When I was little, we would eat biscuits with milk and watch Star Trek. My brother and I would act out scenes from The Wrath of Khan. He was always Kirk.
When I was older, I watched The Next Generation. I was told I couldn't like science fiction because I was a girl. I was told I couldn't be good at maths because I was a girl. My classmates gave out to me when I turned up for a school tour in a Star Trek: Generations jumper. They made no sense to me. I knew who I was.
When I was older still, I watched Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Dark Angel, Roswell, Angel and dozens of others. It was a golden age of science fiction and fantasy on television. I joined my local Star Trek club, of which I am still a proud member. I started to write science fiction, to read it more. I discovered Douglas Adams, and would spend hours in bookshops looking at his books, deciding which ones to buy with birthday and holiday money. Every week I would go in, checking to see if any of my favourite authors had a new book out. I never found out when books were due to be published. I didn't want to know. I just wanted to go look at the books and see for myself. Even if I'd known what Douglas Adams was like with deadlines, I would still have looked. I was given a gift of eighty classic science fiction books, twenty of them by Isaac Asimov. It was an education.
When I was in college, I discovered that I could study science fiction. I spent my twenty-first birthday at a Stargate conference in England. It was one of the best weekends of my life. I wrote a thesis on feminism and science fiction, discovering Ursula Le Guin, Joanna Russ, Marge Piercy, Octavia Butler, Kate Wilhelm, women who had written what I wanted to write. Women who spoke to me, writing back to them, silently thanking them for being there, for their voices. I entered a competition I'd entered a few times before. I found out I'd won while sitting in front of my laptop, writing another story. I wanted to psyche my mother out with the news, but I was too excited.
When I was in graduate school, I kept writing about science fiction. I found conferences where I could go and talk about and listen to things I wanted to know about my genre. I returned to Douglas Adams for my PhD and discovered that the old love of his work was still there. To this day, over eleven years after his death, I still look for the books with his name, with that same small sliver of hope that today there will be a new book by him. I started to game, and found myself around a table laden with dice and story sheets, laughing at something that no one else could understand, because they had not been there.
There's so much I can say. About how many of my oldest friends are geeks. About long conversations into early morning about anything and everything, wandering around the shows and books and films that have made up our cultural heritage. About how there is a joy in knowing that other people love what you love, and that you can argue about it and never fall out. About how you can get a hold of Ursula Le Guin's Hainish novels or Joss Whedon's television shows and films or Neil Gaiman's Sandman or Terry Pratchett's Discworld and find new ways of looking at your world, answers to the questions you couldn't put into words, new questions that had been hovering around, trying to get your attention. About how you can flirt with a guy over the word 'shiny'. About how my friends seem determined to gift me more sonic screwdrivers than I could possibly hope to use, to my joy. About how sometimes when you fly, you fall. About how it is through suffering that we reach out to each other, that we come through it together and are truly one people. About how you can tell a joke and a truth in one sentence. And more, so very much more than that.
So instead I will just say this: I am a geek. I am proud to be a geek. I hold the glorious 25th of May sacred and will be looking for lilac after work. I am a frood who knows where her towel is. It's on the printer next to me.
Live long and prosper, my shiny friends.
Showing posts with label Gaming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaming. Show all posts
Friday, May 25, 2012
Friday, April 27, 2012
Gaming
The year before last (I don't recall the weather), I was informed that I would have to call myself a gamer. I hadn't realised I'd been particularly denying it, largely because I felt I wasn't justified in calling myself one. However, when, at the tender age of late twenties the Christmas present I really really wanted was a Nintendo 3DS, it is definitely time to be allowed to name myself as a gamer (I got it, by the way. Very pink. I love it. 3D Tetris, dude. 3D Tetris.).
So, here I am, gamer girl, by all accounts, but in some ways, I'm a very specific kind of gamer girl. I'm not the biggest fan of first person shooters. I find them a little dull. I prefer point and click, bonus points if there's a puzzle involved somewhere. I've also been known to have an impressive collection of hidden object games, which I know many other gamers would find ridiculously boring, but I always enjoy a quiet evening making fun of some terrible plot as I try to figure out whether they mean a bat as in baseball or a bat as in 'blind as a'. I'm also pretty fond of Heroes of Might and Magic. Right up to the levels I can't beat...
I'm incredibly impatient when it comes to maintenance games. Like Minecraft. I appreciate that it has some very cool elements. I enjoy those videos on Youtube of people making cool things on Minecraft. But I find it so boring. Seriously. I need plot. Even terrible plot will do. At least terrible plots make me laugh. Leave me plotless and you will find me randomly digging all the way down to lava and feeling far too bored to dig back up (this happened when I downloaded a demo for Minecraft).
The worst thing you can do? Play a game where you have to serve customers in a timely manner when you are working in the food industry. I remember playing one of those games years ago, I think it was on Yahoo, and I couldn't understand why I was getting so stressed until I realised it was just like being at work at the bar I was in at the time. I changed to a matching game, and I felt infinitely better. If you're going to game, game away from what you'd do at work. Your blood pressure will thank you for it.
I love platform games. Anyone else out there remember the New Zealand Story on the Atari? Not to mention the first Super Mario Bros on the Gameboy. And since we've mentioned Tetris, I will briefly tell you that if you want to see competition, give myself and my immediate family a Gameboy and Tetris and mention the words 'High Score'. Then step back. We still argue over who had the highest score nearly two decades ago. Good times. Recent holidays have seen us using a very pink Playstation to play quizzes, in which it has been attempted to stop me holding the joypad, since I have the fastest reaction time in the family. Yeah, I don't think so.
I'm also something of a card game fiend, though Immediate Female Ancestor is the true shark in the family. I pick up card games pretty fast and I can get pretty ruthless. I can still see the look of defeat on Swordsman's face when, during a game of Munchkin, I gave him this ultimatum: "I can either help you, or really hurt you". Yeah, I'm that mean. I've also been known, during Fluxx, to play crazy cards just to see what happens.
Child of Chaos suggests that I start blogging our Magic: The Gathering games, after one truly epic battle last year. Child of Chaos plays Forest, I play Plains (I like white better than green). In one game we managed to pick up lands at about the same rate, so we started building up our creatures at about the same rate, and about the same strength; so much so that neither of us wanted to attack the other, until much later in the game, when Child of Chaos, with a few more higher level monsters than I had, decided to attack. So I used a Neck Snap card to kill her best monster. She could still have beaten me, until I used a second Neck Snap. Child of Chaos's face was priceless. I think I would need more details to make this sound as cool as it was...
Funnily enough, the person who told me that I had to call myself a gamer, GameQueen, didn't know most of this. All she knew was that at the time I was gearing up to play a whiskey and chocolate obsessed Technomancer Elf in Shadowrun. Her opinion of me has been reinforced by my currently playing a Malkavian who sleeps in a morgue with her pet morticians in Masquerade (never underestimate the power of playing the crazy girl), and my participation in my first steampunk larp. Spending a few hours as a genius airship designer was far more fun than I'd imagined it would be. Later that day I purchased the Ankh-Morpork board game and discovered that I truly love putting trouble markers into other people's city blocks. I suppose it doesn't take much to make a gamer, but there are so many types of gamers.
Perhaps my favourite gamer moment is the look of pain on Swordsman's face as Child of Chaos and I discussed our Facebook games. It wasn't that we were playing Facebook games that pained him; it was that both of our computers were capable of playing much more complicated games than what we were using them for. It was the wasted capacity that cut him to the bone.
Still, I am of the opinion that when you're tired but not quite ready to go to bed, there can be nothing more relaxing than matching things for a little while until you are ready to go to sleep. The only trick is making sure you stop before it's 3 am...
So, here I am, gamer girl, by all accounts, but in some ways, I'm a very specific kind of gamer girl. I'm not the biggest fan of first person shooters. I find them a little dull. I prefer point and click, bonus points if there's a puzzle involved somewhere. I've also been known to have an impressive collection of hidden object games, which I know many other gamers would find ridiculously boring, but I always enjoy a quiet evening making fun of some terrible plot as I try to figure out whether they mean a bat as in baseball or a bat as in 'blind as a'. I'm also pretty fond of Heroes of Might and Magic. Right up to the levels I can't beat...
I'm incredibly impatient when it comes to maintenance games. Like Minecraft. I appreciate that it has some very cool elements. I enjoy those videos on Youtube of people making cool things on Minecraft. But I find it so boring. Seriously. I need plot. Even terrible plot will do. At least terrible plots make me laugh. Leave me plotless and you will find me randomly digging all the way down to lava and feeling far too bored to dig back up (this happened when I downloaded a demo for Minecraft).
The worst thing you can do? Play a game where you have to serve customers in a timely manner when you are working in the food industry. I remember playing one of those games years ago, I think it was on Yahoo, and I couldn't understand why I was getting so stressed until I realised it was just like being at work at the bar I was in at the time. I changed to a matching game, and I felt infinitely better. If you're going to game, game away from what you'd do at work. Your blood pressure will thank you for it.
I love platform games. Anyone else out there remember the New Zealand Story on the Atari? Not to mention the first Super Mario Bros on the Gameboy. And since we've mentioned Tetris, I will briefly tell you that if you want to see competition, give myself and my immediate family a Gameboy and Tetris and mention the words 'High Score'. Then step back. We still argue over who had the highest score nearly two decades ago. Good times. Recent holidays have seen us using a very pink Playstation to play quizzes, in which it has been attempted to stop me holding the joypad, since I have the fastest reaction time in the family. Yeah, I don't think so.
I'm also something of a card game fiend, though Immediate Female Ancestor is the true shark in the family. I pick up card games pretty fast and I can get pretty ruthless. I can still see the look of defeat on Swordsman's face when, during a game of Munchkin, I gave him this ultimatum: "I can either help you, or really hurt you". Yeah, I'm that mean. I've also been known, during Fluxx, to play crazy cards just to see what happens.
Child of Chaos suggests that I start blogging our Magic: The Gathering games, after one truly epic battle last year. Child of Chaos plays Forest, I play Plains (I like white better than green). In one game we managed to pick up lands at about the same rate, so we started building up our creatures at about the same rate, and about the same strength; so much so that neither of us wanted to attack the other, until much later in the game, when Child of Chaos, with a few more higher level monsters than I had, decided to attack. So I used a Neck Snap card to kill her best monster. She could still have beaten me, until I used a second Neck Snap. Child of Chaos's face was priceless. I think I would need more details to make this sound as cool as it was...
Funnily enough, the person who told me that I had to call myself a gamer, GameQueen, didn't know most of this. All she knew was that at the time I was gearing up to play a whiskey and chocolate obsessed Technomancer Elf in Shadowrun. Her opinion of me has been reinforced by my currently playing a Malkavian who sleeps in a morgue with her pet morticians in Masquerade (never underestimate the power of playing the crazy girl), and my participation in my first steampunk larp. Spending a few hours as a genius airship designer was far more fun than I'd imagined it would be. Later that day I purchased the Ankh-Morpork board game and discovered that I truly love putting trouble markers into other people's city blocks. I suppose it doesn't take much to make a gamer, but there are so many types of gamers.
Perhaps my favourite gamer moment is the look of pain on Swordsman's face as Child of Chaos and I discussed our Facebook games. It wasn't that we were playing Facebook games that pained him; it was that both of our computers were capable of playing much more complicated games than what we were using them for. It was the wasted capacity that cut him to the bone.
Still, I am of the opinion that when you're tired but not quite ready to go to bed, there can be nothing more relaxing than matching things for a little while until you are ready to go to sleep. The only trick is making sure you stop before it's 3 am...
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