don't have much experience with Guitar Hero since I've only
rented some of their games, but I have purchased Rock Band games so
I'll concentrate my efforts on that particular title. First thing I
like to do is listen to the song I'm attempting to learn. An easy
way of doing this is to go in practice mode and highlight the full
song for listening purposes. 

Re: [Audyssey] When a blind man rocks

2011-02-10 Thread Mich
Hi Phil. try serching for Ben Underwood and vidio games and that might help. 
he died though a few years ago but i hope this helps. from Mich.
- Original Message - 
From: Phil Vlasak p...@pcsgames.net

To: Gamers Discussion list gamers@audyssey.org
Sent: Thursday, February 10, 2011 10:30 AM
Subject: [Audyssey] When a blind man rocks



Hi Folks,
I searched for the article where the blind man beat the sighted on a video 
game but couldn't fine it.

I did find this article from last year:
When a blind man rocks: Interview with Yohandy Rodriguez
April 20th, 2010
11:07 am ET
When you play Guitar Hero and Rock Band, you rely heavily on the rhythm of 
the song and the overall flow, but if you turn on performance mode, where 
the charts are hidden, you more times than not, will fail within seconds.


Now imagine having to play performance mode every single time you fired up 
the game. For Yohandy Rodriguez, that is no hypothetical; that is his 
reality.


As someone who has been blind from birth, Rodriguez never learned to rely 
on his vision as a way to navigate through life or games.


I was actually born prematurely, said Rodriguez. Due to the fact my 
lungs hadn't developed properly, it was necessary to put me in an 
incubator and pump oxygen into it to keep me alive. This was obviously 
successful, but due to too much oxygen intake at such an early age, I 
became blind. I was born in 1985, and I actually remember gaming at a very 
early age. I don't really know how I got started. All I know is everyone 
around me was playing video games, and there was no reason why I shouldn't 
be as well. So that's exactly what I did. I never considered my blindness 
as a barrier for a second. I remember playing games like Super Mario 2 and 
Donkey Kong Country quite clearly, and it was definitely a blast.


Rodriguez may have been able to play games like Mario and Donkey Kong 
Country, but there are certain games that he is unable to play due to his 
blindness.



According to a recent Rodriguez Tweet, Guitar Hero's menus can prove
problematic for blind gamers to navigateWell, I was never able to beat 
Super Mario or Donkey Kong [laughs], even though I did complete a few 
levels through trial and error, said Rodriguez. However, I did come 
across fighting games, and suddenly things changed. I recall playing 
Mortal Kombat 1 and 2 with my sighted cousin on a SNES and man was it fun. 
All the attacks had distinctive sounds, kicks and punches all sounded 
different and unique. It was such an awesome experience I begged my 
parents to buy me a super Nintendo immediately. So they did, and the first 
game I bought was a copy of Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. I played that game 
all day long and I eventually beat it on medium. then I beat it on the 
hardest difficulty. Then after that I had to buy more fighting games so I 
purchased Killer Instinct. I know I'm digressing a bit here so I'll get 
back on track. I find games with 3D environments and shoot 'em ups the 
hardest to play. It's quite easy to get lost in such large playing fields, 
and often enough there's not enough audio to convey everything happening 
on screen.


While it's not instantaneously known by Rodriguez whether or not he'll be 
able to play a game when it first comes out, there are various indicators 
that point him and other blind gamers in the right direction.


There's actually a few blind gamers out there, not just me, said 
Rodriguez. We already know that games like Mortal Kombat VS. DC Universe 
and Super Street Fighter IV are accessible since we've been buying 
fighting games for years, and of course games like Guitar Hero and Rock 
Band, but we actually love to experiment with different genres. One of my 
blind friends bought Final Fantasy XIII when it came out and told everyone 
how playable it ended up being for the blind, so another friend went and 
got the game and can't shut up about it [laughs]. I'm eventually going to 
purchase it as well and see what all the hype's about.


One of Yohandy Rodriguez's favorite types of games to play is the music 
video game genre. Guitar Hero and Rock Band provide blind gamers such as 
Rodriguez with a unique opportunity to actually learn to master a game 
through listening to the subtle changes in the music itself.



Rock Band 2's simplified menu system has proven very accessible to blind 
gamersFirst and foremost, for rhythm games, I think it's more about the 
music, and less about the visual aspect, said Rodriguez. I don't have 
much experience with Guitar Hero since I've only rented some of their 
games, but I have purchased Rock Band games so I'll concentrate my efforts 
on that particular title. First thing I like to do is listen to the song 
I'm attempting to learn. An easy way of doing this is to go in practice 
mode and highlight the full song for listening purposes. I do a lot of 
guitar so I listen to all the various notes and chords to get an idea of 
how it all sounds. What I usually do

Re: [Audyssey] When a blind man rocks

2011-02-10 Thread shaun everiss

well i have got promises over the years that havn't happened.
firstly a vidgame hybred was to be in the works I was successfull on 
applying for it and then for sending my picture for credits.

There was nothing else heard on the subject.
ANother one.
I was put up for an interview on some musical stuff I was interested 
in but it never happened.

I never payed for either of these but I hate half offers.
If you arn't serious then don't bother I am technically hanging in mid aire.
At 04:36 a.m. 11/02/2011, you wrote:
Nice... well, just goes to show one of us has been doing some work! 
I've never done something like that yet... my gaming ability isn't 
something I try and advertise. lol. Nice job, Yohandi... way to 
spread the message! I wouldn't mind doing an interview like that, 
just haven't gotten the chance yet. lol.


At 07:30 AM 10/02/2011, you wrote:

Hi Folks,
I searched for the article where the blind man beat the sighted on 
a video game but couldn't fine it.

I did find this article from last year:
When a blind man rocks: Interview with Yohandy Rodriguez
April 20th, 2010
11:07 am ET
When you play Guitar Hero and Rock Band, you rely heavily on the 
rhythm of the song and the overall flow, but if you turn on 
performance mode, where the charts are hidden, you more times than 
not, will fail within seconds.


Now imagine having to play performance mode every single time you 
fired up the game. For Yohandy Rodriguez, that is no hypothetical; 
that is his reality.


As someone who has been blind from birth, Rodriguez never learned 
to rely on his vision as a way to navigate through life or games.


I was actually born prematurely, said Rodriguez. Due to the fact 
my lungs hadn't developed properly, it was necessary to put me in 
an incubator and pump oxygen into it to keep me alive. This was 
obviously successful, but due to too much oxygen intake at such an 
early age, I became blind. I was born in 1985, and I actually 
remember gaming at a very early age. I don't really know how I got 
started. All I know is everyone around me was playing video games, 
and there was no reason why I shouldn't be as well. So that's 
exactly what I did. I never considered my blindness as a barrier 
for a second. I remember playing games like Super Mario 2 and 
Donkey Kong Country quite clearly, and it was definitely a blast.


Rodriguez may have been able to play games like Mario and Donkey 
Kong Country, but there are certain games that he is unable to play 
due to his blindness.



According to a recent Rodriguez Tweet, Guitar Hero's menus can prove
problematic for blind gamers to navigateWell, I was never able to 
beat Super Mario or Donkey Kong [laughs], even though I did 
complete a few levels through trial and error, said Rodriguez. 
However, I did come across fighting games, and suddenly things 
changed. I recall playing Mortal Kombat 1 and 2 with my sighted 
cousin on a SNES and man was it fun. All the attacks had 
distinctive sounds, kicks and punches all sounded different and 
unique. It was such an awesome experience I begged my parents to 
buy me a super Nintendo immediately. So they did, and the first 
game I bought was a copy of Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3. I played that 
game all day long and I eventually beat it on medium. then I beat 
it on the hardest difficulty. Then after that I had to buy more 
fighting games so I purchased Killer Instinct. I know I'm 
digressing a bit here so I'll get back on track. I find games with 
3D environments and shoot 'em ups the hardest to play. It's quite 
easy to get lost in such large playing fields, and often enough 
there's not enough audio to convey everything happening on screen.


While it's not instantaneously known by Rodriguez whether or not 
he'll be able to play a game when it first comes out, there are 
various indicators that point him and other blind gamers in the 
right direction.


There's actually a few blind gamers out there, not just me, said 
Rodriguez. We already know that games like Mortal Kombat VS. DC 
Universe and Super Street Fighter IV are accessible since we've 
been buying fighting games for years, and of course games like 
Guitar Hero and Rock Band, but we actually love to experiment with 
different genres. One of my blind friends bought Final Fantasy XIII 
when it came out and told everyone how playable it ended up being 
for the blind, so another friend went and got the game and can't 
shut up about it [laughs]. I'm eventually going to purchase it as 
well and see what all the hype's about.


One of Yohandy Rodriguez's favorite types of games to play is the 
music video game genre. Guitar Hero and Rock Band provide blind 
gamers such as Rodriguez with a unique opportunity to actually 
learn to master a game through listening to the subtle changes in 
the music itself.



Rock Band 2's simplified menu system has proven very accessible to 
blind gamersFirst and foremost, for rhythm games, I think it's 
more about the music, and less about