Photo 28 Dec 88 notes whipporwill:

“Chain World” Videogame Was Supposed to be a Religion—Not a Holy War

Jason Rohrer is known as much for his eccentric lifestyle as for the brilliant, unusual games he designs. He lives mostly off the grid in the desert town of Las Cruces, New Mexico. He doesn’t own a car or believe in vaccination. The 33-year-old works out of a home office, typing code in a duct-taped chair. He takes his son Mez to gymnastics and acting class on his lime-green recumbent bicycle, and on weekends he paints with his son Ayza. (He got Mez’s name from a license plate, and Ayza’s by mixing up Scrabble tiles.)
On the morning of February 24, Rohrer took a break from coding and pedaled to the local Best Buy. He paid $19.99 for a 4-gigabyte USB memory stick sheathed in black plastic. The next day he sanded off the memory stick’s logos, giving it a brushed-metal texture that reminded him of something out of Mad Max. Then, using his kids’ acrylics, he painted a unique pattern on both sides, a chain of dots that resembled a piece of Aboriginal art he had seen.
The stick would soon hold a videogame unlike any other ever created. It would exist on the memory stick and nowhere else. According to a set of rules defined by Rohrer, only one person on earth could play the game at a time. The player would modify the game’s environment as they moved through it. Then, after the player died in the game, they would pass the memory stick to the next person, who would play in the digital terrain altered by their predecessor—and on and on for years, decades, generations, epochs. In Rohrer’s mind, his game would share many qualities with religion—a holy ark, a set of commandments, a sense of secrecy and mortality and mystical anticipation. This was the idea, anyway, before things started to get weird. Before Chain World, like religion itself, mutated out of control.

 click to read more…

This is incredible!

whipporwill:

“Chain World” Videogame Was Supposed to be a Religion—Not a Holy War

Jason Rohrer is known as much for his eccentric lifestyle as for the brilliant, unusual games he designs. He lives mostly off the grid in the desert town of Las Cruces, New Mexico. He doesn’t own a car or believe in vaccination. The 33-year-old works out of a home office, typing code in a duct-taped chair. He takes his son Mez to gymnastics and acting class on his lime-green recumbent bicycle, and on weekends he paints with his son Ayza. (He got Mez’s name from a license plate, and Ayza’s by mixing up Scrabble tiles.)

On the morning of February 24, Rohrer took a break from coding and pedaled to the local Best Buy. He paid $19.99 for a 4-gigabyte USB memory stick sheathed in black plastic. The next day he sanded off the memory stick’s logos, giving it a brushed-metal texture that reminded him of something out of Mad Max. Then, using his kids’ acrylics, he painted a unique pattern on both sides, a chain of dots that resembled a piece of Aboriginal art he had seen.

The stick would soon hold a videogame unlike any other ever created. It would exist on the memory stick and nowhere else. According to a set of rules defined by Rohrer, only one person on earth could play the game at a time. The player would modify the game’s environment as they moved through it. Then, after the player died in the game, they would pass the memory stick to the next person, who would play in the digital terrain altered by their predecessor—and on and on for years, decades, generations, epochs. In Rohrer’s mind, his game would share many qualities with religion—a holy ark, a set of commandments, a sense of secrecy and mortality and mystical anticipation. This was the idea, anyway, before things started to get weird. Before Chain World, like religion itself, mutated out of control.

click to read more…

This is incredible!

  1. d-c-x-p-a-t reblogged this from transceiverfreq
  2. swagandpassion reblogged this from inothernews
  3. itsokaynooneslistening reblogged this from buckingthefall
  4. elizabeth517 reblogged this from inothernews and added:
    “Chain World” Videogame Was Supposed...be a Religion—Not a Holy War
  5. jimkal reblogged this from inothernews
  6. buckingthefall reblogged this from inothernews
  7. estandsforincredible reblogged this from inothernews
  8. shock-and-awful reblogged this from rude-mechanicals
  9. derptwerp reblogged this from nikkwhyte
  10. wige23 reblogged this from leclerck and added:
    Great article and concept…a bit crazy though towards the end
  11. leclerck reblogged this from inothernews
  12. airship-redemption reblogged this from rude-mechanicals
  13. theunaware reblogged this from hanukkahjamboree
  14. dotcomslashpost reblogged this from tomsellecksbootyshorts
  15. transceiverfreq reblogged this from rude-mechanicals
  16. rude-mechanicals reblogged this from inothernews
  17. suckmydickbitchitsmagic reblogged this from inothernews and added:
    This is incredible!
  18. aquaticmechanic reblogged this from inothernews
  19. kingdomsend reblogged this from hanukkahjamboree
  20. roads2roam reblogged this from inothernews
  21. boysgonewilde reblogged this from inothernews
  22. cornellnotetakingsystem reblogged this from inothernews
  23. brokenladder reblogged this from inothernews
  24. sincerelyshameless reblogged this from inothernews
  25. timecubed reblogged this from inothernews
  26. epistomology reblogged this from inothernews
  27. brainwashinganddrying reblogged this from inothernews
  28. fullofpho reblogged this from inothernews
  29. fayteddh reblogged this from inothernews
  30. apocalypsesunshine reblogged this from inothernews
  31. scaryscara reblogged this from mercuryarms
  32. magictruffle reblogged this from inothernews and added:
    Wow. What a crazy story. Amazing. Read this.
  33. farfromeden reblogged this from inothernews
  34. thepotatoofrage reblogged this from inothernews
  35. melodydirtytalk reblogged this from inothernews
  36. cannibalxqueen reblogged this from inothernews
  37. popopayaso reblogged this from inothernews
  38. explodinganyway reblogged this from inothernews
  39. thepinkavenger reblogged this from inathousandwaves
  40. hanukkahjamboree reblogged this from inothernews and added:
    This is some of the coolest shit I’ve ever read.
  41. lovelikesourmilk reblogged this from ziggystarbucks
  42. unusualjourney reblogged this from inothernews
  43. demaqueer reblogged this from inothernews
  44. thefortnightly reblogged this from inothernews
  45. dualminded reblogged this from inothernews
  46. steelgiant reblogged this from inothernews
  47. thatonechickjasmine reblogged this from inothernews
  48. tomsellecksbootyshorts reblogged this from deermydear
  49. nikkwhyte reblogged this from inothernews and added:
    This is a very interesting read

Design crafted by Prashanth Kamalakanthan. Powered by Tumblr.